Oman Daily Observer

Guantanamo prison takes on geriatric airs

- SYLVIE LANTEAUME

The controvers­ial Guantanamo Bay prison still houses 40 ageing inmates — and with no plans to close it, many of them will probably remain there until they die. The population still imprisoned at the military base in Cuba range from middle-aged to elderly — the oldest inmate is 71 — so the prison with a history of torture has taken on some airs of a geriatric facility. The US Army — directed to ensure Guantanamo can stay open at least another 25 years — has revamped parts of the institutio­n home to terror suspects to include a dedicated medical centre and operating rooms.

“There has been a lot of thought put into what preparing for an ageing detainee population looks like and what infrastruc­ture we need to have in place to do that safely and humanely,” said Anne Leanos, the Public Affairs Director for Joint Task Force Guantanamo.

With a budget of $12 million, a prison annex has been transforme­d into a public hospital, complete with a radiology room equipped with an MRI scanner, as well as an emergency room and three-bed intensive care unit.

During a journalist visit to the new clinic, a walker sits in the corner of a room, which has a hospital bed, wheelchair and medical equipment akin to any other infirmary.

But there is no window, and wire mesh serves as a partition, recalling that this is still very much a detention centre.

Congress will not allow sick prisoners to travel to the United States for treatment: Guantanamo inmates are considered highly dangerous by the government, which accuses them of participat­ing in various attacks, including those of September 11.

Patients suffer from ailments common for their age: Diabetes, hypertensi­on, gastrointe­stinal diseases and motor disorders.

The second-floor psychiatri­c ward is equipped with two cells converted into consultati­on rooms.

A third, completely empty cell, is padded and serves as the isolation room for prisoners experienci­ng psychotic episodes.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) visits Guantanamo about four times a year to make sure the prison is complying with detention standards and to assess detainees’ treatment.

Since the infamous detention centre opened in 2002, nine inmates have died: Seven committed suicide, according to the military, while one died of cancer and another had a heart attack.

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