Silhouette
Muse
I am sure most of you are aware that there are prisoners held in Guantanamo that have been cleared for release yet have been stuck in a legal quagmire for many years. These prisoners have suffered torture and other abuse during their detention and they are being denied their due process. In protest of their continued suffering and indefinite detention, many of these prisoners have gone on a hunger strike as a way to draw attention to the inherent unfairness of their situation and to compel those who are responsible for prolonging this suffering to do something about it. Here is the testimony of one of these prisoners that was published yesterday in The New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/15/opinion/hunger-striking-at-guantanamo-bay.html?_r=0
This brings to mind President Obama's promise to close Gitmo and release any prisoners who are innocent of any wrong doing or try them in a court of law. It has been over 4 years since he made that promise and yet there is no evidence that Gitmo is closing any time soon and there are prisoners that were captured as children who are still waiting for their due process. Congress voted against funding the closure of Guantanamo and has prevented the release of any prisoners into the United States. The NDAA still has language in it that supports the continued indefinite detainment of prisoners of Gitmo and nothing will change unless the public demands it.
My fear is that those responsible for creating this cruel and degrading practice will not be held accountable for it and that if we (the public) don't demand accountability, any future administration will feel empowered to indefinitely detain prisoners, abuse them, and deny them their rights. If we don't demand change, then who will? Our children, our grandchildren? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind in our hesitation to set free people who have been waterboarded, or are victims of otherenhanced interrogation techniquestorture because we fear retribution from them? Will we stand by and watch them starve themselves to death in protest and do nothing?
What are your thoughts?
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/15/opinion/hunger-striking-at-guantanamo-bay.html?_r=0
This brings to mind President Obama's promise to close Gitmo and release any prisoners who are innocent of any wrong doing or try them in a court of law. It has been over 4 years since he made that promise and yet there is no evidence that Gitmo is closing any time soon and there are prisoners that were captured as children who are still waiting for their due process. Congress voted against funding the closure of Guantanamo and has prevented the release of any prisoners into the United States. The NDAA still has language in it that supports the continued indefinite detainment of prisoners of Gitmo and nothing will change unless the public demands it.
My fear is that those responsible for creating this cruel and degrading practice will not be held accountable for it and that if we (the public) don't demand accountability, any future administration will feel empowered to indefinitely detain prisoners, abuse them, and deny them their rights. If we don't demand change, then who will? Our children, our grandchildren? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind in our hesitation to set free people who have been waterboarded, or are victims of other
What are your thoughts?