FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: July 12, 2013
Contact: Samantha Friedman, Rabinowitz/Dorf Communications, (202) 265-3000 or [email protected]
National religious leaders support Obama’s efforts to close Guantanamo, ask him to resume transfers and veto attempts to keep Guantanamo open
Washington, D.C. – Forty-three senior leaders of religious denominations and ecumenical organizations sent a letter to President Obama today, encouraging him to resume transfers of detainees out of the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, and asking him to veto any congressional attempts to keep Guantanamo open. The full text of the letter with the list of signers can be seen here.
In the letter, the religious leaders tell President Obama, “The hunger strike at Guantanamo is an ongoing humanitarian crisis – caused in large part by the despair prisoners at the detention center feel over their continued detention without hope of trial. It is past time for our country to deal with that crisis.”
Rev. Richard Killmer, executive director of the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, who coordinated the letter, noted, “The letter shows that the religious community is ready to stand with the President if he follows through on his promise to close Guantanamo. The detention center there is a symbol of torture and indefinite detention, and closing it is in line with our moral values.”
The National Religious Campaign Against Torture (NRCAT) is a membership organization committed to ending U.S.-sponsored torture, and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. Since its formation in January 2006, more than 320 religious organizations have joined NRCAT, including representatives from the Catholic, evangelical Christian, mainline Protestant, Unitarian Universalist, Quaker, Orthodox Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Baha’i, Buddhist, and Sikh communities. Members include national denominations and faith groups, regional organizations and local congregations.
www.nrcat.org
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