HAMILTON, (Reuters) – Hundreds of protesters called for Bermudian Premier Ewart Brown to step down yesterday and accused him of acting like a dictator in allowing four Guantanamo prisoners from China to settle on the mid-Atlantic island.
Some 600 people gathered outside Parliament in the island’s capital Hamilton, waving banners and chanting “Brown must go” as they marched to the Cabinet office.
Brown emerged from the building and shouted to the booing crowd: “As some of you might know, I grew up in the protest era. This is nothing new to me. I have seen them larger and longer,” he said.
Under an agreement with Brown, the United States last week sent to the British territory four members of China’s Muslim Uighur minority who had been held at the Guantanamo prison camp long after the U.S. military and courts determined they posed no threat.
The United States said it could not send them to China because they faced persecution there, but U.S. politicians blocked efforts to release them in the United States.
The British government complained that it had not been consulted about the deal and questioned whether Brown had authority to admit the Uighurs.
In Bermuda, opponents who had earlier accused Brown of autocracy also condemned him for acting unilaterally.