Guantánamo
Bay hunger strike prompts arrival of medical back-up
US
military confirms presence of 40-strong team as 21 of 100 detainees
refusing food are approved for force-feeding
29
April, 2013
A
40-strong medical back-up team has arrived at Guantánamo Bay, as the
number of inmates taking part in a hunger strike continues to rise,
the US military has confirmed. By Monday, 100 detainees were refusing
food, with 21 having been approved for force-feeding.
Authorities
said that the "influx" of medical reinforcements had been
weeks in the planning. But the news will fuel speculation that the
condition of hunger-striking prisoners at Guantánamo Bay is
deteriorating. Shaker Aamer, the last British resident being kept at
the centre, told his lawyer earlier this month that authorities will
soon see fatalities as a result of the current action.
"I
cannot give you numbers and names, but people are dying here,"
said Aamer, who is refusing food.
The
action is a protest against conditions at the centre, as well as the
indefinite nature of the remaining prisoners' confinement. Aamer has
been cleared for release twice, but is still behind bars after 11
years. He has never been charged or faced trial but the US refuses to
allow him to return to the UK, despite official protests by the
British government.
Of
the 166 detainees left at Guantánamo, almost two-thirds are on
hunger-strike. Five of those approved by guards to be subjected to
force-feeding are in hospital.
Increased
media attention to the plight of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay has led
to renewed calls for President Barack Obama to close the camp. In the
face of pressure from Congress, Obama dropped a 2008 campaign pledge
to close the camp.
The
current hunger strike is believed to have begun on 6 February and
initially involved a minority of detainees. But the number taking
part has steadily increased. Two weeks ago, guards attempted to break
the resolve of those refusing food by moving detainees from communal
areas and placing them in single cells, where they could be monitored
more closely. That action led to violent clashes in which US troops
fired four "less-than-lethal" rounds on inmates.
US
authorities said on Monday that the decision to bring in a back-up
medical team was made as increasing numbers of inmates began to
refuse food. "We will not allow a detainee to stave themselves
to death and we will continue to treat each person humanely," a
Guantánamo Bay spokesman, Lt Col Samuel House, said.
He
added: "Detainees have the right to peacefully protest, but we
have the responsibility to ensure that they conduct their protest
safely and humanely."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.