This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
March 29, 2013 |
No Comments
March 29, 2013: The International Committee of the Red Cross sent delegates to Guantánamo amid a growing number of protracted hunger strikes. In the past, inmates that protest by refusing have been force fed through a feeding tube inserted into the nose. March 26, 1992: International human rights and health organizations visited Guantánamo as makeshift…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
March 20, 2013 |
No Comments
March 20, 2013: The U.S. military has acknowledged that 21 inmates at Guantánamo are protesting their detention by refusing food. One prisoner said the hunger strike was a result of detainees feeling like they are “living in their graves.” 111 of the 166 inmates at Guantánamo have been unanimously cleared for release or relocation to prisons in…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
March 13, 2013 |
No Comments
March 12, 2013: Three attorneys for Guantánamo detainees testified before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in Washington, arguing that indefinite detention and a harsh environment are creating conditions at the facility that amount to inhumane treatment. March 12, 1957: Three American teenage boys who ran away from their home on the base at Guantánamo were…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
March 04, 2013 |
No Comments
March 4, 2013: Defense attorneys representing detainees at Guantánamo have discovered audio monitoring and recording units in locations they have discussed confidential aspects of their case with their clients. The discovery comes amid increasing debate about the legality and legitimacy of military trials at Guantánamo. March 10, 2002: Just months after the first detainees arrive at Camp…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
February 26, 2013 |
No Comments
February 25, 2013: Civil liberties and media groups, led by The Miami Herald and the American Civil Liberties Union, appealed to the Pentagon’s Court of Military Commissions Review to increase the transparency of legal proceedings at Guantánamo. The appeal comes amid increasing allegations that the U.S. government is using the inaccessiblilty of the naval station in Cuba to censor information about…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
February 20, 2013 |
No Comments
February 19, 2013: Guantánamo detainee Walid bin Attash berated the judge of his military commission hearing after guards searched his cell and confiscated confidential correspondence between him and his attorney. February 19, 2002: The Center for Constitutional Rights filed the landmark habeas corpus case Rasul v. Bush to challenge indefinite detention at Guantánamo and the lack of legal…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
February 13, 2013 |
No Comments
February 10, 2013: U.S. officials at Guantánamo simulated the arrival of Caribbean refugees to prepare for possible mass migrations from nearby political strife or natural disasters. February 15, 1995: A riot erupted on Caymen Brac after the nearly 1,000 Cuban refugees that had landed on the small Caribbean island were denied asylum. Nearly 900 of these Cuban men, women,…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
February 06, 2013 |
No Comments
February 5, 2013: Pre-trial proceedings at Guantánamo for detainee Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri began with a physician’s recommendation on how to conduct a mental examination for a survivor of torture. Al-Nashiri is the alleged planner of the attack on the USS Cole in 2000 that left 17 crew members dead and 31 wounded. February 6, 1964: Following Florida’s arrest of a…
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
January 29, 2013 |
No Comments
29 January 2013: The U.S. State Department dismantled the special envoy charged with closing Guantánamo despite President Obama’s campaign promise to close the site. 29 January 1993: Almost immediately after the inauguration of President Bill Clinton Haitian refugees began protesting their detention at Guantánamo by refusing food.
Read more
This Week in Guantánamo: Present and Past
By
Nathaniel Rojas |
January 26, 2013 |
No Comments
January 25, 2013: A U.S. appeals court overturned the war crimes conviction of Ali Hamza al Bahlul, a Yemeni national serving a life sentence at the detention facility at Guantánamo. Bahlul worked as a publicist for al Qaeda, posting training and recruiting videos on the internet for the organization. The dismissal of the charge is likely to…
Read more