Prisoners in Camp 4 at Guantanamo in 2009 line up for
morning prayers. These are some of the prisoners
regarded as cooperative or not significant -- perhaps
amongst the 89 who have been cleared for release, but
are still held (Photo: Michelle Shephard/The Toronto
Star). |
Today,
prisoners at Guantánamo will embark on a peaceful protest,
involving sit-ins and hunger strikes, to protest about their
continued detention, and the continued existence of the prison
at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, three years after President Obama came
to office promising to close it within a year, and to show their
appreciation of the protests being mounted on their behalf by
US citizens, who are gathering in Washington D.C. on Wednesday
to stage
a rally and march to
urge the President to fulfill his broken promise.
Ramzi Kassem, a
law professor at the City University of New York, and one of the
attorneys for Shaker
Aamer, the last British resident in Guantánamo, said that
his client, who is held in isolation in Camp 5, told him on his
last visit that the prisoners would embark on a peaceful protest
and hunger strike for three days, from Jan. 10 to 12, to protest
about the President’s failure to close Guantánamo as promised.
He explained
that the men intended to inform the Officer in Charge ahead of
the protest, to let the authorities know why there would be
protests, and added that the prisoners were encouraged by the
“expression of solidarity” from US citizens planning protests on
Jan. 11, the 10th anniversary
of the opening of the prison.
Kassem also
said that another of his clients, in Camp 6, where most of the
prisoners are held, and where, unlike Camp 5, they are allowed
to socialize, stated that prisoners throughout the blocks were
“extremely encouraged” by reports of the protests in Washington
D.C.
The prisoner,
who does not wish to be identified, also said that banners and
signs had been prepared, and that there would be peaceful
sit-ins in the communal areas. He added that the prisoners were
concerned to let the outside world know that they still reject
the injustice of their imprisonment, and feel that it is
particularly important to let everyone know this, when the US
government, under President Obama, is trying to persuade the
world that “everything is OK” at Guantánamo, and that the prison
is a humane, state of the art facility.
He also
explained that the prisoners invited the press to come to
Guantánamo and to request interviews with the prisoners, to hear
about “the toll of a decade” of detention without charge or
trial, and said that they “would like nothing more” than to have
an independent civilian and medical delegation, accompanied by
the press, be allowed to come and talk to the 171 men still
held.
In Camp 5,
Shaker Aamer and the other men still held there will not be able
to stage a sit-in, as they are unable to leave their cells, but
they will participate in the protests by refusing meals.
No one knows
how the authorities will respond to the protests, especially as
the new commander of Guantánamo, Navy Rear Adm. David Woods, has
gained a reputation for punishing even the most minor
infractions of the rules with solitary confinement.
According to
Kassem, prisoners have complained that the new regime harks back
to the worst days of Guantánamo, between 2002 and 2004, when
punishments for non-cooperation were widespread.
Of the 171 men
still held at Guantánamo, 89
were “approved for transfer” out
of Guantánamo by a Task Force of career officials and lawyers
from the various government departments and the intelligence
agencies, and yet they remain held because of Congressional
opposition and President Obama’s unwillingness to tackle his
critics. 36 others were recommended for trials, and 46 others
were designated for indefinite detention without charge pr
trial, on the basis that they are too dangerous to release, but
that there is insufficient evidence against them to put them on
trial.
That is a
disgraceful position for the government to take, as indefinite
detention on the basis of information that cannot be used as
evidence indicates that the information is either tainted by
torture, or is unreliable hearsay. It remains unacceptable that
President Obama approved the indefinite detention of these men
inan
executive order last March, even though he also promised
that their cases would be subject to periodic review.
Just as
disgraceful, however, is the fact that all of
the 171 prisoners still at Guantánamo face indefinite detention,
as none of them can leave the prison given the current
restrictions. That ought to trouble anyone who cares about
justice and fairness, and the protests by the prisoners, on the
10th anniversary
of the opening of Guantánamo, ought to convey, more eloquently
than any other method, why the pressure to close the prison must
be maintained.
Note:
For further information, to sign up to a new movement to close
G, and to sign a new White House petition on the “We the People”
website calling for the closure of Guantánamo, visit the new
website, “Close
Guantánamo.”
SOURCE:
The World Can`t Wait Andy
Worthington is the author of The
Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s
Illegal Prison. |