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(FILES) This file photo taken on March 29, 2010 shows US military guards movING a detainee to an undefined facility inside Camp Delta in the Detention Center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The Pentagon on aPRIL 4, 2016 announced the transfer of two Libyan inmates from the Guantanamo Bay detention center to Senegal. "The Department of Defense announced today the transfer of Salem Abdu Salam Ghereby and Omar Khalif Mohammed Abu Baker Mahjour Umar from the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay to the government of Senegal," the Pentagon said in a statement. The latest transfers mean the remaining population at the controversial jail is now 89. / AFP / PAUL J. RICHARDS Image Credit: AFP

Washington: The United States has transferred nine Yemeni men to Saudi Arabia from the US military prison at Guantanamo, including an inmate who had been on a hunger strike since 2007, under a long-sought diplomatic deal between Washington and Riyadh, US officials said.

Saturday's transfer, which took place just days before President Barack Obama’s visit to Saudi Arabia for a summit of Gulf Arab allies, marked the latest step in his final push to close the controversial detention centre at the US naval base in Cuba before he leaves office in January 2017.

The Saudis agreed, after lengthy negotiations that at one point involved Obama and Saudi King Salman, to take the nine Yemenis for resettlement and put them through a government-run rehabilitation program that seeks to reintegrate militants into society, the officials said.

The group announced by the Pentagon was the largest shipped out of the Guantanamo Bay prison since Obama rolled out his plan in February aimed at shutting the facility. But he faces stiff opposition from many Republican lawmakers as well as some fellow Democrats.

There are now 80 prisoners at Guantanamo, most held without charge or trial for more than a decade, drawing international condemnation.

The most prominent of the transfers was Tariq Ba Odah, a 37-year-old Yemeni whom the military had been force-feeding daily since he went on a hunger strike in 2007. His legal team said he was down to 74 pounds, losing about half of his body weight.

Ba Odah’s lawyer, Omar Farah, said the US government had “played Russian roulette” with his client’s life and that his transfer “ends one of the most appalling chapters in Guantanamo’s sordid history.” His case was a source of legal wrangling between the US

Department of Justice and his lawyers, who had unsuccessfully sought his release on humanitarian and medical grounds, and also created divisions within the Obama administration.

But the transfer was considered a breakthrough since Riyadh had long resisted taking any non-Saudi nationals from the prison.

All nine men have family ties in Saudi Arabia, which borders Yemen. The Obama administration has ruled out sending Yemenis to their homeland because it is engulfed in civil war and has an active al Qaeda branch.

“The United States is grateful to the government of the kingdom of Saudi Arabia for its humanitarian gesture,” the Pentagon said in a statement.

Guantanamo prisoners were rounded up overseas when the United States became embroiled in wars in Iraq and Afghanistan following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington. The facility, opened by Obama’s predecessor George W. Bush, came to symbolise aggressive detention practices that opened the United States to accusations of torture.

Obama’s plan for shuttering the facility calls for bringing the several dozen remaining prisoners to maximum-security prisons in the United States. US law bars such transfers to the mainland but Obama has not ruled out using executive action to do so.

Ba Odah, who was captured by the Pakistani army along the Afghan border and was accused of receiving weapons training in order to fight with the Taliban, had been force-fed by nasal tube since he stopped taking solid food in protest at his detention. He was cleared for transfer in 2009.

Pentagon officials had said he was receiving proper care.

But his case was seen, until a recent uptick in transfers, as evidence of the Pentagon resisting Obama’s efforts to close the detention centre.

The other prisoners involved in the transfer were identified as: Omar Abdullah Al Hikimi, Abdul Rahman Mohammad Saleh Nasir, Ali Yahya Mahdi Al Raimi, Mohammad Abdullah Mohammad Al Hamiri, Ahmad Yaslam Said Kuman, Abd Al Rahman Al Qyati, Mansour Mohammad Ali Al Qatta, and Mashur Abdullah Muqbil Ahmad Al Sabri.

They were among a group of lower-level inmates, now numbering 26 and mostly Yemenis, who have been cleared for transfer by a US government inter-agency task force. US

officials have said they expect to move out all members of that group by this summer.