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Guantanamo hunger strikers stay defiant [yawn]
AP ^ | July 20, 2007 | Ben Fox

Posted on 07/20/2007 2:34:19 PM PDT by Alouette

GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba - Twice a day at the U.S. military prison here, Abdul Rahman Shalabi and Zaid Salim Zuhair Ahmed are strapped down in padded restraint chairs and flexible yellow tubes are inserted through their noses and throats. Milky nutritional supplements, mixed with water and olive oil to add calories and ease constipation, pour into their stomachs.

Shalabi, 32, an accused al-Qaida militant who was among the first prisoners taken to Guantanamo, and Ahmed, about 34, have refused to eat for almost two years to protest their conditions and open-ended confinement. In recent months, the number of hunger strikers has grown to two dozen, and the military is using force-feeding to keep them from starving.

An Associated Press investigation reveals the most complete picture yet of a test of wills that's taking place out of public view and shows no sign of ending, despite international outrage.

The restraint chair was a practice borrowed from U.S. civilian prisons in January 2006. Prisoners are strapped down and monitored to prevent vomiting until the supplements are digested.

The British human rights group Reprieve labeled the process "intentionally brutal" and Shalabi, according to his lawyer's notes, said it is painful, "something you can't imagine. For two years, me and Ahmed have been treated like animals."

The government says force-feeding detainees in the restraint chair was not meant to break the hunger strikes, but it had that effect. A mass protest that began in August 2005 and reached a peak of 131 detainees dwindled at one point to just two — Shalabi and Ahmed. In recent months, though, the number has grown again.

The military won't identify strikers, citing privacy rules and a desire to keep detainees from becoming martyrs.

But the AP was able to identify Shalabi and Ahmed, both Saudi Arabians, through interviews with several detainee lawyers and detailed military charts, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, tracking the weights of each detainee.

Shalabi told his lawyer that other strikers include Sami al-Hajj, a Sudanese cameraman for Al-Jazeera, the Qatar-based Arabic-language TV station; Shaker Aamer, a Saudi who has acted as a camp leader; and Ghassan Abdullah al-Sharbi, a U.S.-educated Saudi engineer who told his captors he was proud to fight the U.S. and would consider it an honor to be given a life sentence.

"I don't quite see what they have gained from it," detention center commander Navy Rear Adm. Mark Buzby told the AP. "They are alive and healthy and we are going to keep them that way as long as they are here."

The military counted 24 men on hunger strike this week, including 23 receiving "enteral feeding" through tubes. It begins daily monitoring and considers force-feeding any detainee who misses nine consecutive meals. All are now at 100 percent of their ideal body weight because of the tube feedings, the military says.

"We never allow them to become seriously, medically compromised," said Navy Capt. Ronald Sollock, a doctor who commanded the detention center hospital from January 2006 until this month.

Guantanamo officials who deal directly with the strikers — and cannot be identified under military rules — cast doubt on their commitment. They say some were coerced by other detainees to stop eating and others eat McDonald's Happy Meals or Subway sandwiches provided by interrogators when they think other detainees won't find out.

And while detainees have complained of wounds from the repeated insertion and removal of the tubes, the military says it uses lubricants and local anesthetics to ease the pain.

Health experts unaffiliated with the military say there are no nutritional consequences from long-term tube feeding, that with proper care it can be done safely. Psychological and physical harm, however, are a real possibility.

Dr. Ronald Kleinman, chief of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition at MassGeneral Hospital for Children, says there is a potential for "psychological consequences when this is done coercively," as well as "physical harm from repeatedly inserting a tube through the nose or leaving it in place inappropriately."

The previous Guantanamo commander, Navy Rear Adm. Harry Harris, underwent the process "just so he could say it was no big deal," Buzby said. He also says long-term strikers have complained at times when their feeding is delayed.

Prisoners have sporadically refused to eat at Guantanamo since shortly after they began arriving in January 2002. Detainees also show defiance by banging on their cell doors in concert for extended periods or hurling their bodily excretions at guards.

The mass hunger strike that began in August 2005, however, was something different. The prisoners compared themselves to the 10 Irish Republican Army hunger strikers who starved themselves to death in Britain's Maze prison in 1981 in hopes of winning status as political prisoners.

"Nobody should believe for one moment that my brothers here have less courage," Ethiopian detainee Binyam Mohammed warned in a statement released through his lawyer.

The Guantanamo hunger strikers were tube-fed, but many intentionally vomited the nutritional supplements and steadily lost weight.

By that December, at least 19 of 29 remaining strikers were significantly malnourished and at "great risk" of complications such as infection, permanent organ damage and injuries from weakened bones and muscles, according to an affidavit filed by a former hospital commander, Navy Capt. Stephen Hooker, in support of the military's response.

In early 2006, the military started using the restraint chairs, which strap down their arms and legs, to prevent detainees from resisting feeding efforts or making themselves vomit.

Among opponents were the International Committee of the Red Cross and Physicians for Human Rights. "We believe the will of the detainee must be respected," Red Cross spokesman Simon Schorno said.

The number of strikers has increased again recently, lawyers say, in protest of their increased isolation in Camp 6, the newest section of Guantanamo, where detainees spend most of the day alone in solid-wall cells. About 360 men are still being held at Guantanamo on suspicion of terrorism or links to al-Qaida or the Taliban.

The U.S. considers refusing to eat to be a disciplinary infraction and confiscates so-called comfort items such as mattresses and long underwear from their air-conditioned cells. Detainees must sleep on thin mats, can't get books or magazines other than the Quran and can have paper and pens to write letters for only an hour or so a day.

Shalabi and Ahmed have regained their weight since their captors began strapping them down. The records show Shalabi's weight dropped from 124 pounds to 106 pounds in January 2006, when the use of the restraint chair began. His lawyer says he now weighs about 155. Ahmed dropped from 149 pounds to 108 in December 2005 and was 143 pounds at the end of last year. His current weight is unknown.

The military doesn't allow detainee interviews, and Ahmed has no known lawyer. But Shalabi told New York attorney Julia Tarver Mason that after more than five years in detention without being charged, the strikers see their protest as a grueling but necessary struggle against indefinite confinement.

"I think he just feels hopeless that the law doesn't apply to him," Mason said.

A slight man with a short beard, Shalabi appeared in better health in June than when they previously met in October 2005, when he was "gaunt and emaciated," Mason said. But the strike has taken its toll. "He looks very old for someone his age. ... If I saw him anywhere else," the lawyer said, "I would think he's a man in his 50s."

The Bush administration maintains the detainees have no right to challenge their confinement in U.S. courts. They may, however, have some reason to feel less hopeless now: Reversing an earlier decision, the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review the question, and a decision is expected next year.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: clubgitmo
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All are now at 100 percent of their ideal body weight

What are they complaining about? There are people WHO WILL PAY BIG BUCKS for this treatment and they are getting it for free!

1 posted on 07/20/2007 2:34:22 PM PDT by Alouette
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To: 1st-P-In-The-Pod; 2ndDivisionVet; A_Conservative_in_Cambridge; af_vet_rr; agrace; albyjimc2; ...
FReepMail to be added or removed from this pro-Israel/Judaic/Russian Jewry ping list.

Warning! This is a high-volume ping list.

2 posted on 07/20/2007 2:35:43 PM PDT by Alouette (Vicious Babushka)
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To: Alouette

How they feel and are treated concern me.

NOT!


3 posted on 07/20/2007 2:37:46 PM PDT by Bibman (Don't tread on me!)
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To: Alouette

I hope these miserable creatures suffer for a long time to come.


4 posted on 07/20/2007 2:38:20 PM PDT by Red6 (Come and take it.)
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To: Bibman
How they feel and are treated concern me.

Me too. (barf)

Sheesh!
5 posted on 07/20/2007 2:40:28 PM PDT by mutley
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To: Alouette
strapped down in padded restraint chairs and flexible yellow tubes are inserted through their noses and throats. Milky nutritional supplements, mixed with water and olive oil to add calories and ease constipation, pour into their stomachs.

This forced-feeding torture must cease immediately!!! (sarc)

Where are the leftist attorneys fighting for the terrorists' right to die?

6 posted on 07/20/2007 2:41:01 PM PDT by pjr12345
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To: Alouette
The British human rights group Reprieve labeled the process "intentionally brutal" and Shalabi, according to his lawyer's notes, said it is painful, "something you can't imagine. For two years, me and Ahmed have been treated like animals."

It won't bother me if we stopped feeding them and blame it on human rights groups.

7 posted on 07/20/2007 2:42:05 PM PDT by mjp (Live & let live. I don't want to live in Mexico, Marxico, or Muslimico. Statism & high taxes suck.)
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To: Alouette
Hopefully the terrorists will realize starvation is futile and will find a quicker way to commit suicide.
8 posted on 07/20/2007 2:48:06 PM PDT by Man50D (Fair Tax, you earn it, you keep it!)
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To: Alouette
Shalabi, according to his lawyer's notes, said it is painful, "something you can't imagine. For two years, me and Ahmed have been treated like animals."

Well, you're the retarded ape who refuses to eat... Dumbass.

9 posted on 07/20/2007 2:51:20 PM PDT by SunStar (Democrats piss me off!)
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To: All
An Associated Press investigation reveals the most complete picture yet of a test of wills that's taking place out of public view and shows no sign of ending, despite international outrage.

Will the outrage lessen if they’re allowed to starve? Somehow I doubt it.

10 posted on 07/20/2007 2:52:12 PM PDT by dighton
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To: Alouette

“Detainees also show defiance by banging on their cell doors in concert for extended periods or hurling their bodily excretions at guards.”

Hmmm, could these people be the missing link we have been looking for?


11 posted on 07/20/2007 2:54:18 PM PDT by crazy
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To: Alouette
He also says long-term strikers have complained at times when their feeding is delayed.

I found that line particularly amusing.

Reminds me of the tale of the bear-hunter who, after a number of unsuccessful encounters with the bear, is told "I'm thinking you're not in this for the hunting".

12 posted on 07/20/2007 2:54:18 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Alouette

So?


13 posted on 07/20/2007 2:56:36 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: Alouette
BFD. Waste of food, oxygen, and electrons to report it.


14 posted on 07/20/2007 2:59:28 PM PDT by Diogenesis (Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum)
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To: Alouette

Feed the lot to the sharks


15 posted on 07/20/2007 3:02:25 PM PDT by JamesA
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To: Alouette

He also says long-term strikers have complained at times when their feeding is delayed.

Yeah, they’re real serious about dying from hunger. sarc/


16 posted on 07/20/2007 3:03:24 PM PDT by kalee (The offenses we give, we write in the dust; Those we take, we write in marble. JHuett)
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To: Alouette

Lots of sharks in the waters off Cuba.

Two or three of these guys should be fed to them.

That will shut the rest of them up.

We can always claim it was an “Escape from Alcatraz” scenario and have plausible deniability.


17 posted on 07/20/2007 3:06:06 PM PDT by Beckwith (dhimmicrats and the liberal media have chosen sides -- Islamofascism)
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To: pjr12345

No kidding. Where’s Michael Schiavo when you need him?


18 posted on 07/20/2007 3:07:59 PM PDT by CherylBower
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To: JamesA

“physical harm from repeatedly inserting a tube through the nose or leaving it in place inappropriately.”

Make a LARGE incision on their throats and use a toilet plunger to push food directly in their esophagus. Problem solved.


19 posted on 07/20/2007 3:19:16 PM PDT by Westlander (Unleash the Neutron Bomb)
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To: Alouette
An Associated Press investigation reveals the most complete picture yet of a test of wills that's taking place out of public view and shows no sign of ending, despite international outrage.

I can imagine the outrage if we allow these POS's die!

20 posted on 07/20/2007 3:24:50 PM PDT by rocksblues (Just enforce the law!)
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