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Home Front: WoT
Gitmo detaineesÂ’ frustrations simmering, say lawyers
2013-03-17
They'd be easier to handle if we turned the heat to 'parboil'...
Tensions between detainees and the military at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have spiked in recent weeks, with a hunger strike at one of the camps reflecting growing despair that the Obama administration has abandoned efforts to repatriate prisoners cleared for release, according to defense lawyers and other people with access to information about detention operations.

A majority of the 166 detainees remaining at Guantanamo Bay are housed in Camp 6, a facility that until recently held men the military deemed “compliant.” But the camp, where cell doors are left open so detainees can live communally, has been at the center of a series of escalating protests since January.

The lawyers and human rights advocates said there is a mass hunger strike at Camp 6 that is threatening the health and life of a number of detainees. In a letter to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, they said they have received “alarming reports” that men have lost “over 20 and 30 pounds” and that “at least two dozen men have lost consciousness due to low blood glucose levels.”

A military official said 14 detainees are on hunger strikes and six of them are being force fed. Others have been refusing meals but eating non-perishable food stashed in their cells, officials said.
We're required to offer them food. We're not required to force feed them.
In a statement, Navy Capt. Robert Durand, a spokesman for Joint Task Force Guantanamo, said “claims of a mass hunger strike . . . are simply untrue.”

The International Committee of the Red Thingy Cross, the only outside organization allowed unrestricted visits to the camps, said it visited Guantanamo from Feb. 18 to 23 and “is aware of the tensions at the detention facility.”

“The ICRC routinely follows the situation of detainees on hunger strikes and continues to do so today,” the group said in a statement. “The ICRC believes past and current tensions at Guantanamo to be the direct result of the uncertainty faced by detainees.”

Officials at the ICRC would not comment on information obtained by The Washington Post that a Red Thingy Cross employee was splashed with a mixture of feces and urine during the February visit. Durand said guards have been splashed with bodily fluids.
This is supposed to make us feel sorry for the inmates...
The immediate trigger for the protests was a series of searches in Camp 6 in which detainees alleged that their Korans were desecrated by guards who looked through them.

Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Todd Breasseale said that no member of the guard force ever touches a Koran and that any examination of Korans would be conducted by cultural advisers at Guantanamo, most of whom are Muslim. He also noted that detainees have in the past used their Korans to hide contraband.
Prisoners need to understand that we're not required to handle their holy books in any special way. If they've got contraband we're going to find it.
Of the remaining detainees at Guantanamo, the administration has said, more than 80 are cleared for release if they can be returned to their home country or resettled in a third country. But Congress has imposed a series of restrictions on transfers out of Guantanamo, which have ground to a halt.

In January, the administration closed the State Department office charged with negotiating the transfer of detainees and accelerating the closure of the facility.

“Part of this is the general, absolute loss of hope, people having forgotten about Guantanamo and the administration having no plan for closure,” said Pardiss Kebriaei, a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, which represents a number of detainees.
The CCR is a Soros-funded, neo-communist group. If Pardiss is whinging about 'absolute loss of hope' then I'm pleased with how it's going there...
Posted by:Steve White

#14  Sort of like jock itch?
Posted by: Matt   2013-03-17 20:58  

#13  "I'm seething! I tells ya! I'm Islamo-Seething©. It's the worst kind"
Posted by: Frank G   2013-03-17 20:52  

#12  Of course you're simmering with frustration. You're in prison, you morons. It's supposed to be unpleasant. It's kinda sorta the whole point.
Posted by: SteveS   2013-03-17 20:46  

#11  Feed the Gitmo detainees their Harvard lawyers. Oh wait they won't eat pigs.
Posted by: Airandee   2013-03-17 20:01  

#10  Hey Ship. I'm a Lakefront yat. Try any of the restaurants on Harrison Ave. (for the food, that is, not the po-lice.)
Posted by: Matt   2013-03-17 18:59  

#9  You depress me Matt.
Also: Hello.
I want to be at Trolley Stop #3 for breakfast with the cops.
Posted by: Shipman   2013-03-17 15:17  

#8  How about we implant a tracker under their skin, release them, and if they give us any trouble, drone zap them?

Or let it be known that a few of them have been released because they agreed to cooperate.
Posted by: Rambler in Virginia   2013-03-17 14:09  

#7  Our lads at GITMO may be something of a problem for the current regime. A select few have been released and have returned to their old careers in the Stans. Many of these chaps have been been tracked down and drone zapped. Purely conjecture, but it could be those remaining at GITMO may have told the Klingons to go fok off and keep the Pepsi, and fish and chips coming.

Wat to do with non-cooperative, double-agent flunk outs ?

Posted by: Besoeker   2013-03-17 11:55  

#6  Is the violin player on strike?
Posted by: tu3031   2013-03-17 11:45  

#5  #4 LG, roll the clock back a very few years to when the market for Ivy League law school graduates was tight and the evil Boosh was president. Big Law Firm wants to hire an editor of the Hahvahd Law Review because that's basically their business model, and is willing to pay mega-bucks for the kid. The kid wants the mega-bucks but is conflicted about becoming a corporate tool. So he insists that in addition to the mega-bucks Big Law Firm agree to let him stick it to Boosh by representing innocent terrorists. Big Law Firm says yeah, kid whatever, just be sure to put in your 3,000 billable hours. Big Law Firm gets the "talent", kid gets the $175,000 a year starting salary and keeps his conscience clean by filing endless paperwork on behalf of poor, poor Mahmoud. It's a win-win, unless you count the people Mahmoud murdered.
Posted by: Matt   2013-03-17 11:43  

#4  It is remarkable how many top ranked law firms and top ranked law profs are volunteering their time to represent and/or counsel the terrorist detainees.
Posted by: lord garth   2013-03-17 08:48  

#3  Others have been refusing meals but eating non-perishable food mountains of Memphis Style ribs stashed in their cells,
Posted by: Shipman   2013-03-17 03:30  

#2  so?
Posted by: Water Modem   2013-03-17 01:35  

#1  Enemy combatants, right? Shoot them all.
Posted by: Raj   2013-03-17 01:14  

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