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Home Front: WoT
Guantanamo guards struggle with hunger striker
2008-10-25
Three years ago, the man known as Internment Serial Number 669 stopped eating.

Ahmed Zaid Zuhair, a compact 43-year-old with 10 children in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, had been held at Guantanamo Bay since 2002 without charges and decided to join a mass hunger strike in protest. The U.S. military was determined not to let him succeed.

Since then, according to court documents reviewed by The Associated Press, guards have struggled with him repeatedly, at least once using pepper spray, shackles and brute force to drag him to a restraint chair for his twice-daily dose of a liquid nutrition mix force-fed through his nose.

The documents, filed in federal court in Washington, are a rare look at the military tactics used on hunger strikers, which have sparked international condemnation but remained hidden from view, with officials refusing to even confirm the identity of the men taking part in the protest.

Zuhair's attorney, Yale Law School lecturer Ramzi Kassem, says the tactics described in the documents amount to "cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment." The military says the only reason it uses such tactics is that Zuhair is violent and dangerous.

"ISN 669 has a very long history of disciplinary violations and noncompliant, resistant and combative behavior," according to Army Col. Bruce Vargo, commander of Guantanamo Bay's guards.

Zuhair's protest is the remnant of a mass hunger strike at Guantanamo Bay that began in the summer of 2005, with prisoners celebrating the 10 Irish Republican Army and Irish National Liberation Army militants who starved themselves to death in Britain's Maze prison in 1981 while demanding political-prisoner status.

At its peak, there were 131 prisoners refusing meals at the U.S. Navy base in Cuba. The U.S. began force-feeding prisoners, but some were regurgitating the liquid-nutrient mix. In January 2006, commanders adopted a practice borrowed from American civilian prisons of strapping detainees into a special restraint chair for the feedings, and the number of strikers quickly dropped off.

Eventually there were just two: Zuhair and another Saudi, Abdul Rahman Shalabi. The number has since fluctuated and 10 were participating this week.

A number of prisoners have alleged brutal treatment during the hunger strike, and lawyers and human rights groups have accused guards of using unnecessary force. Kassem and other attorneys say their clients have mostly complied with the force-feeding, and that the U.S. has used rough treatment in an effort to break the strike.

Physicians for Human Rights, the World Medical Association and the United Nations, among others, have condemned the use of restraint chairs and other tactics. In a 2006 protest, Physicians for Human Rights said "the infliction of pain and suffering to discourage a hunger strike violates U.S. law and basic principles of human rights."

The U.S. military has denied any abuse, though it has offered few if any details about what happens between guards and prisoners behind the coiled-razor wire.

The Defense Department has said it is U.S. military policy to keep hunger-striking prisoners alive by appropriate clinical means and in a humane manner. And while the U.S. considers the detainees "enemy combatants" for whom the Geneva Conventions do not apply, it says it treats them in a humane manner that in some ways exceeds international standards.
Stalin had a way of dealing with hunger strikes: he let you starve yourself to death without interference. And he made sure that no one, no one, ever heard about it. So there was no moral value, no press value, and no good reason to do it.
Posted by:Fred

#3  If he's in Guantanamo, he was probably picked up as an unlawful combattant. Shoot him and his "hunger strike" is over. And stop giving the press ANYTHING - they just distort it and use it against us. Personally, some of the press NEEDS TO BE IN GUANTANAMO, THEMSELVES. Or shot - commander's choice.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-10-25 22:45  

#2  It is cruel, inhuman and degrading. Just put food in his cell and let him starve if he wants to.
Posted by: Darrell   2008-10-25 15:42  

#1  Leave a big ham sub for him...just out of reach, of course.....just to keep him honest.....
Posted by: Uncle Phester   2008-10-25 15:23  

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