Breaking news from the Royal Gazette--" Huge protest outside Cabinet":

Hundreds of people gathered in front of the Cabinet building this afternoon to call for the Premier to step down following his decision to bring four Guantanamo detainees to Bermuda without consulting with the Governor or the UK Government. The huge crowd first heard speeches by rally organisers outside Sessions House demanding Dr. Ewart Brown's resignation, before marching en masse to the Cabinet lawn. ... The UK Government and Governor Sir Richard Gozney have expressed their anger that Dr. Brown did not consult the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and only involved his colleague Immigration Minister Senator David Burch in his plans.

You might think that "hundreds" don't quite make a protest "huge", but by sleepy, tiny Bermuda's standards these protests are nothing to scoff at. And the Bermudians aren't simply protesting the autocratic manner in which the head of parliament agreed to take the Gitmo detainees. According to another Royal Gazette report, police are concerned about the security threat the Uighurs pose:

The Commissioner of Police only learned the four detainees from Guantanamo Bay were relocating to Bermuda last Thursday, the morning of their arrival. And he said a "preliminary threat assessment" of the men conducted by Police the following day described them as "high risk" - information passed on to Governor Sir Richard and Public Safety Minister David Burch later that afternoon.