As a detainee accuses US military guards of sexual assault, we ask if prison conditions are deteriorating even further. Guantanamo inmate accuses US military of rape
Prisoner claims in his letter to his lawyers that sexual abuse practice is widespread. ( 04-Jul-2013 )
In the letter obtained by Al Jazeera, Chekkouri describes being
sexually assaulted by guards as they search him each time he leaves and
returns to his cell in order to talk to his lawyer or his wife. And he
says he is not the only one enduring this kind of treatment.
In response to the allegations, the Pentagon described
Guantanamo guards as "some of the most professional, most heavily
scrutinized guards on the planet" adding that "absurd accusations simply
do not withstand intellectual rigor".
Inside Story Americas interviewed
Cori Crider, the strategic director for Reprieve, a London-based legal
action charity, who is also Chekkouri's attorney. She shared information
on his life before he was taken to Guantanamo. According to Crider,
Cherkkouri comes from a Sufi family in Morocco, but has not lived in Morocco in
many years. He was a travelling student living abroad with his family
across the Middle East and South Asia, and was living with his wife and
brother in Afghanistan before the US invasion.
Chekkouri was arrested trying to flee the invasion. He has been
cleared and awaiting release for a long time now, his lawyer said.
Crider said there is no intention to charge Chekkouri with an offense
at any point, and she has tried to take his case to a judge. Chekkouri
has done everything he can to pursue the legal avenues available to him,
she said, adding that "Barack Obama's task force cleared him, yet still
he is there".
Another letter from a Guantanamo detainee, Abdelhadi Faraj, was published on Huffington Post.
Faraj is a Syrian national who has been in US custody since 2002. He
was cleared for release by a US government inter-agency taskforce in
2010, but remains imprisoned at Guantanamo.
"It is not unusual for prison guards here to search prisoners'
genital parts and their rectum 10 times in a single day. Daily, I am
forced into a restraint chair, my arms, legs and chest tied down tight.
Big guards grab my head with both hands. I feel like my skull is being
crushed. Then, so-called nurses violently push a thick tube down my
nostril. Blood rushes out of my nose and mouth. The nurses turn on the
feeding solution full throttle. I cannot begin to describe the pain that
causes," Faraj's letter says.
It continues: "Recently, a nurse brutally yanked
out the force-feeding tube, threw it on my shoulder, and left the cell,
leaving me tied down to the chair. Later, the nurse returned to the
cell, took the tube off my shoulder and began to reinsert it into my
nose. I asked him to cleanse and purify the tube first but he refused.
When I later tried to complain to another nurse about the incident, the
other nurse threatened to force the feeding tube up my rear, not down my
nose, if I did not suspend my hunger strike."
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