How US hid the suicide secrets of Guantanamo
After three inmates killed themselves, the Pentagon declared the
suicides an act of 'asymmetric warfare', banned the media and
went on a PR offensive. But as despair grows within the camp, so
too does outrage mount at its brutal and secretive regime
By David Rose
06/18/06 "The
Observer" -- -- In Guantanamo Bay's Alpha Block,
the night was like any other: sweltering and seemingly endless.
Although the temperature was down to the high 70s outside, the
block's steel roof and walls were radiating heat, and in the two
facing rows of 24 cells it felt little cooler than it had at
midday. 'The nights are worse than the days,' the British former
prisoner Shafiq Rasul recalled yesterday. 'You hear the rats
running and scratching. The bugs go mad and there's no air.
Especially where that block is: there's no breeze whatsoever.'
According to Guantanamo's rules, a six-person team of military
police should have been patrolling constantly, and as usual the
bright neon lights stayed on. A guard should have passed each
detainee's cell every 30 seconds. 'From the landing, you can see
right into every cell,' said Rasul. 'They don't have doors, just
gates made from wide-spaced mesh. There's no privacy. If you
hang up a towel because you want to go to the toilet, they make
you take it down.'
The high degree of surveillance has foiled dozens of previous
attempts by prisoners to take their own lives. 'It happened in
front of me several times. The soldiers would see what was
happening and they were in the cell in seconds,' Rasul said. But
somehow, in circumstances that the Pentagon has succeeded in
keeping totally obscure, late on Friday, 9 June, three
detainees, all weak and emaciated after months on hunger strike
and being force-fed, managed to tease bedsheets through their
cells' mesh walls, tie them into nooses and hang themselves.
With the cells little taller than the height of a man, they
stood no chance of breaking their necks: the only way they could
die was slowly, by hypoxia.
'That would take at least four or five minutes, probably
longer,' said Dr David Nicholl, consultant neurologist at
Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital, who has been co-ordinating
international opposition to Guantanamo by physicians. 'It's very
difficult to see how, if the landing was being properly
patrolled, they could have managed to accomplish it.'
Accomplish it, however, they did. And virtually simultaneously.
A little before midnight the bodies of Manei Shaman Turki al-Habadi,
30, and Yasser Talal al-Zahrani, 21, both from Saudi Arabia, and
of a Yemeni, Ali Abdullah Ahmed, 29, were found on Alpha Block.
How long they had been like that, the Pentagon will not
disclose. Their mouths were stuffed with cloth, apparently to
muffle any cries.
As often before in its four-and-a-half-year propaganda war over
Guantanamo, the US military and its masters in Washington
decided that the best means of defence to what looked - at best
- like a case of criminal negligence was to go on the offensive.
The dead men, said Guantanamo's commander, Navy Rear Admiral
Harry Harris, when the news broke last Saturday, had 'no regard
for human life, neither ours nor their own. They are smart, they
are creative, they are committed. I believe this was not an act
of desperation, but an act of asymmetric warfare against us.'
Colleen Graffy, a senior State Department official who recently
visited London to make the case for Guantanamo with the UK
media, called the suicides a 'good PR move' and 'a tactic to
further the jihadi cause'. The US government tried to distance
itself from Graffy's remarks. But early on Sunday The Observer
talked to the camp's top Washington spin doctor, Lieutenant
Commander Jeffrey Gordon, an official in Defence Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld's office and the Pentagon's chief press officer.
According to Gordon, whatever the outcome of the investigation
now being conducted by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service,
there was no need to regret the deaths. All three men, Gordon
said, had been dedicated terrorists: 'These guys were fanatics
like the Nazis, Hitlerites, or the Ku Klux Klan, the people they
tried at Nuremberg.'
He went on to make specific allegations against each: Ahmed had
been a 'mid-to-high-level al-Qaeda operative' with key links to
Abu Zubaydah, an al-Qaeda leader captured in 2002; Habadi had
been a 'militant recruiter' who worked with a second tier group
called Jama'at Tabligh, and knew of operations in Qatar and
Pakistan. As for Zahrani, he was a 'frontline Taliban fighter'
who had played a prominent part in the November 2001 prison
uprising in Mazar-e-Sharif, in which a CIA man died.
All this may be true. On the other hand, they had not been
charged with anything. Questionable as it often is and
consisting of statements made after torture or coercion, the
Pentagon has disseminated some evidence against more than 300
Guantanamo detainees, in federal court filings and at internal
camp boards that reviewed their detention. Against the three
suicides, it has presented nothing.
Meanwhile, the information available suggests that the
explanation of the deaths rejected by Harris - that the men
tried to kill themselves through despair and succeeded through
the incompetence of his staff - remains more plausible.
Rasul said: 'I was shocked by what happened, though not
surprised, because I saw it almost happen so often. It was
always scary: I would see people deteriorating mentally in front
of my eyes until they tried to take their own lives, and you
always thought: "That could be me". There were even times when I
thought about it myself, but I wanted to be strong for my
family. When I did, believe me, it wasn't because I was trying
to hurt the United States, but on days when I'd just been told
I'd never see England again, and that I was a terrorist, and
when I denied it they wouldn't listen.'
The suicides triggered new calls to close Guantanamo, from the
Lord Chancellor, Lord Falconer, the European Union and others.
But the Pentagon will go to considerable lengths to block any
independent scrutiny of what happened.
News of the suicides broke while I was flying to Washington from
London, in order to travel to Guantanamo on a military flight
next day and cover a military commission tribunal. A message on
my mobile phone - from a fellow reporter, not the Pentagon -
said that both had been cancelled. Thus I made the first of many
calls to Jeffrey Gordon. At first, he could not have been more
helpful. To enter Guantanamo, he said, one needed an 'area
clearance', and because mine had been issued for the tribunal it
was no longer valid. However, the press office at Guantanamo or
Southern Command in Miami might be able to issue a new one,
Gordon said. Clearance was not, he pointed out, the only
problem. Now that the military plane had been cancelled, the
only way to reach Guantanamo was on scheduled 18-seat flights
from Florida and Kingston, Jamaica. They tended to be fully
booked well in advance.
I teamed up with another British journalist, David Jones of the
Daily Mail, to organise clearance and investigate flights. By
the end of Sunday, we thought we were on our way. Jones found a
private charter firm willing to fly us to the camp from
Kingston. Guantanamo's head of public affairs, Commander Robert
Durand, explained in an email he was seeking authorisation from
Harris. 'He's a pretty open sort of guy,' Durand said, 'and I
can't see any reason for not granting you clearance since you
were coming already.' At 7.30pm one of Durand's staff phoned to
say there were new clearances. He faxed them a few minutes
later.
Next day Jones and I got up at 4am to fly to Miami, where we
checked with Guantanamo one last time that everything was in
order and got on a plane to Kingston. There, at check-in for our
private flight, the manager was apologetic. 'Guys, I'm so sorry.
Jeffrey Gordon called me from the Pentagon five minutes ago.
Your clearances have been revoked.' Over the next 48 hours, I
had several heated conversations and email exchanges with
Gordon. At first he was apologetic: the new clearances had been
'a mistake' and he would try to get us a refund on the plane
costs. Later he became more aggressive: forgetting that he had
advised me to approach Durand at Guantanamo, he claimed that we
tried to 'get round' the Pentagon by obtaining clearance from a
clerk. His last email stated that our conduct had been
'ethically questionable, at best'. It was left to Durand to shed
a little light. For the time being, he said, his ability to
issue clearances had been removed and assumed by Rumsfeld's
office alone.
Meanwhile, three US reporters at the base were ordered to leave.
According to a Pentagon spokesman quoted by the US media, the
reason was that two barred British reporters - us - had
threatened to sue if the Americans were allowed to stay. This
was, of course, untrue.
Closing Guantanamo to the media meant there were no reporters
there as the Naval Criminal Investigative Service team went
about its work; none when pathologists conducted post mortem
examinations; and none last Friday when, after a Muslim ceremony
conducted by a military chaplain, the first body - Ahmed's - was
prepared to be flown home. It was also impossible to gauge the
impact of the deaths on the 460 inmates.
Yet our bizarre experience raises a fundamental question: when
it comes to Guantanamo, can the world believe a single word that
Gordon and his numerous cohorts say? There is, to say the least,
an alternative explanation for the three Guantanamo deaths.
Since early 2003, when the Red Cross issued the first of many
reports stating that inmates were experiencing high levels of
depression, there has been mounting evidence that detention
there has wrought havoc on some prisoners' mental health. It is
not so surprising: most prisoners get just two 30-minute periods
out of their cells - the size of a double bed - each week,
except when being interrogated. Some have endured this since
2002, and have no idea when, if ever, they may leave.
By the time of my own visit in October 2003, a fifth of them
were on Prozac and there had been so many suicide attempts - 40
by August 2003 - that the Pentagon had reclassified hangings as
'manipulative self-injurious behaviours'. Cannily, perhaps, it
has refused to give exact statistics on how many SIBs have
occurred, claiming that since the reclassification there have
been (until last week) only two genuine attempted suicides.
Tarek Dergoul, another freed British former detainee, knew two
of the dead men well. 'I was next to or opposite Manei [Habadi]
for weeks, maybe months,' he said, 'and like me his morale was
high. He was always up for a protest: a hunger strike or a
non-co-operation strike. He used to recite poetry, not just
Arabic, but English - he knew chunks of Macbeth and he taught me
how to read the Koran correctly. When you go through that sort
of experience with someone, you really get to know them. I just
can't believe he would take his own life. He would have had to
be really desperate.' Likewise, Dergoul said, Zahrani was 'a
person everyone loved. It's offensive to me to say he could have
killed himself.' Apart from anything else, all three men would
have been deeply aware of Islam's prohibition of suicide.
However, the men may well have been so desperate that they
ignored the prohibition - even if, as seems likely, they
co-ordinated their deaths in the hope of increasing their
political impact. Many lawyers who have visited clients at
Guantanamo have spoken eloquently of their despair: this year a
prisoner tried to kill himself in front of his US attorney,
somehow managing to open his veins, covering himself in blood,
as the lawyer watched in horror, unable - because of the screen
that separated them - to intervene.
Dergoul also suggested how the three may have been able to kill
themselves undetected. Sometimes, he said, instead of patrolling
the guards 'used to sit in their room at the end. It's a long
walk from end to end of the block and some nights they didn't
feel like it: they'd sit in their room, smoking and playing
cards. You'd need toilet paper or something and you'd yell "MP,
MP!" But they wouldn't come - it could be as long as an hour.'
One might, just about, imagine such a scene in a British prison.
One can also envisage what might happen if three men committed
suicide on the same landing at the same time: public inquiries,
sackings, outrage. All three had been on hunger strike, with few
breaks, since the middle of last summer. This meant that, four
times a day, they were strapped down in restraining chairs so
that they could not move their limbs and force-fed through nasal
tubes, inserted and removed each time - a process the Pentagon's
own court documents state causes bleeding and nausea. It is not
hard to see why that may have made them depressed.
According to newly declassified testimony by another prisoner
shortly before the suicides, a guard recently told him: 'They
have lost hope in life. They have no hope in their eyes. They
are ghosts and they want to die. No food will keep them alive
right now.' This prisoner, the former British resident Shaker
Aamer, told his lawyer, Clive Stafford Smith, that the three
dead men and other hunger strikers were so ill whenever their
feeds contained protein that it went 'right through them'
causing severe diarrhoea.
Last week Rumsfeld got what he wanted: the removal of media
scrutiny from Guantanamo's deepest crisis. Potentially
embarrassing, perhaps very damaging, headlines have been
averted, and tomorrow, with the most sensitive tasks in the wake
of the deaths complete, Guantanamo's public affairs office will
resume its chaperoned tours. But the bigger costs of shutting
out the daylight are making themselves felt.
On BBC1's Question Time last week, Falconer called the camp
'intolerable and wrong', adding that it acted as a recruiting
agent for those who would attack all our values. Proving his
point next day, some former Guantanamo detainees suggested the
three dead men had been murdered, a claim echoed by their
families and the government of Yemen next day.
The Pentagon response to the suicides was characterised by
panic, smears and blatant obstruction. One might be forgiven for
thinking that its vehement denials lacked a little weight.
© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
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