Guantanamo gulag getting worse

April 5th, 2007

The BBC reports on a new Amnesty International report — Cruel and Inhuman: Conditions of isolation for detainees at Guantánamo Bay — that conditions at Guantanamo are getting even worse, if that can be imagined. About 3/4 of the prisoners are being held in the worse-than-supermax conditions at Camp 5 and Camp 6, in conditions of near-total isolation and sensory deprivation. Imprisonment in such conditions often induces severe mental distress, not to mention possible permanent mental disorders. The most moving description of Camp 5’s horrors I’ve seen is attorney Brent Mickum’s Guantánamo’s lost souls. While Mickum’s client Bisher al-Rawi is now free, his other client, Jamil el-Banna, along with hundreds of others, remains in those horrifying conditions. Here is the BBC account:

Guantanamo conditions ‘worsening’

Conditions for detainees at the US military jail at Guantanamo Bay are deteriorating, with the majority held in solitary confinement, a report says.

Amnesty International said the often harsh and inhumane conditions at the camp were “pushing people to the edge”.

It called for the facility to be closed and for plans for “unfair” military commission trials to be abandoned.

Many of the 385 inmates have been held for five years or more, unable to mount a legal challenge to their detention.

“While the United States has an obligation to protect its citizens… that does not relieve the United States from its responsibilities to comply with human rights,” the report said.

“Statements by the Bush administration that these men are ‘enemy combatants,’ ‘terrorists’ or ‘very bad people’ do not justify the complete lack of due process rights,” the group said.

Amnesty reiterated its call for detainees at the prison camp in Cuba - many of whom are suspected Taleban and al-Qaeda fighters - to be released or charged and sent to trial.

‘Already in despair’

The report, published on Thursday, said about 300 detainees are now being held at a new facility - known as Camp 5, Camp 6 and Camp Echo - comparable to “super-max” high security units in the US.

The group said the facility had “created even harsher and apparently more permanent conditions of extreme isolation and sensory deprivation”.

It said the detainees were reportedly confined to windowless cells for 22 hours a day, only allowed to exercise at night and could go for days without seeing daylight.

The organisation’s UK director, Kate Allen, described the process at Guantanamo as “a travesty of justice”.

“With many prisoners already in despair at being held in indefinite detention… some are dangerously close to full-blown mental and physical breakdown.

“The US authorities should immediately stop pushing people to the edge with extreme isolation techniques and allow proper access for independent medical experts and human rights groups.”

‘Serving justice’

The provision that stripped detainees of their right to mount a legal challenge to their confinement was upheld by a US federal appeals court in Washington in February.

Pushing the anti-terror legislation through Congress last year, Mr Bush said he needed the new law to bring terror suspects to justice.

It allows for the indefinite detention of people as “enemy combatants”.

The US has said it plans to use the military tribunal system to prosecute about 80 of 385 prisoners remaining at the camp.

After reading this, please go to http://www.avaaz.org/en/close_guantanamo/?cl=5170861 and sign the Petition to Cl9ose Guantanamo Prison.

We call upon US President Bush to close Guantanamo Bay prison forever. Every detainee should be charged with a crime and tried in a legitimate court or immediately released. We further call on President Bush to respect international law and basic human rights in the handling of all current and future prisoners in US custody.


Sign!

Entry Filed under: Guantanamo, International Law, Law, Rights and Liberties, Torture, War Crimes

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. Psyche, Science, and Soci&hellip  |  April 5th, 2007 at 8:58 pm

    [...] In this letter, there is not one mention of the terrible human rights violations that have occurred, and are still occurring, at Guantanamo, not to mention the role of psychologists in those abuses. He ignores the evidence that it is precisely his pals, “the community of military psychologists, together with civilians who consult to national security and law enforcement,” who are reported by virtually every reporter who has looked into the matter — Jane Mayer (New Yorker), Mark Benjamin (Salon), Art Levine (Washington Monthly) — to be one ones who were sent to Guantanamo to develop torture techniques, not to prevent them. Evidently Dr. Gelles considers himself to be one of a tight-knit community with these people, not to mention those psychologists who helped developed the special technique used at the CIA black sites. [...]

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