“The [Special Rapporteur] observes with profound concern that of the 30 men remaining at Guantánamo, 19 men have never been charged with a single crime—in some cases, after more than 20 years of detention in US custody,” the report reads.
“The [Special Rapporteur] is concerned that the continued internment of certain detainees follows from the unwillingness of the authorities to face the consequences of the torture and other ill-treatment to which the detainees were subjected and not from any ongoing threat they are believed to pose.”
The report found “there is little meaningful engagement with the detainees and their legal representatives concerning transfer, which appears to be viewed as an inter-governmental problem to be solved, rather than a rights-endowing process for persons who are torture victims and survivors.”