Visitors Now:
Total Visits:
Total Stories:
Profile image
Story Views

Now:
Last Hour:
Last 24 Hours:
Total:

Gitmo press agent denies abuses amid ongoing hunger strike

Monday, March 18, 2013 9:25
% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.

(Before It's News)

Despite a long history of reported human rights abuses at Guantanamo prison, which both the UN and US President Barack Obama denounced as torture, the prison’s Director of Public Affairs Captain Robert Durand has denied any wrongdoing.

“We will continue to carry out our mission to provide a safe
and humane environment,”
  he said.

Earlier this month, Joint Task Force Guantanamo (JTF-GTMO) denied
the existence of an ongoing hunger strike at the facility. 
Durand called detainee allegations of mistreatment, “outright
falsehoods and gross exaggerations,”
implying that the protest
was insignificant compared to one that took place in 2006. He also
claimed that detainees had fabricated incidents of misconduct.

“If the definition of a hunger striker is entirely in their
control and is a matter of their discretion, then I think that
explains how they are able to say that there are no more than a
handful of men on hunger strike,”
Pardiss Kebriaei of the
Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) told RT.  

“While JTF-GTMO continues to deny the existence of a mass hunger
strike at Guantánamo, attorneys report that the prisoners’ health
is declining rapidly as the hunger strike enters its second
month,”
CCR said in a statement on Thursday.

Gitmo prisoners have reportedly been on a hunger strike over
alleged mistreatment at the hands of prison guards. Some 130 people
housed in Camp 6 of Guantanamo Bay are believed to be
participating, and a reported two-dozen men have lost consciousness
due to their low blood glucose levels from the hunger strike.

The prisoners are protesting against the sacrilegious disrespect
displayed towards their religion by the confiscation of Korans,
according to detainees and their lawyers. Although Durand has
categorically denied “any claims of abuse, desecration or
mishandling,”
it is unclear how he defined those terms.

Gitmo press agent denies abuses amid ongoing hunger strike

Mishandling does not necessarily mean covering the book’s pages
in graffiti, burning it or otherwise mutilating it, but rather
through a simple act such as touching it without being physically
or spiritually clean. Many Muslim scholars assert that
non-believers handling the text can also constitute an act of
desecration.

“There have been no incidents of mishandling the Quran by
guards or translators… JTF-GTMO guards are to avoid touching any
detainee’s Quran at any time.” 
However, he did not
confirm or deny whether detainees religious’ texts were touched by
the translators, who have been accused of mishandling them.

Approximately five men have been subjected to force-feeding – a
procedure that can be considered a form of ‘cruel or unusual
punishment,’ contrary to the Eighth Amendment of the US
Constitution and tantamount to torture, according to a UN Human
Rights Commission report in 2006. The same report demanded the
immediate closure of the offshore prison, and to cease all such

“practices amounting to torture.” Force-feeding involves
restraining a detainee by strapping them into a chair, inserting a
tube down their throat and into the stomach, often through the
nose; Durand confirmed that the five undergoing force-feeding have
been subjected to the nostril-tube method.

Durand maintains that the

“mission of Joint Task Force Guantanamo is the safe, legal,
humane and transparent care and custody of detainees,”
adding
that JTF-GTMO

“takes its duty to treat detainees very humanely and very
seriously.”
Amnesty International has said that practices at
the camp constitute

“gross human rights abuses,” and illegal detention.

Gitmo press agent denies abuses amid ongoing hunger strike

 A promise made, a promise broken

In January 2009, shortly after President Obama was inaugurated, he
ordered the facility to be closed within a year, and banned certain
interrogation methods after the US government admitted to torturing
some of the detainees.  

However, in May of that year, the US Senate refused to allow the
prison to be closed until the president provided more detail as to
what would be done with the prisoners.

In mid-October 2009, Congress voted to allow some Guantanamo
detainees to be moved to the United States for prosecution. But at
the end of 2010, Congress approved a defense spending bill that
forbade Guantanamo detainees from being tried in the US. And in
January 2011, President Obama signed a Defense Authorization Bill
that ruled out shutting down Guantanamo, and prevented the transfer
of prisoners from the camp.

In March 2011, Obama signed an executive order resuming military
trials for Guantanamo detainees – a move seen by many as a complete
reversal of his previous policy. And in December 2011, the
president refused to veto the national defense bill, paving the way
for prisoners to be held indefinitely and without charge, and
extending the ban on moving them from the prison.

Finally, in July of last year, the Pentagon announced its plans to
lay a $40-million fiber-optic cable from Guantanamo Bay to the US
mainland, signaling their apparent intent to keep the facility open
for the foreseeable future.

In 2004, the US drafted a document attempting to justify the
continued imprisonment of the Guantanamo detainees, saying that
since the US was engaged in a “real” war against Al-Qaeda,
the “law of war therefore applies and allows us to hold enemy
combatants without trial or charges until the end of the
conflict.”

The UN issued a statement this week that the US is violating
international human rights law by holding detainees indefinitely
without charges.

Gitmo press agent denies abuses amid ongoing hunger strike

RT’s letter from Durand

Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Caveats: FOUO

Veronica,

Sorry for the delay in response. The statement below is
attributable to me, Captain Robert Durand, Director of Public
Affairs, Joint Task Force Guantanamo.

The mission of Joint Task Force Guantanamo is the safe, legal,
humane and transparent care and custody of detainees. We carry out
this mission daily, and we take any allegation of misconduct very
seriously.

The recent allegations by detainees that conditions at GTMO have
deteriorated are patently false.  The JTF takes its duty to
treat detainees humanely very seriously and seeks to ensure we
conduct ourselves in accordance with the highest standards, and we
remain under continual scrutiny, oversight, and inspection.
 

Recent detainee allegations about incidents in the camps include
outright falsehoods and gross exaggerations.  The claims of a
mass hunger strike and an incident in which the Quran was
mishandled are simply untrue.  First, we take extraordinary
care to respect the Quran and categorically deny any claims of
abuse, desecration or mishandling.  The number of detainees
refusing all food has increased from six when the first allegation
was made to 14 today; this is in comparison to 2006 when we had as
many as more than 100 hunger strikers.  It certainly is not a
widespread phenomenon as alleged.  Detainees have colluded
among themselves to fabricate incidents and claim misconduct where
there has been none.  Detainees have acted out individually,
recently splashing guards with various bodily fluids and excrement,
but there have not been any large-scale incidents.  These are
coordinated acts specifically designed to attract media
attention.

The medical staff continuously monitors and provides outstanding
medical care to detainees in our custody.  The health and
well-being of detainees is their primary mission and they take this
duty as seriously as they would a duty to treat our own service
members or any patient in their care.  The reports of
hunger-strike related deteriorating health and detainees losing
massive amounts of weight are simply untrue.

Regardless of these most recent allegations, we will continue to
carry out our mission to provide a safe and humane environment for
the detainees, and ensure the safety of our guard force.

Specifically, regarding the Quran, I can tell you that there have
been no incidents of mishandling the Quran by guards or
translators.

Per SOP (standard operating procedures), JTF-Guantanamo guards are
to avoid touching any detainee’s Quran at any time. The Quran is
treated with the utmost respect..

Each detainee has available a personal Quran.  Detainees are
also provided religious articles, such as prayer mats and beads
that are used during the practice of their faith. Prayer times are
posted in the camp, and silence is maintained by the guards and
staff during prayer times. Understanding the detainees’ religious
practices and cultural norms is an essential part of training for
all who work with detainees.

Regarding searches, there has been no change to our cell or block
search SOPs.  We routinely conduct searches for contraband
that could be used to harm guards, medical personnel, translators,
instructors, attorneys or detainees. Contraband items found can
include improvised weapons, communication devices, unauthorized
food and medicine, and other items which detainees could utilize to
harm themselves or others.

Our search procedures reflect our mission to treat detainees
humanely. We respect both their religious and cultural norms with
regard to the Quran, personal privacy and physical contact.

Detainees who follow camp rules have access to satellite
television, personal DVD players, video games and more than 25,000
books, CDs, movies and TV shows. They also have many comfort items,
including materials for crafts and extra food that detainees can
store for snacks or treats in between meals.. Allowing these items
provides incentives for the detainees to comply with
well-established camp rules, but also provides them the opportunity
to create and hide contraband.

Detainees who violate camp rules may have privileges suspended as a
consequence. This may include moving from a communal block to a
single cell, and loss of comfort items. Detainees know the rules,
understand the consequences, and can regain their privileges by
complying with camp rules.  Detainees in single cell
confinement have basic issue items for clothing, hygiene and
religious observances.

Detainees are never held in solitary confinement.  At no time
is a detainee deprived of



Source:

Report abuse

Comments

Your Comments
Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

Top Stories
Recent Stories

Register

Newsletter

Email this story
Email this story

If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.