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Another Club Gitmo Guest Kills Himself
Some of the most cartoonish pseudo-tough-guy, play-acting-warrior-low-lifes of the Right -- Rush Limbaugh, The Weekly Standard, National Review's Andy McCarthy -- have long referred to Guantanamo as "Club Gitmo." Many leading national Republican politicians have (as usual) followed suit. Recently, some key Democrats have begun actively impeding plans to close it.
Today, Muhammad Ahmad Abdallah Salih -- a 31-year old Yemeni who has been in a Gitmo cage since February, 2002 (more than seven years) without charges -- became the latest Club Gitmo guest to successfully kill himself:
U.S. military officials say a Yemeni detainee at Guantanamo Bay has died of an "apparent suicide."
The Joint Task Force that runs the U.S. prison in Cuba says guards found 31-year-old Muhammad Ahmad Abdallah Salih unresponsive and not breathing in his cell Monday night.
At the moment, the U.S. military is calling it an "apparent suicide" pending an autopsy. Though Salih is either the 4th or 5th Gitmo prisoner to kill himself, numerous others have continuously tried, including this year, using every means from hunger strikes to hanging. In 2006, Rear Adm. Harry B. Harris infamously claimed that detainee suicides were "an act of asymmetrical warfare waged against us." Although the Obama DOD earlier this year self-servingly announced that Guantanamo is in full compliance with the Geneva Conventions, there is ample evidence that suggests otherwise.
Putting people in cages for life with no charges -- thousands of miles from their homes -- is inherently torturous. While Salih acknowledged fighting for the Taliban against the Northern Alliance, there is no evidence that he ever engaged in or planned to engage in terrorist acts or acts of violence of any kind against the U.S. Apparently, though, he's one of the Worst of the Worst we keep hearing about -- Too Dangerous To Release even if we can't charge him with any crime.
Along those lines, Sen. Russ Feingold will hold a hearing a week from today, at 10:00 a.m., on Obama's proposal for indefinite "preventive detention," entitled "The Legal, Moral, and National Security Consequences of ‘Prolonged Detention'" (Feingold's letter excoriating Obama's proposal is here). Other Democrats, such as Rep. Jerry Nadler, have already announced they will oppose Obama's detention policy. Closing Guantanamo obviously does nothing to solve these problems if the same system of indefinite detention without charges is simply transported to a new location. As today's NYT article put it: "detainees lawyers, including those representing other Yemeni detainees, have been saying that many prisoners are desperate and that many are suicidal because they see no end to their detention." It's the system of indefinite detention with no trials, not the locale of the cage, that is so oppressive and destructive.
UPDATE: Back in January, several human rights groups -- Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Human Rights First and the ACLU -- sent a letter to Obama (.pdf) requesting that they be allowed access to Guantanamo in order "to independently review and report on the conditions of confinement there and make concrete recommendations for change." They were never given that access. Instead, the Pentagon simply conducted its own 3o-day review and announced that everything was fine at Guantanamo.
Today, the ACLU called for a full investigation into the "apparent suicide" of Salih and the conditions of confinement there. The ACLU's Ben Wizner said:
Tragic deaths like this one have become all too common in a system that locks up detainees indefinitely without charge or trial. . . .
There is no room for a system of indefinite detention without charge or trial under our Constitution. Detainees against whom there is legitimate evidence should be tried in our federal courts -- not in the reconstituted military commissions now being proposed. Those against whom there is no legitimate evidence must not be given a de-facto life sentence by being locked up forever.
I continue to be amazed by the people who spent the last eight years vehemently protesting this system of indefinite, charge-less detention yet are now supporters of it all because the location will change (maybe) and it will be conducted under a different President.
UPDATE II: A 30-year retired police officer from Texas and periodic commenter here, Diana Powe, wrote in comments:
As someone who has literally had to fight to arrest people who only faced the prospect of a potentially limited confinement after a conviction at trial, the fact that some Americans believe that it's somehow defensible to dismiss someone facing the rest of their life in a cage committing suicide makes me despair for our country.
Also in comments, Affirming Flame notes that the Penatgon's status report on Salih reported: "When the detainee gets released, he hopes to go back to Yemen and get married. Once married, the detainee intends to go to school and become a history or geography teacher." Affirming Flame adds:
This an intensely human tragedy that this man gave up on his dreams and his life. Obviously I can't know what was going through his head during his final moments, but I do not think it is wildly speculative to imagine that he had given up any hope of ever being sent home and so found the only "release" available to him.
It's very difficult to know why someone commits suicide, if that's what happened here. And since he had no trial, one can't know what Salih did or didn't do. But what is not hard to see is that it is simply wrong to imprison people for life with no charges. That should not be something that we even have to debate.
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12 Comments so far
Show AllGlenn Greenwald, you make a lot more money than me, I am stone poor dead broke and in debt just to try to buy groceries, typical lower-class American, and that pisses me off about you, but at least, you somewhat earn your pay.
And that's the biggest compliment I can give anybody several tiers up the salary ladder from me. Most of you, I would not compliment at all, because I hate you.
I don't think, nedlud, that you can know what kind of money Glenn Greenwald makes. Very few writers in this country making a good living at writing. True, Greenwald used to be a lawyer and, sadly, lots of lawyers don't make lots of money.
I feel sorry for you nedlud, that you 'hate' people you do not know just because you perceive them as making more money than you. Thinking that way reinforces your own low opinion of yourself. Don't you see that? Greenwald, if he makes more money than you, is mostly just lucky, not better or worse than you. Lucky.
some folks make it to the higher levels of the money game by greed and drive but lots of folks just lucky out.
I am sorry you don't earn enough money nedlud and even sorrier that it seems to shape your self-image and your image of other harmless good people.
What a tragedy this latest, the fifth?, Gitmo suicide.
This is America we're talking about. We lock people in cages for life without trying them and giving them justice.
That which we do to the least humans, we also do to ourselves.
I don't think Salih was ever going to get out. It makes me wretch to learn that Democrats in Congress are resisting closing Gitmo and that Obama wants to give them military tribunals instead of our constitutional justice system.
Every sin committed by our government taints us all.
I sent prayers for Salih's soul. I hope he gets to become a teacher in his next life. Asalam alaikem.
Three and one half more years of Bush's third term.
Shouldn't the title read:
'Another Guantanamo Inmate "Kills" Himself'?
No, they're living in the tropics and given everything they could possibly want.
America the MONSTER!!!!! MURDEROUS TORTURER!!! CRIMINAL INSANITY!!!
It would be a dramatic improvement if we could by some miracle find our way back to a world that is only as distorted and bizarre as that of "Behind the Looking Glass." There are evil people who want to kill Americans, who want to rob Americans of everything they have, and who wish to destroy the US system of government and take away the Bill of Rights, and who have the power to do so. These people are on K Street, on Wall Street, in the Capitol Building, and in the White House, not in Guantanamo. And in return for posing such dangers, they are punished by being buried by mountains of cash. As Moses said in the "Planet of the Apes," "It's a Madhouse!"
I suspect Greenwald voted Obama even though he new he was right of center-He's a strategic pragmatist.
I'm not convinced by the third party argument either. Even if the greens steal half the dems in a presidential election, you'd have Gingrich in the whitehouse, right?
Wouldn't it be better to have congress full of progressives like Kucinich, Franken and McKinney? Why does it matter if they're dems, indis or greens?
There is the implicit assumption here that you can believe a trace of the official news from the imperial mouthpieces. Suicide? are we sure it wasn't just one waterboarding too many? maybe the doctor who was monitoring his vitals during a prolonged beating had to go to the can and missed seeing his organs start to fail. oh, right Obamassiah has stopped the torturing, I forgot.
I believe he is dead, but I won't believe anything else they say.
Sioux Rose
GOTTA: Good point. The thing is, we all do have a breaking point. If I couldn't sleep for weeks and was confined to a cage with blasting music and the lights always on, I think I'd want to check out, too. That bastard Gonzales and his crony Yoo conceiving that only organ failure constitutes torture will one day know first hand what torture of the mind, heart, and soul feels like. The invisible wounds thus rendered can outlast those of the body. Naomi Klein begins her masterful book, "The Shock Doctrine" relating the inroads being made (and thus financed) into non-physical forms of torture, those intended to break minds down. It takes an enormous amount of depravity to pursue that course, added to bunkers full of all kinds of bombs and inhuman weapon systems. Before Rumsfeld (?) spoke of our nation taking on the means of the dark side (for supposed glorious, "Godly" ends), I think Eisenhower saw that direction winning powerful adherants almost five decades prior.
Gee, has Greenwald opened a casino or something?
Dammit Glen, if you've worked out some way to make a fortune writing this stuff, don't hold out on your suddenly good pals here.
"Putting people in cages for life with no charges -- thousands of miles from their homes -- is inherently torturous"
Ah, sometimes genius lies in the obvious.