Guantánamo
hunger strikers make up half of inmate population, officials say
Eighty-four
of the 166 remaining detainees are on hunger strike, a figure almost
double the number previously released
21
April, 2013
More
than half of the remaining detainees at Guantánamo Bay are now on a
hunger strike, US military officials confirmed Sunday.
Of
the 166 inmates at the controversial detention camp in Cuba, 84 are
refusing all food as a protest against their indefinite confinement
and conditions at the centre.
The
figure is almost double the number previously released by officials,
although inmates and their lawyers have long suggested that a
majority of inmates were taking part.
Amongst
those refusing food is Shaker Aamer, who has spent 11 years at
Guantánamo. He remains behind bars despite being cleared for release
six years ago.
He
told the Observer – the Guardian's sister paper – on Sunday that
he had lost a quarter of his body weight since going on hunger strike
more than 60 days ago.
"I
barely notice all of my medical ailments any more – the back pain
from the beatings I have taken, the rheumatism from the frigid air
conditioning, the asthma exacerbated by the toxic sprays they use to
abuse us. There is an endless list. And now 24/7, as the Americans
say, I have the ache of hunger," Aamer said.
He
added: "I hope I do not die in this awful place. I want to hug
my children and watch them as they grow. But if it is God's will that
I should die here, I want to die with dignity. I hope, if the worst
comes to the worst, that my children will understand that I cared for
the rights of those suffering around me almost as much as I care for
them."
Of
the 84 prisoners on hunger strike, 16 are being force-fed. The
military has said that none have life-threatening conditions, but a
number of inmates and their lawyers have suggested that some men are
close to death as a result of the action.
Last
weekend, guards attempted to break hunger strikers' resolve by
forcibly removing them from communal areas and placing them in
solitary cells. The move led to violent clashes, with guards firing
"non-lethal" rounds on prisoners.
"The
military responds with violence, as if that will break us; it draws
us together," Aamer told the Observer.
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