The Intolerable Conditions Inside Obama's Guantanamo
Gitmo: Where Death is Preferable to Life
by MARJORIE COHN
More than 100 of the 166 detainees at Guantanamo are starving 
themselves to death. Twenty-three of them are being force-fed. “They 
strap you to a chair, tie up your wrists, your legs, your forehead and 
tightly around the waist,” Fayiz Al-Kandari told his lawyer, Lt. Col. 
Barry Wingard. Al-Kandari, a Kuwaiti held at Guantanamo for 11 years, 
has never been charged with a crime.
“The tube makes his eyes water excessively and blood begins to 
trickle from the nose. Once the tube passes his throat the gag reflex 
kicks in. Warm liquid is poured into the body for 45 minutes to two 
hours. He feels like his body is going to convulse and often vomits,” 
Wingard added.
The United Nations Human Rights Council concluded that force-feeding 
amounts to torture. The American Medical Association says that 
force-feeding violates medical ethics. “Every competent patient has the 
right to refuse medical intervention, including life-sustaining 
interventions,” AMA President Jeremy Lazarus wrote to Defense Secretary 
Chuck Hagel. Yet President Barack Obama continues the tortuous Bush 
policy of force-feeding hunger strikers.
Although a few days after his first inauguration, Obama promised to 
shutter Guantanamo, it remains open. “I continue to believe that we’ve 
got to close Guantanamo,” Obama declared in his April 30 press 
conference. But, he added, “Congress determined that they would not let 
us close it.” Obama signed a bill that Congress passed which erected 
barriers to closure. According to a Los Angeles Times editorial, 
“Obama has refused to expend political capital on closing Guantanamo. 
Rather than veto the defense authorization bills that have limited his 
ability to transfer inmates, he has signed them while raising questions 
about whether they intruded on his constitutional authority.”
“I don’t want these individuals to die,” Obama told reporters. In 
fact, Obama has the power to save the hunger strikers’ lives without 
torturing them. Eighty-six – more than half – of the detainees
remaining at Guantanamo have been cleared for release for the past three years. 
Section 1028(d) of the 2013 National Defense Authorization Act empowers 
the Secretary of Defense to approve transfers of detainees when it is in the 
national security interest of the United States. Fifty-six of the 
86 cleared detainees are from Yemen. Yet Obama imposed a ban on 
releasing any of them following the foiled 2009 Christmas bomb plot by a 
Nigerian man who was recruited in Yemen. Obama must begin signing these 
certifications and waivers at once.
Indeed, Obama said in his press conference, “I think – well, you 
know, I think it is critical for us to understand that Guantanamo is not 
necessary to keep America safe . . . It hurts us in terms of our 
international standing . . . It is a recruitment tool for extremists. It needs 
to be closed.”
In addition, Obama’s March 7, 2011 Executive Order 13567 provides for 
additional administrative review of detainees’ cases. The Periodic 
Review Board (PRB) would provide an opportunity for a detainee to 
challenge his continued detention. Yet Obama has delayed by more than a 
year PRB hearings at which other detainees could be cleared for release. 
Despite a requirement that the PRB begin review within one year, no PRB has yet 
been created. Obama should appoint an official to oversee the 
closure of Guantanamo and commence periodic reviews immediately so that 
detainees can challenge their designations and additional detainees can 
be approved for transfer.
Moreover, as suggested by Lt. Col. David Frakt, who represented 
Guantanamo detainees before the military commissions and in federal 
habeas corpus proceedings, Obama should direct the attorney general to 
inform the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals that the Department of Justice 
no longer considers the cleared detainees to be detainable. Obama has 
blocked the release of eight cleared detainees by opposing their habeas 
corpus petitions. “[W]hen the Obama administration really wants to 
transfer a detainee, they are quite capable of doing so,” Frakt wrote in JURIST.
The Constitution Project’s Task Force on Detainee Treatment, which 
includes two former senior U.S. generals, and a Republican former 
congressman and lawyer, Asa Hutchinson, issued a report that concluded 
the treatment and indefinite detention of the Guantanamo detainees is 
“abhorrent and intolerable.” It called for the closure of the prison 
camp by next year.
Twenty-five former Guantanamo detainees issued a statement 
recommending that the American medical profession stop its complicity 
with abuse force-feeding techniques; conditions on confinement for 
detainees be improved immediately; all detainees who have not been 
charged be released; and the military commissions process be ended and 
all those be charged tried in line with the Geneva Conventions.
The detainees who are refusing food have been stripped of all 
possessions, including a sleeping mat and soap, and are made to sleep on 
concrete floors in freezing solitary cells. “It is possible that I may 
die in here,” said Shaker Aamer through his lawyer, Clive Stafford 
Smith. “I hope not, but if I do die, please tell my children that I 
loved them above all else, but that I had to stand up for the principle 
that they cannot just keep holding people without a trial, especially 
when they have been cleared for release.” Aamer, a British father of 
four, was approved for release more than five years ago.
Col. Morris Davis, who served as Chief Prosecutor for the Terrorism 
Trials at Guantanamo, personally charged Osama bin Laden’s driver Salim 
Hamdan, Australian David Hicks, and Canadian teen Omar Khadr. All three 
were convicted and have been released from Guantanamo. “There is 
something fundamentally wrong with a system where not being charged with a war 
crime keeps you locked away indefinitely and a war crime 
conviction is your ticket home,” Davis wrote to Obama.
Marjorie Cohn is a professor of human rights at Thomas Jefferson School and 
former 
president of the National Lawyers Guild. Her most recent book is “The United 
States and Torture: Interrogation, Incarceration, and Abuse.” 
Seewww.marjoriecohn.com. 


http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/05/10/gitmo-where-death-is-preferable-to-life/


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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