Arab Times

‘Guantanamo is killing me’

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WASHINGTON, April 15, (Agencies): An inmate detained at Guantanamo for over a decade without charge on Monday gave a graphic account of his participat­ion in a two-month-old hunger strike at the US-run military prison.

In an op-ed published in the New York Times entitled “Gitmo Is Killing Me,” Samir Naji alHasan Moqbel said he had lost over 30 pounds since going on hunger strike February 10 and that a fellow inmate weighed just 77 pounds.

“I will never forget the first time they passed the feeding tube up my nose. I can’t describe how painful it is to be force-fed this way. As it was thrust in, it made me feel like throwing up,” Moqbel, 35, wrote.

“Two times a day they tie me to a chair in my cell. My arms, legs and head are strapped down. I never know when they will come. Sometimes they come during the night, as late as 11 pm, when I’m sleeping.

“There are so many of us on hunger strike now that there aren’t enough qualified medical staff members to carry out the force-feedings... They are feeding people around the clock just to keep up.”

Moqbel said he had traveled from Yemen to Afghanista­n in 2000 seeking work and fled to Pakistan during the US-led invasion the following year, where he was detained and eventually

spirited off to Guantanamo.

Like most of the striking inmates, he has never been charged with a crime or put on trial, and is not viewed as a threat to US national security.

But he cannot be released because of a moratorium on repatriati­ng Yemenis enacted by President Barack Obama in 2009 after a plot to blow up an airliner on Christmas Day was traced back to alQaeda’s Yemeni franchise.

The strike began when the men claimed prison officials searched their Korans for contraband. Officials have denied any mishandlin­g of Islam’s holy book.

Attorneys representi­ng inmates at the prison have said that most of the estimated 130 detainees at Guantanamo’s Camp Six wing, which houses “low-value” prisoners, are on hunger strike.

US authoritie­s, however, put the number of hunger strikers at about three dozen. Moqbel said at least 40 people were taking part in the protest.

“The situation is desperate now. All of the detainees here are suffering deeply... People are fainting with exhaustion every day. I have vomited blood,” Moqbel wrote.

“I just hope that because of the pain we are suffering, the eyes of the world will once again look to Guantanamo before it is too late.”

A federal judge has denied an emer- gency motion for relief filed by a Guantanamo Bay prisoner on a hunger strike, despite pleas from the man’s lawyer who says his client is dying.

US District Judge Thomas Hogan ruled Monday that he didn’t have jurisdicti­on over the case. He pointed to a provision of the Military Commission­s Act which bars judicial review of claims made by detained enemy combatants regarding their conditions of confinemen­t.

The prisoner and others in the hunger strike originally claimed that they were being denied drinking water, and that temperatur­es in the prison had been kept at “extremely frigid” levels — which the government denied. But the claim was expanded to include the allegation that Guantanamo officials had shown “deliberate indifferen­ce” to the prisoners’ serious medical needs.

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