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DoD Should Assess Tradeoffs of Expanding Access to Gitmo Terror Trials - GAO

WASHINGTON (Sputnik) - The Department of Defense (DoD) needs to assess the tradeoffs associated with expanding public access to and open information about terrorism trials at the US detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) said in a report.
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"DOD has not assessed the tradeoffs nor identified the risks of options for expanding public access to military commissions' proceedings", the report said on Tuesday. "Consequently DOD has not developed a strategy to address challenges or identified the resources needed to achieve its public access goals".

Some victims and family members of victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States and other members of the public, wanted better access to pre-trial hearings of alleged terrorists held at Guantanamo Bay, the GAO acknowledged.

READ MORE: Gitmo Rebirth: Trump Must Spend Lavishly to Fix Deteriorating Facility — Report

Options to increase access include adding closed-circuit television sites for the public and broadcasting via television or the internet, the report said.

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The Guantanamo facility was established by the United States in 2002 in Cuba amid the post-9/11 war on terror to jail terror suspects indefinitely and became notorious for human rights abuses. Since opening, Guantanamo has reportedly held a total of over 700 prisoners.

Barack Obama has promised to close the prison but failed to fulfill his pledge since the US Congress refused to allocate funds for the facility’s closure.

In January 2018, Trump announced that he had signed an order to keep Guantanamo open but no new prisoners have been reportedly transferred to the facility since that.

READ MORE: Trump Administration Lost Track of Some Ex-Gitmo Prisoners

According to Amnesty International, a total of 40 individuals, all of them Muslim, are currently imprisoned in Guantanamo. Amnesty further claimed that many of the prisoners had been tortured, while others had been authorized for transfer to other detention facilities, yet remained in Guantanamo.

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