|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US judge orders release of Guantánamo hunger strikers
medical records
By Tom Carter
31 October 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
A federal judge ruled on October 26 that the Bush administration
and the US military must provide information to defense attorneys
about the conditions of detainees in Guantánamo Bay. The
lawyers are representing detainees from Qatar, Yemen, Saudi Arabia
and Afghanistan who have been participating in a hunger strike
for more than three months to protest their incarceration and
treatment at the US detention camp.
Federal District Judge Gladys Kessler ordered the US military
to release to lawyers the medical records of the prisoners they
are representingrecords that are currently classified. The
government must also notify a lawyer representing a detainee within
24 hours of a force-feeding by Guantánamo authorities,
a brutal practice that is prohibited by international medical
standards and has been denounced by civil liberties advocates.
Kessler rejected another demand by the attorneys that they be
put in regular telephone contact with their clients. The US government
may appeal the judges decision.
Julia Tarver, an attorney with the Center for Constitutional
Rights who recently visited the hunger strikers, found that the
medical practice of force-feeding has become a new form of torture
at Guantánamo Bay. Many of the strikers had trouble speaking
to her because of throat lesions caused by having finger-width
feeding tubes shoved through their noses.
A 2004 Supreme Court ruling permits lawyers to travel to Cuba
to meet their detainees in person. Before that, lawyers had no
contact whatsoever with the inmates. Lawyers still may not make
contact with their clients in writing or over the phone, and all
information regarding the reasons for the detainees incarceration,
as well as any statements made by the detainees themselves, are
withheld as classified.
In an interview with Democracy Now!, Tarver delivered
a chilling account of her recent visit. What we found is
that the situation at Guantánamo has deteriorated drastically,
even since our previous visit at the end of July. The level of
hopelessness in the camp has reached a point where our clients
are literally vowing they have no other choice but to die. The
treatment they are receiving from the guards and the medical staff
at Guantánamo is very, very disturbing.... [T]he guards
and the medical staff are using intervention, medical intervention,
to actually inflict forms of torture on our clients.
Multiple detainees reported to Tarver the same behavior on
the part of the military personnel. Feeding tubes were moved from
one detainee to another without any sanitization, with the
bile and the blood still on the tube from the previous detainee,
according to Tarver.
She said that she was told that no doctor was present
for many of these incidents, which sometimes simply consisted
of six men holding one client down while someone inserts
a tube up their nose and into their stomach.
Guards also routinely taunt the gravely ill hunger strikers.
This is what your religion has brought you, the soldiers
jeer, and prevent the detainees from sleeping. We had independent
interviews with more than one client, who had had no way to contact
each other in between, who told us precisely the same horrific
tales, Tarver said.
According to an October 27 article in the New York Times,
detainee Yousef Al-Shehri reported that a feeding tube had been
so roughly inserted into his throat through his nose that he spat
up blood.
The US military has denied that the force-feeding is being
used to intentionally inflect pain on the detainees. Dr. John
Edmondson, who administrates the medical facility at Guantánamo,
contends that anesthetic and lubricants are always used, and that
only doctors and nurses had been involved in the force-feeding.
Even if these assertions were accepted, the practice of force-feeding
in this situation is expressly forbidden by international medical
standards. Article 5 of the 1975 Tokyo Declaration of World Medical
Association, which has been accepted by the American Medical Association,
instructs doctors that if a prisoner goes on a hunger strike to
protest torture and abuse, it is the doctors responsibility
not to intervene in the hunger strike by force-feeding
the prisoner, thereby readying the prisoner for more torture.
According to the Center for Constitutional Rights, about 200
prisoners have been involved in the rolling hunger strike, which
has been coordinated across multiple complexes with some prisoners
refusing food for as many as 60 days (See Guantánamo
Bay hunger strike enters third month).
The Guantánamo detainees are protesting widespread torture
and humiliation, religious persecution, sexual abuse, lack of
shelter, and the denial of their most basic legal rights. The
victims families have often not heard from their loved ones
since they were first swept up in Afghanistan and other locations
and carried away by US soldiers.
Most of the detainees were taken into US custody in early 2002,
and have spent almost four years at Guantánamo without
any criminal charges being brought against them, and without any
of the basic rights and protections guaranteed to prisoners of
war by the Geneva Conventions. There are no court dates set for
any of the prisoners. Flouting its disregard for international
law, the Bush administration has coined the phrase enemy
combatant in an attempt to create new legal circumstances
whereby detainees can be denied their most basic democratic rights.
See Also:
Guantánamo Bay hunger strike enters
third month
[20 October 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |