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Swiss accept Uighurs

February 3, 2010

In the face of Chinese objections, the Swiss government decided Wednesday to allow two Chinese detainees from the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay to relocate to Switzerland.

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Chinese Uighurs detainees behind a fence at Guantanamo Bay.
The Uighurs have been held at Guantanamo Bay since 2001Image: AP

The Swiss government said Wednesday it would allow two Chinese Guantanamo detainees to resettle in northwestern Switzerland, despite objections from China.

Beijing warned the Swiss government in early January that accepting the inmates, ethnic Uighurs and alleged terrorists in China, could sour relations between the two countries.

The Swiss Justice Ministry said it was aware of China's concerns but had decided to grant asylum to the men based on humanitarian grounds, adding that the men didn't represent a security risk.

"Today the Federal Council decided to admit for humanitarian reasons two Uighurs with Chinese citizenship, who have been imprisoned in Guantanamo for years by the United States without being charged with a crime nor condemned," it said.

Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said Switzerland has a "stable, good relationship with China, and we want to keep it that way."

In January, a Swiss parliamentary committee recommended not to accept the detainees, citing security fears after the attempted bombing of an American airliner on December 25.

The detainees, who are brothers, will be resettled in the canton of Jura. In January, an Uzbek became the first former Guantanamo inmate to be resettled in Switzerland. Widmer-Schlumpf said the country is not planning to take in any further detainees.

cmk/AFP/AP/Reuters
Editor: Nancy Isenson