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Home Front: WoT
US rejects deal to end long Gitmo hunger strike
2009-03-19
The U.S. has rejected a Guantanamo prisoner's proposal to end his 3 1/2-year hunger strike in exchange for easing his conditions at the American prison in Cuba, saying such a deal would undermine security and encourage similar protests.
Sounds like a decision W would have made ...
A federal judge in Washington had urged U.S. authorities to consider the proposed deal in the case of Ahmed Zuhair, a Saudi prisoner who has refused to eat since the summer of 2005 and is force-fed a liquid nutrient mix to keep him alive.

The government responded with a court filing Tuesday, rejecting Zuhair's request to be moved from the high-security Camp 6 to the medium-security Camp 4, where prisoners live in a communal dorm-like setting, spend up to 20 hours a day outside and have other privileges.
Has there ever been a prison system anywhere in which one's living situation was not conditioned on one's behavior?
Army Col. Bruce Vargo, the officer in charge of prison operations at Guantanamo, said in court papers that Zuhair's history of infractions makes him ineligible for Camp 4 and that agreeing to transfer him would create a "very real risk" that other prisoners will seek similar deals. "The potential impact on Guantanamo's security and the threats to the safety of Guantanamo's staff and camp population cannot be overstated," Vargo said.

Zuhair has had 80 disciplinary infractions over the past four months and the military has had to use a "forced cell extraction team" to remove him from his cell so he could be strapped into a special restraint chair and force-fed, he said.
So he's been a bad boy. In any prison in the world, that sort of misbehavior gets you tossed into the hole ...
The prisoner, who was recently moved to the detention center hospital for observation, weighs about 114 pounds but is in "good condition," according to the military. The U.S. says the 5-foot-5 prisoner weighed about 137 pounds in August 2008.
Instead of liquid nutrients we should be pouring liquid Twinkies into that feeding tube ...
His attorney, Ramzi Kassem, criticized the military's reasoning for not moving his client. "They want to pressure Ahmed to break his hunger strike by continuing to detain him in the excessively harsh environment of Camp 6," Kassem said. "Moving Ahmed to Camp 4 to encourage him to cease striking would rob ... prison authorities of the sick victory of breaking him."
Of course we want to 'break' him: we want him to play by our rules, not his rules. Doesn't the lawyer understand the concept of 'prison'?
Lawyers for detainees have repeatedly complained that conditions in Camp 6, where prisoners are kept most of the day in solid-wall cells, are unnecessarily harsh.
According to who? Them? Try the Supermax in Colorado.
U.S. officials say the criticism is exaggerated but have taken steps to improve conditions in recent months.

There are currently 34 prisoners on hunger strike at Guantanamo, said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Brook DeWalt, spokesman for the detention center.

Zuhair, who was captured in Pakistan, has been held at Guantanamo since June 2002. He has not been charged with a crime, although U.S. authorities allege that he trained with the Taliban and al-Qaida in Afghanistan and was a member of an Islamic fighting group in Bosnia in the mid-1990s. His lawyer denies the allegations and has asked the courts to order his release.
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Home Front: WoT
Pentagon to arraign alleged USS Cole bombing mastermind
2008-12-21
The Pentagon on Friday formally approved war crimes charges against a Guantanamo detainee accused of masterminding the 2000 bombing of the USS Cole, potentially setting up a high-profile arraignment in the final days of the Bush administration.

Abd Al-Rahim Al-Nashiri faces a possible death sentence if convicted on charges related to the attack on the Navy destroyer that killed 17 US sailors in the Yemeni port of Aden, said Pentagon spokesman Jeffrey Gordon. Formal approval of charges, including murder, treachery and terrorism, triggered a 30-day clock for Al-Nashiri's first appearance before a US military commission at the Guantanamo Bay Navy base.

Al-Nashiri's Pentagon-appointed attorney, Navy Lt Cmdr Stephen Reyes, called the timing 'suspect' because president-elect Barack Obama, who takes office on January 20, has criticised the commissions and vowed to close the detention centre. Al-Nashiri, a Saudi of Yemeni descent, has been imprisoned at Guantanamo since 2006. He is one of the three terrorist suspects that the CIA has said it subjected to water-boarding in secret overseas prisons. The Pentagon also announced that it had dismissed pending charges against another detainee, Abdul Ghani, who was accused of firing rockets at a coalition military base in Afghanistan in 2001 and 2002. The charges were dropped without prejudice and no explanation was provided.

Allegations denied: Also on Friday, Gordon rejected allegations that Guantanamo officials abused one of the first detainees ordered freed by a US federal judge. Mustafa Ait Idr told a private television station upon arriving in Bosnia this week that interrogators broke one of his fingers and that his captors desecrated the holy Quran. "The Department of Defence policy is clear. We treat all detainees humanely," Gordon said.

The 38-year-old Algerian and two other Algerian-born naturalised Bosnians were detained in 2001 on suspicion of plotting to bomb the US Embassy in Sarajevo. They had been held at Guantanamo since January 2002. A US federal judge ruled last month they should be released, saying the US government's evidence linking the men to Al Qaeda was not credible because it came from a single, unidentified source. The cases of more than 200 additional Guantanamo detainees are still pending, many in front of other judges in Washington's federal courts.

Hunger strike: A judge has ordered an independent medical examination for a Saudi prisoner at Guantanamo who has been on hunger strike for more than three years. US District Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled on Thursday after a hearing in Washington that a court-appointed medical expert would evaluate Ahmed Zuhair's physical and mental health, which his lawyers say has deteriorated sharply in recent weeks. Last month, his lawyer returned from visiting Zuhair and said his client appeared to weigh no more than 100 pounds and was vomiting repeatedly during meetings at the US base in Cuba.

Zuhair has been on a hunger strike to protest his confinement since the summer of 2005. He has not been charged with a crime, but the US says he trained with the Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and was a member of an Islamic fighting group in Bosnia in the mid-1990s.
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