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cal04 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-17-06 11:56 PM
Original message
How US hid the suicide secrets of Guantanamo
After three inmates killed themselves, the Pentagon declared the suicides an act of 'asymmetric warfare', banned the media and went on a PR offensive. But as despair grows within the camp, so too does outrage mount at its brutal and secretive regime

In Guantanamo Bay's Alpha Block, the night was like any other: sweltering and seemingly endless. Although the temperature was down to the high 70s outside, the block's steel roof and walls were radiating heat, and in the two facing rows of 24 cells it felt little cooler than it had at midday. 'The nights are worse than the days,' the British former prisoner Shafiq Rasul recalled yesterday. 'You hear the rats running and scratching. The bugs go mad and there's no air. Especially where that block is: there's no breeze whatsoever.'

According to Guantanamo's rules, a six-person team of military police should have been patrolling constantly, and as usual the bright neon lights stayed on. A guard should have passed each detainee's cell every 30 seconds. 'From the landing, you can see right into every cell,' said Rasul. 'They don't have doors, just gates made from wide-spaced mesh. There's no privacy. If you hang up a towel because you want to go to the toilet, they make you take it down.'


(snip)
By the time of my own visit in October 2003, a fifth of them were on Prozac and there had been so many suicide attempts - 40 by August 2003 - that the Pentagon had reclassified hangings as 'manipulative self-injurious behaviours'. Cannily, perhaps, it has refused to give exact statistics on how many SIBs have occurred, claiming that since the reclassification there have been (until last week) only two genuine attempted suicides.

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,1800218,00.html
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-18-06 12:20 AM
Response to Original message
1. Ineptness, callous disregard. And now hangings classified as
manipulative? What happened to having respect for the powers that be? There used to be a few bad apples everywhere, but now the whole bushel is rotten? :(
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DELUSIONAL Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-18-06 12:38 AM
Response to Original message
2. Conditions like that would drive me to suicide
-- not knowing when or if I would ever get out of there and perhaps knowing that my fate upon returning home could be worse.

I believe that the suicide by these men was final control -- THEY took control of their lives.

We also know that they were never told that they had legal representation -- nor that at least one was due to be transfered.

Most of these men and children were apparently innocent -- merely in the wrong place at the wrong time.

In a way they are dead men walking -- what kind of a life will they have and can they be rehabilitated?

The leadership is stinking from the top down -- the military is so polluted -- the officers who remain are the ones who survived the Rummy/Cheney/bush purge -- and are in the same mold.

Humanity, compassion, Geneva Accords, Respect, Dignity . .. . . . . . huh ?? how is a spoiled, privileged, frat son of a bitch supposed to know about history?

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snappyturtle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-18-06 12:56 AM
Response to Original message
3. And we wonder why the world hates us! nt
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enough Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-18-06 08:48 AM
Response to Original message
4. A vivid look at the reality of this hell-hole.
snip>

One can also envisage what might happen if three men committed suicide on the same landing at the same time: public inquiries, sackings, outrage. All three had been on hunger strike, with few breaks, since the middle of last summer. This meant that, four times a day, they were strapped down in restraining chairs so that they could not move their limbs and force-fed through nasal tubes, inserted and removed each time - a process the Pentagon's own court documents state causes bleeding and nausea. It is not hard to see why that may have made them depressed.

According to newly declassified testimony by another prisoner shortly before the suicides, a guard recently told him: 'They have lost hope in life. They have no hope in their eyes. They are ghosts and they want to die. No food will keep them alive right now.' This prisoner, the former British resident Shaker Aamer, told his lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, that the three dead men and other hunger strikers were so ill whenever their feeds contained protein that it went 'right through them' causing severe diarrhoea.

Last week Rumsfeld got what he wanted: the removal of media scrutiny from Guantanamo's deepest crisis. Potentially embarrassing, perhaps very damaging, headlines have been averted, and tomorrow, with the most sensitive tasks in the wake of the deaths complete, Guantanamo's public affairs office will resume its chaperoned tours. But the bigger costs of shutting out the daylight are making themselves felt.

snip>
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Lars39 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-18-06 10:25 AM
Response to Original message
5. Remember the soldier that went missing from Gitmo?
I often wonder if he was going to try to expose these conditions and was killed himself or committed suicide.
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Mnemosyne Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-18-06 06:19 PM
Response to Original message
6. The ONLY way they could die was slowly.
Caps are mine for emphasis.

snip>

According to Guantanamo's rules, a six-person team of military police should have been patrolling constantly, and as usual the bright neon lights stayed on. A guard should have passed each detainee's cell EVERY THIRTY SECONDS. 'From the landing, you can see right into every cell,' said Rasul. 'They don't have doors, just gates made from wide-spaced mesh. There's no privacy. If you hang up a towel because you want to go to the toilet, they make you take it down.'

snip>

The high degree of surveillance HAS FOILED DOZENS of previous attempts by prisoners to take their own lives. 'It happened in front of me several times. The soldiers would see what was happening and they were in the cell in seconds,' Rasul said. But somehow, in circumstances that the Pentagon has succeeded in keeping totally obscure, late on Friday, 9 June, three detainees, all weak and emaciated after months on hunger strike and being force-fed, managed to tease bedsheets through their cells' mesh walls, tie them into nooses and hang themselves. With the cells little taller than the height of a man, they stood NO CHANCE of breaking their necks: THE ONLY WAY THEY COULD DIE WAS SLOWLY, by hypoxia.


'That would take at least FOUR OR FIVE MINUTES, PROBABLY LONGER', said Dr David Nicholl, consultant neurologist at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital, who has been co-ordinating international opposition to Guantanamo by physicians. 'It's very difficult to see how, if the landing was being properly patrolled, they could have managed to accomplish it.'

snip>

All three men, Gordon said, had been dedicated terrorists: 'These guys were fanatics like the Nazis, Hitlerites, or the Ku Klux Klan, the people they tried at Nuremberg.'





:grr::nuke::grr:
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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-19-06 10:41 AM
Response to Original message
7. Guardian: How US hid the suicide secrets of Guantanamo
How US hid the suicide secrets of Guantanamo
David Rose
Sunday June 18, 2006
The Observer

In Guantanamo Bay's Alpha Block, the night was like any other: sweltering and seemingly endless. Although the temperature was down to the high 70s outside, the block's steel roof and walls were radiating heat, and in the two facing rows of 24 cells it felt little cooler than it had at midday. 'The nights are worse than the days,' the British former prisoner Shafiq Rasul recalled yesterday. 'You hear the rats running and scratching. The bugs go mad and there's no air. Especially where that block is: there's no breeze whatsoever.'

According to Guantanamo's rules, a six-person team of military police should have been patrolling constantly, and as usual the bright neon lights stayed on. A guard should have passed each detainee's cell every 30 seconds. 'From the landing, you can see right into every cell,' said Rasul. 'They don't have doors, just gates made from wide-spaced mesh. There's no privacy. If you hang up a towel because you want to go to the toilet, they make you take it down.'

The high degree of surveillance has foiled dozens of previous attempts by prisoners to take their own lives. 'It happened in front of me several times. The soldiers would see what was happening and they were in the cell in seconds,' Rasul said. But somehow, in circumstances that the Pentagon has succeeded in keeping totally obscure, late on Friday, 9 June, three detainees, all weak and emaciated after months on hunger strike and being force-fed, managed to tease bedsheets through their cells' mesh walls, tie them into nooses and hang themselves. With the cells little taller than the height of a man, they stood no chance of breaking their necks: the only way they could die was slowly, by hypoxia.

'That would take at least four or five minutes, probably longer,' said Dr David Nicholl, consultant neurologist at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital, who has been co-ordinating international opposition to Guantanamo by physicians. 'It's very difficult to see how, if the landing was being properly patrolled, they could have managed to accomplish it.'

Accomplish it, however, they did. And virtually simultaneously. A little before midnight the bodies of Manei Shaman Turki al-Habadi, 30, and Yasser Talal al-Zahrani, 21, both from Saudi Arabia, and of a Yemeni, Ali Abdullah Ahmed, 29, were found on Alpha Block. How long they had been like that, the Pentagon will not disclose. Their mouths were stuffed with cloth, apparently to muffle any cries.

entire article
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-19-06 10:41 AM
Response to Reply #7
8. This begs the question, did they really take their own lives, and
simultaneously?
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dmoded Donating Member (105 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-19-06 04:58 PM
Response to Reply #8
10. just as...
the ones that staged that attack on their captors a few weeks back are probably just FINE right now *nudge nudge*.
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spanone Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-19-06 02:39 PM
Response to Original message
9. Our children's children will pay for these crimes against humanity.
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