The prison camps at Guantanamo Bay were gripped
by a series of uprisings and disturbances which suggest a state of near revolt,
it has emerged. Reports from within the controversial detention centre in Cuba
claim the base's military commanders believe there were links between a series
of suicide attempts, medical emergencies and the violent clashes between 20
inmates and guards on Thursday [18th May].
It was "probably the most violent outbreak" in
the camp's four-year history, claimed Rear Admiral Harry Harris, the detention
and interrogation centre's commander. "These are dangerous men and
determined jihadists," he said.
The base's authorities suspect the incidents were
co-ordinated and fed off each other, but one former inmate and two lawyers
raised substantial doubts about the US military's account of the disturbances.
Moazzam Begg, the Birmingham bookshop owner released from
the camp last year, said the detention cells were too closely monitored and
controlled for inmates to organise a revolt so well. Clive Stafford Smith and
Brent Mickum, defence lawyers who regularly visit clients in the base, said
they suspected the official accounts were "rubbish".
Camp officers said the incidents began early on Thursday
morning in Camp 1, when an unconscious inmate was discovered in his cell.
Nearly seven hours later, another detainee was found unconscious, both from
taking anti-depressants which they had not been prescribed.
During the same period, another two men became ill - one
from an adverse reaction to his medication and a second who over-dosed,
allegedly in solidarity with the two unconscious men.
Five hours later, 10 inmates in another facility, a
normally peaceful communal compound for "compliant" prisoners called
Camp 4, allegedly provoked a confrontation with the prison's notorious
"quick reaction force". When the 10-man force arrived, the
authorities claim they were confronted by detainees wielding improvised weapons
made from a broken lighting tube, large fan blades, CCTV cameras which had been
ripped down from walls, and metal sheeting from buildings.
The floor of their shared bunkhouse had allegedly been
slickened with urine, excrement and soapy water, leading to two guards
slipping. The guards then used pepper-spray and rubber pellet shotgun blasts to
subdue the detainees - five of whom were treated for minor injuries.
About midnight, an elderly detainee was hit with pepper
spray and treated for minor injuries after inmates in another nearby camp
staged a further demonstration. Several guards suffered "cuts, scrapes and
bruises, just like a good football game," said Colonel Mike Burngarner,
the base's chief of detention operations.
The authorities claim the disruption was designed to create
further controversy about the camp, because inmates know Guantanamo Bay is the
subject of intense legal and political controversy. Next month, the US Supreme
Court is due to deliver a critical ruling on whether President Bush's
administration can legally refuse to block legal hearings for the 460 inmates
now there.
Col Burngarner told the Miami Herald that inmates believed
three detainees would need to die in order to provoke a worldwide backlash intense
enough to close the camp. Yesterday, Lord Goldsmith, the Attorney General,
repeated his demand for closure.
Mr Begg, who was seized by the CIA in Pakistan in 2002,
said he was sceptical that inmates would be able to avoid the round-the-clock
surveillance by CCTV cameras, foot patrols and watchtowers to make and hide
weapons. Medical staff were also scrupulous about ensuring detainees swallowed
their medication.
He added that electrical equipment such as fans and cameras
were normally out of reach. "It's not like a Second World War prisoner of
war camp where you can dig tunnels. There's so much security, day in, day out.
Everything is logged, everything is watched, everything is scheduled," he
said.
Mr Stafford Smith and Mr Mickum, who represent detainees
with close ties to the UK, said these unusually detailed and immediate accounts
by the US authorities confirmed the Bush administration had begun a public
relations offensive to rebuild support for the camp.
Reproduced from the Independent
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