The US military has provided conflicting reports
of a clash that took place Thursday between guards and prisoners at the
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba internment camp. Initially, a spokesman reported that
inmates, wielding improvised weapons, had confronted guards when the latter
attempted to prevent another detainee from committing suicide. The suicide
attempt was said to be the fourth of the day.
Navy Commander Robert Durand, public affairs director for
the US prison and interrogation network, claimed that “minimum force was used
to quell the disturbance and prevent the suicide.” Two of the four men who
attempted suicide were reportedly hospitalized and under observation. Those
involved in the riot were moved to maximum-security confinement. No names or
nationalities were revealed. Durand disingenuously told the media, “At this point, I
have no idea of the motive, no idea of any coordination and no idea of any
intended message.”
During a media teleconference later on Friday, Navy Rear
Admiral Harry B. Harris Jr., commander of Joint Task Force Guantánamo,
described events that were more in the order of a minor uprising. Harris told
reporters that inmates had lured guards into a dorm-like room by a prisoner
pretending to prepare to hang himself. “When the guard force entered the
compound to intervene, they were then assaulted by the other detainees in the
block,” he said. “The detainees had slickened the floor of their block with
feces, urine and soapy water in an attempt to trip the guards. They then
assaulted the guards with broken light fixtures, fan blades” and other weapons.The American guards, according to a Reuters report, “used
pepper spray and then blasted the inmates with several shots from a shotgun
that fired rubber balls to gain control of the inmates and used an M203 grenade
launcher that shot a blunt rubber object, US officials said. The fighting
lasted four to five minutes, they said, and the detainees at one point were
winning the fight.” Six prisoners were injured. Army Colonel Michael I. Bumgarner, commander of the Joint
Detention Group, who was also on the conference call, told reporters that two
guards were knocked to the ground after inmates jumped on them from beds. “We
were losing the fight at that point,” he said. Bumgarner said the fighting
lasted about an hour in total. He claimed that fifteen guards worked in support
of the 10-man rapid response team that subdued the inmates. According to the
Armed Forces Press Service, “While authorities worked to end the fighting in the
first bay, detainees in two other bays began acting out by damaging their
accommodations, destroying fans, light fixtures and security cameras.” As for the wave of suicides, Harris claimed that one
detainee was found unconscious early in the day after deliberately overdosing
on medication. Another prisoner “complained of dizziness after taking about
five pills.... It turns out that this detainee simply had a bad reaction to
drugs prescribed to him. This was not a suicide attempt.” But later a second genuine
suicide attempt was discovered. Harris asserted that “this detainee is also
stable and unconscious at the naval hospital.” Another inmate told guards he
had tried to kill himself, but did not have sufficient drugs, Harris told the
news conference, so this was not considered a real attempt. “At the end of the
day, we have two confirmed suicide attempts,” he remarked. Whatever actually occurred May 18, and there is good reason
to be skeptical about every word that comes out of the mouth of a US military representative,
the events underscore the hellish conditions at the internment camp, whose
existence is a national disgrace. In the minds of many millions of people
around the world, ‘Guantánamo’ is identified with perpetual incarceration
without trial and various forms of mental and physical torture. Its
establishment in January 2002 contravened international law and it has remained
an outpost of illegality and sadism ever since. And yet there is no outrage in
the US mass media or the Democratic Party, all of whom are the Bush
administration’s accomplices in this criminal enterprise. On the same day as violence erupted at Guantánamo, the
United Nations Committee Against Torture urged that the detention center be
closed, observing that the detention of persons indefinitely without charge
“constitutes per se a violation of the Convention [Against Torture].” Following the clash May 18, Durand claimed that there had
been 39 suicide attempts by 23 prisoners since the internment camp opened in
January 2002. This flies in the face of information provided earlier by the
American military. The US Southern Command previously reported some 350
“self-harm events” and “hanging gestures” in 2003 alone. In one weeklong
protest in 2003, it said 23 prisoners attempted to hang or strangle themselves.
The Southern Command documented 110 suicide attempts in 2004. One prisoner, Jumah al-Dossari, a 31-year-old Bahraini, has
allegedly tried to take his own life some 12 times. An attorney for al-Dossari,
Joshua Colangelo-Bryan, said that he visited his client recently and saw scars
on his throat and the back of his neck from his most recent attempt in March.
Colangelo-Bryan, told the Associated Press that the suicide attempts reflect
the desperation of detainees held for more than four years with no idea when,
if ever, they will be released. “Under these circumstances, it’s hardly
surprising that people become desperate and hopeless enough to attempt
suicide,” the attorney commented. In a statement al-Dossari composed in July 2005, which was
made available to Amnesty International, he wrote of “the revolting torture and
those vile attacks which were a humiliation and will continue to be a vile
stain on history, memories that whenever I look back on them, I wonder how my
soft heart could bear them, how my body could bear the pain of the torture and
how my mind could bear all that stress. How I wish my memories and my thoughts
could be forgotten.” According to Amnesty International, “On 15 October 2005,
Jumah al-Dossari attempted to hang himself after going into the toilet during
an interview with his lawyer. In November 2005 he told his lawyer that he had
wanted to kill himself so that he could send a message to the world that the
conditions at Guantánamo are intolerable. He added that he had tried to do it
in a public way so that the military could not cover it up and his death would
not be anonymous. This suicide attempt left him with a broken vertebra and 14
stitches in his right arm.” A hunger strike that began last August at Guantánamo
involved some 131 prisoners. In response, the military resorted to strapping
prisoners into restraint chairs in cold isolation cells and force-feeding them.
The brutal US actions were denounced by 263 doctors, including famed
neurologist Oliver Sacks, in a letter to Lancet, the British medical journal,
published in March 2006. The statement noted that the World Medical
Association, to which the American Medical Association is a signatory,
specifically prohibits force-feeding. Several prisoners continue to refuse food
and are still being force-fed. Some 460 detainees remain at the Guantánamo Bay facility,
out of a total of 759 who have been incarcerated there. Many have been
transferred to their home countries, with their fates unknown. In its report
calling for the closure of the prison camp, the UN Committee Against Torture
urged the US government to “permit access by the detainees to judicial process
or release them as soon as possible, ensuring that they are not returned to any
State where they could face a real risk of being tortured, in order to comply
with its obligations under the [international anti-torture] Convention.”
The report also recommended that Washington should avoid
using secret detention facilities and investigate and disclose the existence of
any such prisons. It called for an end to all forms of torture, by military or
civilian personnel, from detention centers under US control and the prosecution
and punishment of all perpetrators of acts of torture and responsible
superiors. The Committee criticized the practice of sending suspects to states
where they may be tortured, the practice known as “extraordinary rendition.” It
asked the US to report back within a year with its response to the concerns
about secret prisons, extraordinary rendition and the use of interrogation
techniques that have resulted in deaths. The Bush administration rejected the Committee’s findings
out of hand. State Department legal adviser John B. Bellinger III, who led the
American delegation at the UN panel, claimed that the committee had not read
much of the information Washington had provided, or had ignored it. “There are
a number of both factual inaccuracies and legal misstatements about the law
applicable to the United States,” Bellinger told the press. In fact, the Committee, which has no power to enforce its
recommendations, acted quite timidly, considering the record of US abuses.
Fearful of offending Washington, Andreas Mavrommatis, a Cypriot human rights
expert who chaired the panel’s review of American conduct, told the media the
report should not be blown out of proportion because overall the US has “a very
good record of human rights.” George W. Bush’s new press secretary Tony Snow told the
Associated Press, “It is important to note that everything that is done in
terms of questioning detainees is fully within the boundaries of American law.”
Snow asserted that the US ensures detainees have food, clothing and other basic
necessities as well as giving them the chance to worship. “In short,” Snow
said, “we are according every consideration consistent with not only the law
but the needs of safety and security at Guantánamo to the people who are
there.” This is a lie, as the testimony not only of former
detainees, but FBI officials and others, has revealed. The most savage
treatment has been meted out to prisoners at Guantánamo—beatings, sexual
humiliation and other forms of physical and mental torture The list of sanctioned techniques, approved by Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld in December 2002, included the use of “stress
positions,” clothing removal, 20-hour interrogations, isolation for up to 30
days, sensory deprivation, deceptions, such as pretending the interrogator was
from a country known for torture (“false flag”), and inducing stress by playing
upon detainee phobias (such as fear of dogs). One FBI official, in an August 2004 memo, revealed how the
US military was “according every consideration” to the prisoners at Guantánamo:
“On a couple of occasions, I entered interview rooms to find a detainee chained
hand and foot in a fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food or water.
Most times they had urinated or defecated on themselves and had been left there
for 18-24 hours or more.... On another occasion, the A/C had been turned off,
making the temperature in the unventilated room probably well over 100 degrees.
The detainee was almost unconscious on the floor with a pile of hair next to
him. He had apparently been literally pulling his own hair out throughout the
night.” This is not the first UN report recommending the
closure of the notorious military concentration camp. In February 2006 the
Commission on Human Rights, alleging that some aspects of the treatment
amounted to torture, advised the US government to “close the Guantánamo Bay
detention facilities without further delay.” It also called on Washington to
“refrain from any practice amounting to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment, discrimination on the basis of religion, and
violations of the rights to health and freedom of religion. In particular, all
special interrogation techniques authorized by the Department of Defense should
immediately be revoked.” US officials dismissed the report, calling its charges
“largely without merit.” By David Walsh - Reproduced from the World Socialist Website
www.wsws.org |