With their bare hands and the most basic of tools, prisoners at Guantanamo
Bay have fashioned a secret garden where they have grown plants from seeds
recovered from their meals. For some of the detainees - held without charge
for more than four years and who the US say are now cleared for release -
the garden apparently offers a diversion from the monotony and injustice of
their imprisonment.
Using water to soften soil baked hard by the Caribbean sun and then
scratching away with plastic spoons, a handful of prisoners have reportedly
produced sufficient earth to grow watermelon, peppers, garlic, cantaloupe
and even a tiny lemon plant, no more than two inches high.
The revelation of the garden has now been seized on by campaigners, seeking
to close the prison camp in Cuba, who have urged supporters around the world
to send them seeds which they will in turn seek to send to the prisoners.
They have termed their campaign "Seed of Hope".
The existence of the garden - apparently prohibited by the US military
authorities - was revealed by the Boston-based lawyer Sabin Willett who was
informed of it by one of his clients, Saddiq Ahmed Turkistani, held at
Guantanamo Bay since 2002.
Mr Willett said that, last year, the US military deemed Mr Turkistani was no
longer an "enemy combatant" but that he remained in legal limbo
because no country was prepared to take him. Mr Willett said lawyers had
regularly pressed the authorities of Joint Task Force Guantanamo [JTFGTMO]
about establishing a garden but that they had refused.
Mr Willett told The Independent that he was explaining this to Mr Turkistani
on a recent visit when he was told the prisoners already had a garden. "
I could not believe it," he said. "I knew they had no tools. If
you take in court papers you have to take the staples out. The look on his
face as he told me how they had unscrewed the mop handles and used buckets
of water [to build the garden] was something wonderful."
Mr Turkistani said he and other prisoners held in part of the prison known
as Camp Iguana softened the ground with water overnight and then used the
spoons to dig. Every day they managed to loosen more soil until they had
enough for a bed for planting. "We have lots of time here," he
said.
Gardening has long been associated with POW camps. At the Harperley POW
Camp, in County Durham, built by the British for German and Italian
prisoners during the Second World War, gardening was encouraged, along with
educational classes and football.
Mr Willett said that, when he put the request to JTFGTMO, he was told
gardening was not permitted. "These people have been put in such a
hellish situation and yet, somehow, they have found a way to create life,
literally," he said. "They have had to take the seeds from their
meals and then scratch at the soil in order to get that going." Mr
Willett, who first wrote about the garden in The Washington Post, said he
had not personally seen the prisoners' garden but had been told of it by
three different detainees.
Mr Turkistani's plight is especially pitiful. An ethnic Uighur who was
living in Afghanistan, he had been jailed by the Taliban for three years and
then freed by the Washington-backed Northern Alliance in late 2001 before
being transferred to US custody. Last year, Mr Turkistani, who was born and
raised in Saudi Arabia, was cleared for release from Guantanamo Bay. His
lawyers say he is guilty of no crime and should never had been seized by the
US. He was accused by the Taliban of being involved in a plot to kill Osama
bin Laden - an allegation he denies.
But the future of Mr Turkistani and the eight other cleared prisoners - five
Chinese Uighurs, a Russian, an Algerian and an Egyptian - who live in the
less restrictive Camp Iguana, remains uncertain. He does not hold Saudi
citizenship and the US does not want to send him to China because of the
discrimination against Uighurs there.
The UK-based campaign group Reprieve has urged people to send seeds. They
have established a PO Box, details of which can be found on the group's
website www.reprieve.org.uk.
Reprieve's legal director, Clive Stafford Smith, said: "The massive
might of the US military is intent on holding prisoners in an environment
that is stripped of comfort, humanity, beauty and even law. Yet the
prisoners held there have overcome this with a plastic spoon and a lemon
seed. It is the beginning of the end of Guantanamo Bay."
Spurred by the fact that only a handful of detainees have been charged,
there have been repeated calls for the closure of Guantanamo Bay, which was
established for prisoners captured in the so-called "war on terror"
. A UN Human Rights Commission report published in February called for its
immediate closure.
JTFGTMO yesterday failed to respond to queries. Last year, a Pentagon
spokesman said of Mr Turkistani's case: "The government is serious
about finding a place for resettlement for the Uighurs and will continue
diplomatic efforts to accomplish that goal."
The Pentagon said this week that around 140 of the 500 prisoners held at
Guantanamo had been reclassified and were no longer considered enemy
combatants.
© Copyright 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
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