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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2005-10/07feffer.cfm


Hunger Strike at Guantanamo
By John Feffer

For nearly four years, over 500 prisoners have been sequestered in Camp
Delta in Guantanamo, Cuba. They have not gone on trial. Only four have
been charged with any specific offense. They are not protected under the
Geneva Conventions.

They have no way of telling their stories to the outside world. And now,
after suffering all manner of indignations, from solitary confinement and
beatings to poor food and medical treatment, they have resorted to a
desperate measure. They have gone on a hunger strike.

First dozens, then more than 200 prisoners stopped eating in August.
Apparently hunger strikes have happened before at Guantamano, but until
recently the U.S. authorities prevented any information about them from
reaching the news media. Because U.S. authorities didn't fulfill their
earlier promises to improve conditions, more and more detainees have
joined the latest action. This time the hunger strikers have pledged to
fast until death. U.S. authorities have hospitalized and begun
force-feeding more than a dozen.

The Bush administration claims that the Guantanamo detainees are "unlawful
combatants" from the war in Afghanistan. Since they are presumed to be
"terrorists," the detainees are supposed to be getting what they deserve.
But the detainees include businessmen seized in The Gambia. A taxi driver
from Afghanistan spent a year in Guantanamo where he was repeatedly
interrogated, put in solitary confinement, never put on trial, and finally
released without explanation, apology, or compensation. Two other men
released after a year of captivity were, by their own reports, 99 and 105
years old. In early 2004, three minors aged 13 to 15 were released.

Among those that remain, it is likely that many were handed over to U.S.
authorities in exchange for a bounty offered by the U.S. military. On the
television show 60 Minutes, a U.S. military interrogator estimated that 20
percent of the Camp Delta inmates are innocent.

Under U.S. law, however, all detainees are considered innocent before
proven guilty. In Guantanamo, the prisoners are not only treated as guilty
but are punished in ways that would not be permitted in U.S. jails
(though, of course, here too the rules are often honored in the breach).
Detainee testimony of the abuse they suffered while at Camp Delta can be
found in the chilling book America's Disappeared that was jointly prepared
by the Center for Constitutional Rights and Human Rights Watch.

If the Bush administration treated the Guantanamo detainees according to
either international or American law, then the alleged transgressors could
use legal means to defend themselves. Instead, they are in a totalitarian
space controlled entirely by the U.S. military. The International Red
Cross is allowed to visit, but it cannot report on what it has seen.
Journalists are not allowed in; lawyers have irregular access.

The Bush administration has used the war on terrorism as a justification
to engage in extralegal activities. It has detained thousands throughout
the world. It "rendered" suspects by transporting them to countries where
torture is routinely practiced. To extract confessions in Afghanistan and
Iraq, the Pentagon encouraged interrogators to use violence and
humiliation. Amnesty International has identified 27 detainees who died
under suspicious circumstances in Iraq and Afghanistan. The pictures from
Abu Ghraib are just a small part of the story.

Camp Delta sits at the intersection of all that is wrong in U.S. foreign
and domestic policy. It represents the illegality of U.S. actions in
prosecuting the war on terror. But it also showcases the Bush
administration's attack on civil liberties at home. It indicates just how
much the military has taken over U.S. foreign policy. But it also shows
how the Bush administration has manipulated the media and warped the legal
system to its own ends.

Some of the prisoners at Camp Delta might be terrorists. Some might have
been enemy combatants. If they didn't dislike the United States before,
they surely do now.

But whatever they might be -- taxi driver or terrorist -- they deserve a
fair hearing and fair treatment. The hunger strikers at Guantanamo are
willing to put their lives on the line to achieve this basic human right.


John Feffer (http://www.johnfeffer.com) is the author of North Korea,
South Korea.

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