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The Crash of 2008 and Historical Materialism

Why a Philosophy of the Natural Sciences is Needed

My European Vacation: Interviews with Working-class Leaders

Lessons in Coalition Politics: The Indian Left and the Indo-US Nuclear Deal

The Rosenberg Case in Historical Perspective

Yes We Can Shut Down the SOA

The Struggle for Women’s Equality in the US Today

Another Crisis of Capitalism

Reflections on the (Unplanned) Death of an Ideology

How to Reform Medicare and Create National Health Care

Reflexiones sobre la muerte (imprevista) de una ideología

Sagebrush Noir: The Western as 'Social Problem' Film

Book Review: Democracy's Prisoner

Book Review: The Politics of Immigration

CD Review: Pete Seeger: At 89

December 2008 Poetry

Table of Contents for December 2008 – January 2009 issue

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2005 – online /September – October 2005 /Oct. 17 – 23 Print | Send to friend

Special Report:The Guantánamo Prisoner Hunger Strikes & Protests:February 2002 – August 2005



Introduction

Since January 2002, the United States has been imprisoning men virtually incommunicado at the United States Naval Station in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba without access to any fair and adequate legal process. To date, the U.S. government has not permitted a public accounting of the prisoners’ protests of their indefinite detention without legal process and their inhumane treatment. Rather, the Department of Defense
(DOD) has consistently denied and minimized the prisoners’ repeated protests. For over two years, the DOD has maintained exclusive control over the information released from
Guantánamo, prohibiting unhindered independent and public consideration of the prisoners’ plight. Yet over the past year, internal government memoranda released in Freedom of Information Act litigation, client interviews by pro bono habeas counsel, and court records have revealed that since 2002, the prisoners at Guantánamo have been engaged in substantial, and at times life-threatening, hunger strikes and other acts of
protest in response to their detention without trial and their inhumane treatment.

Since the 2002 hunger strikes, the Guantánamo prisoners have been seeking fair trials, freedom from religious abuses, an end to physical and psychological abuses, adequate shelter and food, and access to clean water. As years have passed, the U.S. government has not permitted a single fair hearing for any prisoner, even after the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in the Center for Constitutional Rights’ case, Rasul v. Bush in June 2004, affirming the prisoners’ right to challenge in federal court the lawfulness of their detention and conditions of confinement. In response to the U.S.
military’s ongoing defiance of the rule of law, the prisoners’ protests have become more serious, with the current series of hunger strikes resulting in an unknown number of detainees slipping into comas.

This report chronicles the history of prisoner protests at the detention center at Guantánamo Bay Naval Station from February 2002 to August 2005 based upon the information known to date. An important aspect of this history is the U.S. military’s efforts to conceal the scope and significance of the widespread prisoner protests. Our country cannot afford to detain prisoners beyond the rule of law and without judicial
oversight. Prisoners are now prepared to die in an effort to receive a fair hearing and humane treatment.The time is long overdue for the prisoners in Guantánamo to receive a fair hearing in federal court as mandated by the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Rasul v.Bush. Barbara Olshansky and Gitanjali Gutierrez September 8, 2005...

The Guantánamo Prisoner Hunger Strikes & Protests: A Special Report By the Center for Constitutional Rights



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