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US attorney general in Guantanamo Call to relax Guantanamo regime
(about 3 hours later)
New US Attorney General Eric Holder is visiting Guantanamo Bay - his first trip to the controversial US detention camp in Cuba. A US defence department review of conditions at Guantanamo Bay detention camp has called for an easing of the isolation of prisoners there.
He is being briefed on the detainees and the charges they were facing before military trials were halted last month. The Pentagon report says inmates should be allowed more social interaction and opportunities for recreation.
Mr Holder is also reviewing cases of some 250 remaining inmates, following President Barack Obama's order to close the camp within a year. It comes as new US Attorney General Eric Holder pays his first visit to the controversial facility in Cuba.
Meanwhile, a UK inmate returned from the camp to Britain earlier on Monday. Last month, President Barack Obama ordered the Guantanamo Bay camp to be closed within one year.
Ethiopian-born Binyam Mohamed, 30, had been held in Guantanamo for more than four years and says he was tortured. About 250 prisoners are still held there, nearly all without charge.
He became the first Guantanamo prisoner released by the new administration. Among them was a UK inmate, who returned from the camp to Britain earlier on Monday.
Mr Holder is making his visit away from the media glare, the BBC's James Coomarasamy in Washington says. Ethiopian-born Binyam Mohamed, 30, was held in Guantanamo for more than four years and says he was tortured.
It comes as the Obama administration wrestles with the legal, practical and security implications of its pledge to shut Guantanamo, our correspondent says. He became the first Guantanamo prisoner released since Barack Obama took office.
'Humane treatment'
The report, by Adm Patrick M Walsh, says conditions at the camp comply with the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners.
However, it recommends allowing more socialisation among prisoners, many of whom are confined to their cells for 23 hours a day.
The key to socialisation is providing more human-to-human contact Pentagon report Freed detainee 'happy to be home'
Such interaction "is essential to maintain humane treatment over time", the report says.
"In our opinion, the key to socialisation is providing more human-to-human contact, recreation opportunities with several detainees together, intellectual stimulation, and group prayer," AFP news agency cited the report as saying.
Mr Holder is being briefed on the detainees and the charges they were facing before military trials were halted last month.
The attorney general is making his visit away from the media glare, the BBC's James Coomarasamy in Washington says.
It comes as the Obama administration wrestles with the legal, practical and security implications of its pledge to shut Guantanamo, he adds.