We're at day 59 of a hunger strike at Gitmo - silence from the world media.
Gitmo
guards try to end hunger strike by making conditions worse’
Guards at the Guantanamo detention facility are attempting to end the ongoing hunger strike by making conditions for detainees more difficult, including lowering temperatures at the camp, Cindy Panuco, a lawyer for one of the prisoners told RT
RT,
26
January, 2013
Guards
at the Guantanamo detention facility are attempting to end the
ongoing hunger strike by making conditions for detainees more
difficult, including lowering temperatures at the camp, Cindy Panuco,
a lawyer for one of the prisoners told RT
The longest hunger strike
at the US prison in Guantanamo Bay began almost two months ago, and
there is no sign the crisis will be resolved. Some of the inmates
protesting over their mistreatment at the jail are reportedly close
to death.
To find out more about
the situation, RT spoke with Cindy Panuco, a lawyer for one of the
detainees who is currently at Camp Delta, Guantanamo Bay.
RT: The
man you represent has been in jail since 2002. Is he one of the
hunger strikers?
Cindy Panuco: Yes,
he has been hunger striking since February 6, 2013.
RT: What's
his condition right now?
CP: Well, I
have met with him for the last three days on Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday of this week. The first day that I saw him he was very weak,
he had not been able to sleep because he said that the camp
authorities had lowered the temperature in much of the camp to very,
very frigid temperatures. It appears that the guards are trying to
end the hunger strike by making conditions more difficult for the
prisoners here, including making the camp very cold.
And he had lost 40 pounds
when I saw him. He used to weight 167, and he’s now 125 pounds. His
condition is very, very weak, he is in a lot of pain, he’s having a
lot of stomach problems. It’s very sad.
RT: Is
your client prepared to die? How does he describe his motivation,
what are his exact demands?
CP: The
desecration of the Koran was one of the initial reasons why the
prisoners initially started the strike. They believed that the Koran
– which had not been searched by camp authorities for many years
now and has never been a security threat – has never been a reason
for any kind of security concern, would suddenly be searched again by
the camp authorities. It had not happened since when President Bush
was running the prison camp. And that was what started the strike.
And when the prisoners began to strike it seemed that camp
authorities began to treat them more harshly to try to end the
strike, and so many more men joined the strike to protest the
searching of the Korans and the worsening conditions and more
harsh treatment here. And also it’s the desperation that, instead
of getting better, things are getting worse here at the camp for
them. There are many men who are cleared for release, at least 86 of
them. Now they are also being treated as prisoners, and things as I
said are getting worse for them and not better and no hope.
RT: Why
can’t you help them as a lawyer?
CP: We have
been trying for many years. We’ve been challenging the detention in
civil courts in the US. Some of the judges who were ruling on these
cases have ordered for the men to be released, while others ordered
they cannot be released. In cases where judges ordered the release of
men, the government challenged those cases and appealed those orders.
Also, in my
understanding, President Obama has closed the one office headed by
Daniel Fried that had been established in the Department of State to
carry out the closing of Guantanamo. Now that the [office] has
been closed, it seems that there is no one in the government and the
administration to help with the closure of the prison. We continue to
just challenge the detention in our courts.
RT: Why
should Washington be worrying about what is happening in Guantanamo
Bay?
CP: Because
the reputation of the US in the world is at stake here. And if the US
does not come to the table, if government authorities do not come to
the table and discuss with the detainees the improvement of the
conditions here – there are men that are going to begin to die for
no reason at all, when the simple solution would be to stop the
searching of the Koran. Or, if not, to allow the men to turn over
their Koran so they are not searched. As simple as that. It would get
the men to be eating tomorrow and to be back on track to be healthy.
We hanged people for this crap at Nuremburg!!
ReplyDelete