Today,  January 11, 2018, marks the 16th year that Guantanamo prison has  exclusively imprisoned Muslim men, subjecting many of them to torture  and arbitrary detention.
In Washington, D.C., about thirty people have gathered this week as part of Witness Against Torture,  for a weeklong fast aimed at closing Guantanamo and abolishing torture  forever. Four days ago, Matt Daloisio arrived from New York City in a  van packed with posters and banners, plus sleeping bags, winter  clothing, and other essentials for the week.
Matt spent an hour organizing the equipment in the large church hall housing us. “He curates it,” said one organizer.
In 2007, there were 430 prisoners in Guantanamo. Today, forty-one men are imprisoned  there, including thirty-one who have endured more than a decade of  imprisonment without charge.None of the forty-one prisoners now in  Guantanamo was captured by the U.S. military on a battlefield. Afghan  militias and the Pakistani military were paid cash  bounties for selling most of these prisoners into U.S. custody. Imagine  the “green light” this gave for other countries to engage in the buying  and selling of human beings.
Aisha Manar of the London Campaign to Close Guantanamo points out  that “the rights-violating practices surrounding Guantanamo are now a  model for the detention and incarceration policies of the U.S. and other  states.”
This chilling reality is reflected in Associated Press reports  revealing that the United Arab Emirates operates a network of secret  prisons in Southern Yemen, where prisoners are subjected to extreme  torture. This has included being trussed to a rotating machine called  “the grill” and exposed to a roasting fire.
“Nearly 2,000 men have disappeared into the clandestine prisons,” the AP reports,  “a number so high that it has triggered near-weekly protests among  families seeking information about missing sons, brothers and fathers.”
One of the main detention complexes is at Riyan Airport in Yemen’s  southern city of Mukalla. Former detainees, speaking on condition of  anonymity, told of “being crammed into shipping containers smeared with  feces and blindfolded for weeks on end. They said they were beaten,  trussed up on the “grill,” and sexually assaulted.”
A member of the Yemeni security force set up by the United Arab  Emirates told AP that American forces were at times only yards away.
“It would be a stretch to believe the U.S. did not know or could not  have known that there was a real risk of torture,” Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty  International’s director of research in the Middle East, said in a June 2017 statement.
On January 9, 2018, Witness Against Torture members tried to deliver a letter  to United Arab Emirates Ambassador Yusuf Al Otaiba, seeking his  response to these reports. Security guards took our pictures but said  they were unable to accept our letter.
Today, joining numerous other groups for a rally in front of the  White House, we’ll carry one banner that says, “It would take a genius  to close Guantanamo.” Another says, “We are still here because you are  still there.” Clad in orange jumpsuits and black hoods we’ll also carry  placards bearing the number “41.”
Forty-one hearts still beat in Guantanamo prison cells. That's forty-one too many.
 
 


 
 
 
 
 
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