Guantanamo Bay

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The world condemns Guantanamo Bay !!

NEW AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORT CONDEMNS CONDITIONS IN GUANTÁNAMO

The large majority of detainees who remain in Guantánamo are held in cruel conditions of isolation which flout international standards, according to a new report.

Most detainees have suffered harsh treatment throughout their detention, confined to mesh cages or maximum security cells. Moreover, a new facility which opened in December 2006, known as Camp 6, has created even harsher and apparently more permanent conditions of extreme isolation and sensory deprivation.

Detainees are confined for 22 hours a day to individual, enclosed, steel cells where they are almost completely cut off from human contact. The cells have no windows to the outside or access to natural light or fresh air. No activities are provided, and detainees are subjected to 24 hour lighting and constant observation by guards through the narrow windows in the cell doors. They exercise alone in a high-walled yard where little sunlight filters through; detainees are often only offered exercise at night and may not see daylight for days at a time.

The US authorities have described Camp 6 as a “state of the art modern facility” which is safer for guards and “more comfortable” for the detainees. However, Amnesty International believes that the conditions, as shown in photographs and described by detainees and their attorneys, contravene international standards for humane treatment. In some respects, they appear more severe than the most restrictive levels of “super-maximum” custody on the US mainland, which have been criticized by international bodies as incompatible with human rights treaties and standards.

It appears that around 80 per cent of the approximately 385 men currently held at Guantánamo are in isolation – a reversal of earlier moves to ease conditions and allow more socialising among detainees. According to the Pentagon, 165 detainees had been transferred to Camp 6 from other facilities on the base by mid-January 2007. A further 100 detainees are held in solitary confinement in Camp 5, another maximum security facility.

As many as 20 detainees are also believed to be held in solitary confinement in Camp Echo, a facility set apart from others on the base, where conditions have been described by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) as “extremely harsh”.

Shaker Aamer, a UK resident and former camp negotiator, has been held in total isolation in Camp Echo since September 2005. Saber Lahmer, an Algerian seized in Bosnia, has also spent the last 10 months in Camp Echo. Both men are reportedly confined to small, windowless cells with little exercise and no possessions apart from a copy of the Qu’ran. Saber Lahmer reportedly refused to leave his cell for a pre-arranged visit with his attorneys in March, causing grave concern for his mental health.

Security on the camp is reported to have significantly tightened following a protracted hunger strike and the deaths of three detainees from apparent suicide in June 2006. Many of those transferred to Camp 6 were previously held in Camp 4 where they lived communally in barracks and had access to a range of recreational activities. Camp 4 is now reported to house only around 35 detainees, down from 180 in May 2006.

“It appears that detainees are being placed in extreme lock-down conditions not because of their individual behaviour” AI said “but because of harsher camp operating procedures”.

Among those held in isolation in Camps 5 or 6 are detainees slated for release or transfer. They include a number Uighars, Chinese Muslims cleared for release but who cannot be returned to China because of the risk of persecution.

The organization is concerned that, as well as being inhumane, the conditions could have a serious adverse effect on the psychological and physical health of many of the detainees, exacerbating the stress inherent in their indefinite detention without trial or access to their families. Lawyers who have recently visited detainees in Camp 6 have expressed concern about the impact of the conditions on the mental state of a number of their clients.

Amnesty International is calling for Guantánamo to be closed and for detainees to be charged and tried under international fair trial norms or else released.

In the meantime, the organization is urging the US government to take immediate steps to alleviate conditions in the camp to ensure that all detainees are treated in accordance with international law and standards.

Such steps include ensuring that no detainee is subjected to prolonged solitary confinement in conditions of reduced sensory stimulation, and allowing detainees more association and activities as well as regular contact with their families with opportunities for phone calls and visits.

Amnesty International is also calling on the government to allow independent health care professionals into Guantánamo to examine detainees in private and to allow visits by independent human right organizations and UN human rights experts.

Source: Amnesty International

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UN INQUIRY DEMANDS IMMEDIATE CLOSURE OF GUANTANAMO

By Con Coughlin, Defence and Security Editor in New York

A United Nations inquiry has called for the immediate closure of America's Guantanamo Bay detention centre and the prosecution of officers and politicians "up to the highest level" who are accused of torturing detainees.

The UN Human Rights Commission report  concludes that Washington should put the 520 detainees on trial or release them.

It calls for the United States to halt all "practices amounting to torture", including the force-feeding of inmates who go on hunger strike.

The report wants the Bush administration to ensure that all allegations of torture are investigated by US criminal courts, and that "all perpetrators up to the highest level of military and political command are brought to justice".

It does not specify who it means by "political command" but logically this would include President George W Bush.

The demands are contained in the final report of the commission's working group on arbitrary detention.

Source: The Daily Telegraph

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KOFI ANNAN BACKS UN GUANTANAMO DEMAND

The UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, has said the United States must shut down Guantanamo Bay prison camp "as soon as is possible". Mr Annan backed a UN report calling for the closure of the camp where some 500 "enemy combatants" have been held without trial for up to four years. He said he did not agree with all findings, but said detainees could not be held "in perpetuity" without charge. The White House has dismissed the report as "a discredit to the UN". The UN says the US should try the approximately 500 inmates, or free them "without further delay". Mr Annan said bringing the detainees to trial would allow them to explain themselves.

Only a handful of detainees have been tried so far.

Source: BBC News

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AL - JAZEERA CAMERAMAN FREED FROM GUANTANMO BAY

KHARTOUM, Sudan - An Al-Jaze­era cameraman released from U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay re­turned home to Sudan early Friday after six years of imprisonment that drew worldwide protests.

Sami al-Haj, along with two other Sudanese released from Guan­tanamo prison in Cuba Thursday, arrived at the airport in Sudan's capital Khartoum on a U.S. military plane.

Al-Haj was detained in December 2001 by Pakistani authorities as he tried to enter Afghanistan to cover the U.S.-led invasion. He was turned over to the U.S. military and taken in January 2002 to Guantanamo Bay, where the United States holds some 275 men suspected of links to al-Qaida and the Taliban, most of them without charges.

Reprieve, the British human rights group that represents 35 Guan­tanamo prisoners including al-Haj, said Pakistani forces apparently seized al-Haj at the behest of the U.S. authorities who suspected he had interviewed Osama bin Laden, said.

But that "supposed intelligence" turned out to be false, Reprieve said in a news release.

"This is wonderful news, and long overdue," said Clive Stafford Smith, Reprieve's Director who has represented al-Haj since 2005. "The U.S. administration has never had any reason for holding Mr. Al Haj, and has, instead, spent six years shamelessly attempting to turn him against his employers at Al-Jazeera." The U.S. military says it goes to great lengths to respect the religion of detainees, issuing them Qurans, enforcing quiet among guard staff during prayer calls throughout the day. All cells in Guantanamo have an arrow that points toward the holy city of Mecca.

Al-Haj was the only journalist from a major international news organization held at Guantanamo and many of his supporters saw his detention as punishment for a network whose broadcasts angered U.S. officials.

Al-Haj said he believed he was arrested because of U.S. hostility toward Al-Jazeera and because the media was reporting on U.S. rights violations in Afghanistan.

The military alleged he was a courier for a militant Muslim organization, an allegation his lawyers denied. 

By Mohamed Osman
The Associated Press

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