Vigil To Close Guatanamo

July 13 White House Vigil to Support the Guantanamo Hunger
Strikers–Close Guantanamo & End Indefinite Detention

Over 106 Prisoners on Hunger Strike, 45 Force Fed

When: Friday, July 13, 2013, Noon – 1:00 p.m.

Where: White House-North side on Pennsylvania Ave.

“Where is the world to save us from torture? Where is the world to
save us from the fire and sadness? Where is the world to save the
hunger strikers?”

— Adnan Latif, Yemeni Guantanamo prisoner held for ten years without
ever having been charged with a crime and cleared for release on four
separate occasions, found dead in his cell on September 8, 2012.

July 13 will be day 156 of the Guantanamo hunger strike. As many as
120 prisoners are now participating in the hunger strike. The military
admits that 45 are being forcibly fed by tubes snaked through their
noses twice a day because they have lost so much weight.

Prisoners have appealed to doctors not to participate in this forced
feeding. Obama, who knows force feeding is condemned by the AMA and
the United Nations, said on May 17, as he once again promised to close
Guantanamo, “Look at the current situation, where we are force-feeding
detainees who are holding a hunger strike. Is that who we are?”
Apparently it is. And as Andy Worthington says, “We wait and we wait
and still nothing happens.” Instead an additional 125 U.S. troops were
recently sent to the prison to “contain” the situation.

On July 8 U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler dismissed a Syrian
detainee’s request to end force-feeding saying she lacks jurisdiction
to rule on conditions at the prison. However, she condemned the
military’s practice of force-feeding detainees as “painful,
humiliating and degrading” and said President Obama has the authority
to stop it.

The vast majority of the 166 men have been held for more than 11
years without any charge or fair trial, with no end to their detention
in sight although 86 have been cleared for release for years. Nearly
two months has passed since Yemeni officials seeking the repatriation
of the 56 Yemenis cleared for release agreed to set up a
rehabilitation center to help reintergrate them. But nothing has
happened since Obama lifted his ban on their repatriation.

The Obama administration must take immediate measures to address the
causes of the hunger strike and fulfill its promise to close
Guantanamo without further delay. And we demand an end to the illegal
policy of indefinite detention.

Finally, word of our actions is making it to the men at Guantanamo,
and making an enormous difference to them.

An attorney for several men at Guantanamo recently wrote Witness
Against Torture to say:

I was at GTMO all week meeting with clients. I wanted to share with
you the following words from . . . Moath al-Alwi, a Yemeni national
who has been in U.S. custody without fair process since 2002.

Moath was one of the very first prisoners to reach GTMO, where the
U.S. military assigned him Internment Serial Number (ISN 028). He has
been on hunger strike since February and the U.S. military is now
force-feeding him. Moath shared the following during our meeting,
translated as accurately as I could from the Arabic:

“I recently had an interesting conversation with one of the Navy
officers in charge of my force-feeding here at Guantanamo. He told he
was here to make sure I was treated humanely as I was being force-fed.
So I answered through the interpreter, saying:

‘What I am enduring now is torture and the American people will tell
you as much. Humanitarian organizations, various human rights bodies,
as well as American groups such as Witness Against Torture and Doctors
Without Borders have all declared that what is taking place at
Guantanamo is a violation of human rights and that it amounts to
torture.’

The officer’s face changed and he walked away.”

The men at GTMO are fully aware of your work and their eyes literally
tear up when I describe the various protest actions you and your
fellow activists have undertaken in solidarity with their plight. To
say they are grateful would be an understatement.

In response to this moving statement, WAT members Jeremy Varon and
Datt Daloisio wrote: “Our eyes fill with tears as we contemplate the
significance of what Moath shared: that our actions — however
inadequate we feel them to be — help the men at Guantanamo resist
assaults on their dignity and confront their persecutors, with added
confidence in the justice of their position and the world’s concern
for their plight. There can be no greater affirmation of the value of
our efforts, nor greater motivation for us to work harder.”

Raise your voice! Please join this important vigil to help save the
lives of the prisoners.

Sponsored by the Dorothy Day Catholic Worker and Witness Against Torture.

For more info about the campaign to Close Guantanamo and End Torture
and Indefinite Detention see: www.witnesstorture.org.)

1 Comment »

 
  1. sanjitagnihotri says:

    The root cause behind this is the national self-image of a people. Most people,of any given country,have a positive image of themselves,which they contrast with their neighbouring or other countries.Most Americans,deep down believe the best of themselves and not-so-good about the people of other countries,especially those with whom they have had a troubled history.At times of crisis,this national self-image comes under pressure and most of us go into denial of things like torture.

 

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