| Close Guantanamo Now |
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Andy Rowell, 3 July 2006
Since 2002, over 750 inmates from some 40 countries have been imprisoned at the former naval base at But
right from the start, people argued that no one knows how long these
hostilities or the war on terror will last, least of all the Americans. If
fact the war on terror has now been renamed the long war, which in its very
own admission is a long time, in fact probably a conflict without end. The cynical reason that a bay in Cuba was chosen for the base
was that the US believed it was beyond the reaches of the US constitution and
international law. However a UN report earlier this year by human rights
inspectors, concluded categorically that the obligations of the United States
under international human rights law extend to the persons detained at
Guantánamo Bay. However the inhumane treatment the inmates were subject to violated
the Geneva Convention. In fighting his own war on terror, President Bush has
allowed his own rules of terror to be used.
Right from the start of their incarceration, inmates were routinely
subject to physical and psychological torture. Firstly,
detainees were denied a basic legal right that of legal representation, a
fair hearing and a trial. Only a handful of the 700 have ever actually been
charged with any offence. The rest have lived in what has been called legal
limbo, which means no right to a lawyer, no charges brought against them, no
right to a trial or even a fair, independent legal hearing. In fact no legal
rights at all, with no end in sight. By May 2005, the
human rights organization Amnesty International called Guantanamo the gulag
our times, entrenching the notion that people can be detained without any
recourse to the law. Amnesty called
on the US Administration to close Guantanamo as well as disclose just how many
prisoners there were. Either release the prisoners or charge and prosecute
them with due process, said the human rights group. But the US denied doing any wrong doing. Vice
President Dick Cheney replied: For Amnesty International to suggest that
somehow the United States is a violator of human rights, I frankly just dont
take them seriously. The US also refused to charge the prisoners. As of the
end of December 2005, only nine
detainees had been referred to a military commission. Despite Cheneys denial, the indefinite detention of prisoners is inconsistent
with the provisions of the Geneva Convention. A trial by a military commission
also violates international law. Secondly
the prisoners were subject to routine torture. Prisoners
were routinely shackled, chained, hooded and forced to wear earphones and
goggles. If they refused to do so they were stripped and forcibly shaved, which
included the shaving of beards, heads
and eyebrows. The UN human rights inspectors also found evidence of excessive
force being used including beating, kicking and punching as well as stripping
and the force-feeding of hunger strikes. Interrogation
techniques used at the base amounted to torture including: The use of stress positions (like standing)
for a maximum of four hours; a hood placed over the head during transportation
and questioning; Deprivation of light and auditory stimuli; the use of dogs,
exposure to extreme temperatures, sleep deprivation for several consecutive
days and prolonged isolation. In fact many of the torture techniques
that were being used at Abu Ghraib that shocked the world were first used at
Guantanamo. When the UN report was released in February
its conclusion was the same as Amnestys and many other human rights
organisations and lawyers: The United States Government should close the
Guantánamo Bay detention facilities without further delay, they said.
Typically, a White
House spokesperson responded by saying that it was a rehash of old
allegations based on lies. Bush told European dignitaries at the EU-US Summit in Vienna
last month, Id like to end Guantanamo. Id like it to be over with. For four
years Bush could have closed the camps. But he did not. Bush is the Commander
in Chief of US Forces. He is the ultimate decider of the fate of those at Guantanamo.
For four years he presided over a regime that tortured those within its care.
The majority of these, we now find out, were innocent. A study by the New
England law school earlier this year found that 90 per cent of the inmates
had nothing to do with terrorism what-so-ever. Even if Guantanamo closes
it does not mean that the US administration will respect and comply with
international law and conventions. If this gruesome camp is going to have a
legacy, then we must make the US comply with these laws. We must also make sure
that the US Administration is not allowed to open another gulag of our times.
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