While
the Guantánamo Bay prison camp has faded as a political issue, the
conditions there have been dramatically deteriorating. For several
months, prisoners have been mounting intense protests, in response to
grievances with guards and frustration with their legal status. They
have conducted hunger strikes, battled with guards, and thwarted the
camp’s surveillance system.
On
Saturday, U.S. officials decided the prisoners had gone too
far. Officials raided the camp, emptying prison cells, and
forcing some detainees into isolation.
The
Miami Herald’s CarolRosenberg, who has covered Guantánamo for over a decade, reports
that while the U.S. has sought to provide more humanitarian
conditions for detainees, the recent tensions reflect frustration
with the endless legal limbo in the camp:
By the time President Barack Obama took office, the prison camps had established communal confinement in a prison called Camp 6 that was more in the spirit of the Geneva Conventions, with … TV, books and, for well-behaved captives, wristwatches…But [there have been] mounting tensions at the camp… following a particularly aggressive cell search held Feb. 6.
…Lawyers for the captives said a wide-ranging hunger strike was underway, and some described seeing long-held, once plump prisoners wasting away before their eyes. The strike, they said, was sparked by what the captives considered abusive searches of their Qurans … fueled by years of frustration at their status of legal limbo.
Rosenberg
reports that there are 43 prisoners on hunger strike. The U.S. is now
force-feeding 13 of them, in order to keep them alive. The guards
have also lost a measure of “control over life” in the prison,
Rosenberg reports: ”The captives could be seen systematically
disobeying communal camp rules. They covered surveillance cameras in
individual cells with cereal boxes. They refused to admit food carts
to the cellblocks.”
Obama
officials emphasize that they had advance notice about recent changes
at the prison, such as moving detainees into individual cells, and
they are monitoring developments closely. That may be fine for crisis
management, but there is very little talk about actually addressing
the core problems at Guantánamo Bay.
About 166prisoners remain in the camp today. That reflects progress–over
700 men have been imprisoned there–but also stalemate. Twelve years
after the Afghanistan war began, these remaining prisoners are people
who have been cut off from their entire world, mostly without any
trial to address the charges against them, let alone their guilt or
innocence. And that’s not all.
It
is well known that many detainees are not high-ranking
terrorists. As early as 2003, Donald Rumsfeld privately objected
to how many “low-level enemy combatants” wound up in the
prison. According to a comprehensive 2006 analysis of Defense Department data, most detainees were not affiliated with terrorist
groups. (The report was from Seton Hall University, applying a
terrorist definition was based on the U.S. government’s terrorist
list.) A
high error rate, of course, does not mean the prison should just be
emptied.
Nor
could it, since Congress severely restricted the Obamaadministration’s options for transferring detainees. As one former
National Security Council official told me last year, “Congress has
put up as many roadblocks as possible to keep the Guantanamo Bayprison open.”
So
the prison stays open, while the door to fair trials is pretty much
closed. A reassessment of Guantánamo justice is long overdue.
Source:
msnbc
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