"There is little question of how history will respond to Guantánamo…it will 
be looked back on with condescension and bemusement. How could we be so 
foolish, misguided, cruel? How we will respond is a legal question and a 
political question. But it is most of all a moral question. Will we respond 
with courage or cowardice? This is our choice."

- Joseph Margulies, a lawyer challenging the indefinite detention of the 
prisoners at Guantánamo

On January 11th, 2002, twenty hooded and shackled men shuffled off a plane 
from Afghanistan, arriving at the U.S. prison at Guantánamo. In an attempt 
to sidestep the Geneva Convention protections for prisoners of war, the 
Bush administration created a new category of “enemy combatant” for these 
men captured in the “war on terror.”

Since that time, more than one thousand men and boys have been imprisoned 
at Guantánamo. Accounts of cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment have 
been condemned by the United Nations, Human Rights Watch and other 
reputable bodies. The prisoners have resorted to hunger strikes as a way of 
protesting their treatment. Many have attempted suicide; three men killed 
themselves on June 10th 2006. Desperation, fear and frustration mark their 
confinement.

Five years later, not a single prisoner has been charged, tried or 
convicted of any crime. Many have been released because no evidence has 
been found against them, but more than 430 men remain in indefinite 
detention without hope of release. The United States has abandoned law and 
justice.

January 11th, 2007 marks five years of unjust imprisonment, isolation, 
beatings, interrogation and abuse for these men. We must say: no more. We 
must say: no longer. For our nation of laws, for our democracy, for our 
humanity and theirs, we demand small but essential steps to help return our 
nation to the best of our own traditions.

We call on the United States government to:

· Repeal the Military Commissions Act and restore Habeas Corpus.
· Charge and try or release all detainees.
· Withhold funds for the proposed $125 million construction of new military 
courts at Guantánamo.
· Clearly and unequivocally forbid torture and all other forms of cruel, 
inhuman, and degrading treatment, by the military, the CIA, prison guards, 
civilian contractors, or anyone else.
· Pay reparations to current and former detainees and their families for 
violations of their human rights.
· Shut down Guantánamo, Abu Ghraib, Bagram and all other U.S. prisons 
overseas, including secret CIA detention facilities.

We mark January 11, 2007 as a day of national shame. But we can also mark 
it as a day of citizen action. How? By acting on behalf of our fellow human 
beings in Guantánamo, their bereaved families and all victims of the “war 
on terrorism.”

We declare January 11, 2007 an International Day of Action to Shut Down 
Guantánamo. In Washington, DC we will march from the Supreme Court to the 
U.S. Federal Court. At the Supreme Court, Guantánamo Lawyers and others 
will address the press. Individuals will then proceed to Federal Court, 
taking on the names and identities of the men in Guantánamo and submitting 
Habeas petitions on their behalf. With our action and our bodies, we will 
forge the path that the Center for Constitutional Rights and other legal 
advocates demand on behalf of their clients. Outside the Federal Court on 
Constitution Avenue, people will read testimonies and names of prisoners, 
perform street theater and hand out information. There will be solidarity 
demonstrations from Amsterdam to Boise, Idaho and a National Call-In Day to 
Congress.

We invite you to come to Washington and participate, either as an 
individual or as part of an affinity group. If travel is not an option, 
join or plan an action in your own community. Around the country, groups 
are planning vigils and actions at courthouses, federal building and public 
squares. In other countries, the focus will be on U.S. Embassies and 
military facilities. For a full list of both National and International 
actions, visit www.witnesstorture.org

If you plan on coming to DC, we encourage you to form affinity groups and 
be in touch with organizers ahead of time for details on the scenario. 
Contact Matt Daloisio ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) or Frida Berrigan 
([EMAIL PROTECTED]). 



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