Two Malay who were repatriated again to Malaysia after being held at Guantanamo Bay for 18 years for involvement in the Bali attacks of 2002 will go through a number of extensive deradicalization programs, according to Malaysia’s Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail.
In a Facebook post on Thursday ( Dec 19 ), Saifuddin outlined the government’s aim to ensure “holistic rehabilitation” of the two detainees to facilitate their reintegration into society in three main stages.  ,
Mohammed Farik Amin and Mohammed Nazir Lep were both repatriated to Malaysia before on Wednesday, according to the Pentagon. In connection with the Bali bombing of 2002, the two had entered a crime plea in January of this year. Since 2006, they have been detained at the notorious US defense jail in Cuba.  ,
Saifuddin confirmed the same day that his country had taken the two prisoners and is in favor of the resettlement, based on “principles of human rights and common justice” ( principles of human rights and common justice ).  ,
Saifuddin after stated in a social media post on Thursday that” the Malay Unity Government is concerned and concerned about the welfare of two Malay people who have left the Guantanamo Bay Detention Center.”  ,
The recovery program will first emphasize the support of the two people through their move into a new” controlled environment,” according to an infographic that comes with the article, followed by their reintegration into family life. The ultimate objective is to enable them to “live freely and efficiently within the neighborhood.”  ,
Saifuddin added that the police will continue to monitor the progress of their treatment through regular trips in order to make sure that the security of the two people remain protected.  ,
The view highlights the president’s strong commitment to the well-being of all people as well as the principles of the Madani state, which prioritize second chances and social justice, the minister said.
Free Malaysia Today ( FMT ) reported that Nazir, 47, and Farik, 48, had been in solitary confinement since their arrest in Thailand in 2003 by the US authorities in connection with the Bali bombings which killed 202 people.  ,
Following a pre-trial contract, they pleaded innocent to their position in the attacks and were sentenced to 23 years in prison in January of this year. They could be released after five years and moved to a second nation in accordance with the agreement.  ,
According to The New Straits Times, Farik and Nazir, along with many other Guantanamo Bay inmates, have never been tried before this year. After testifying against Encep Nurjaman, the alleged mastermind behind the problems, Encep Nurjaman, who is much known as Hambali, both men agreed with the prosecution to claims of being accessory to the Bali terror strikes under the terms of the plea deal in January.
Hambali is the former president of the Jemaah Islamiyah activity, an affiliate of Al-Qaeda.  ,