THE U.S. government ban on lawyers or
representatives of the Red Cross or humanitarian
groups from entering the Guantánamo naval base
prison is a revealing boomerang. If, to date, access
to the improvised prison was limited, preventing all
contact with the outside world indicates that
something must be very wrong there, when nobody –
not even in a brief, controlled way – can have
contact with the prisoners or witness the real
conditions of their incarceration.
In
response to the avalanche of criticism after the
suicide of two Saudis and a Yemeni, and reiterated
demands for the disgraceful facility to be shut down
and its inmates provided with legal trials under
proper conditions, the Bush administration has
reacted by closing up the small opening to the
outside world that the prisoners had. This makes
them even more exposed.
If Saudi authorities were suspicious of the
alleged suicide, it can be assumed that the U.S.
government’s decision has increased their doubts.
The ongoing revelations of torture and abuse,
including religious, suffered by the more or less
500 prisoners held on the base in southeastern Cuban
territory usurped by Washington compound the hunger
strike that various inmates have intermittently
undertaken for more than 12 months, with most of
them being force-fed.
It is known that some of them got so desperate
that they tried to kill themselves using the most
improbable methods, due to a lack of any ideal
resources for doing so. That is why it is strange
that all of a sudden they obtained the means of
committing suicide used so often throughout history
by individuals in similar circumstances. So, it is
no exaggeration to mistrust the versions served up
by the authorities of that despicable place.
Mansur al Turki, spokesman for the Saudi Ministry
of the Interior, announced his government’s
suspicions that those prisoners were tortured,
possibly to death. He announced that his country is
to try to obtain the bodies of the two Saudis who
supposedly killed themselves to bury them, and
perhaps to investigate the real causes of their
deaths.
The International Committee of the Red Cross has
reiterated its questions regarding the prisoners and
how they are being psychologically affected by their
extraordinary suffering, due to a total uncertainty
over their fate. For his part, George W. Bush issued
a curt condolence, and it is difficult to believe
that he is sincere, given that the White House
treated last month’s attempt at a collective suicide
as a joke and ignored the May 19 UN group petition
stating that keeping prisoners indefinitely
imprisoned in Guantánamo is in violation of the
international convention against torture.
Various heads of state have referred to the issue,
such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who did so
during her visit to the U.S. president, and Danish
Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who stated to
Bush that events like those of Abu Ghraib or Haditha
in Iraq, or the existence of the horrifying black
hole of Guantánamo are inadmissible. British
Attorney General Lord Goldsmith made a similar
comment recently, and called for the shameful prison
to be shut down. (Elsa Claro)