Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Wednesday, 13
January 2016
The Catholic Bishops’ Conference has waded into the
controversial decision by the Mahama-led NDC government to accept terrorists
from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on Ghanaian soil, describing the decision as “wrong
and dangerous.”
“We, the members of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’
Conference, have received news of the transfer of two former Guantanamo Bay
prisoners, namely, Mahmoud Omar Mohammed Bin Atef (36 years) and Khalid Shayk
Mohammed (34 years) to Ghana with great distress and sadness and wish to call
on our government to act responsibly and in the interest of the nation by
sending these men back to wherever they came from,” the Bishops said in a
statement yesterday.
Pentagon
Announcement
The Pentagon on Wednesday announced that two Guantanamo Bay
inmates with Al-Qaeda ties were being sent to Ghana, the first in a wave of 17
detainees expected to be transferred from the prison. The government later
issued a statement confirming that the two terrorists were in Ghana.
The two, who were held for more than 13 years at the
detention facility near Cuba, are in Ghana for a two-year stay as part of a
deal reached between the United States of America and the Mahama-led
government.
Mission in Ghana
A statement issued in Accra and signed by President of
the Catholic Bishops’ Conference, Most Rev Joseph Osei-Bonsu, who is also the
Bishop Of Konongo-Mampong, said “having learnt that of these two former
prisoners, Mahmoud Bin Atef fought for the late Osama Bin Laden at one time,
while Khalid Shayk Mohammed is known to have trained with the terrorist group,
Al Qaeda, we wish to pose these questions, among others, for our government’s
response: What is their mission here in Ghana?
“Does their presence not constitute or pose a clear
danger to us? If indeed these two persons are harmless and if they have been ‘cleared’
of any terrorist act by the US Government, as our Government and the US
Government and some others want us to believe, why were they not sent back to
Yemen or Saudi Arabia or Afghanistan where they come from or taken to the USA
which found them harmless?”
Urgent Answers
The Bishops further queried, “Did our representatives in
Parliament discuss the merits and demerits of their resettlement here in Ghana?”
adding, “We need urgent answers to these and other questions because we think
that their presence clearly poses a threat to Ghana.”
They said “our government should not take the citizens
of this country for a ride by acting in ways that can have serious consequences
on the nation’s safety and security.”
The statement said “Ghana has been open to receiving
refugees in the past but these two men are not in this category. We think that
they are not refugees but time-bombs and so government should do all it can to
send them back as soon as practicable.”
Terror
Activities
The Bishops said that the upsurge in terrorists
activities around the globe, particularly in the West African sub-region where
Boko Haram and others are wreaking havoc, should have informed the NDC
government to be cautious in accepting to host the high-profile terrorists,
saying, “the acceptance of two former prisoners of Guantanamo Bay Camp is
surely not a good move in the effort to secure the security of the nation.”
Election Year
Security
They said as Ghana heads to the polls this year, “the
security of our nation is going to be put to a severe test once again,” adding,
“We must understand that Ghana is not immune to the attacks of potential
external terrorist forces.
“This year is an election year and we expect our government
to focus a lot of attention on helping to secure peace and security in the
country by dealing with the above-mentioned and related challenges and not to
risk the security of our land by hosting two former terrorists.”
The Bishops called on Parliament, religious leaders,
chiefs, opinion leaders and civil society organisations “interested in the
security of Ghana to speak against this unilateral decision of the government
to accept these ex-prisoners to Ghana and to advise the government to do all it
can to send these men back to wherever they came from.”
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