Al-Hajj was just released from prison today, having been incarcerated at Gitmo for seven years. He was, like all detainees in the prison, labelled an "enemy combatant," but never charged. That's right: he was in prison for seven years and was never charged with a crime.
He was, however, encouraged to spy on al-Jazeera, and most of his questioning did not refer to his own purported "terrorist links" (he was accused of having al-Qaida training and supplying some Chechnyan rebel groups) but rather to the actions of the Qatar news network, according to al-Jazeera itself. I hesitate to use al-Jazeera as my only source on this, and I think we should take the network's assertions with a grain of salt, considering the fact that al-Hajj is their employee. I actually have no choice, however: BBC and CNN only give al-Jazeera's account, and FoxNews doesn't have a clue that this has happened at all (or, more likely, doesn't want us to have a clue).
I think there is plenty of information out there, from the New York times to Slavoj Zizek, about the chargeless detention of these executively labeled "enemy combatants" at Guantánamo; I don't feel there's anything for me to add. Just be aware that this guy was a cameraman and had a legitimate work visa with a respectable international news agency; he now has gone on hunger strike and been force-fed, interrogated regularly, acquired a kidney infection and throat cancer, and has not seen his young son since he was a toddler. He's 38. And he was never charged with any crime.
And second, what about his drawing? Banned in the United States? Let me just say this: if America is so afraid of a cartoon of Guantánamo being released, then our government had damn well better clean up whatever the hell is going on in there, because this whole situation is worthy of absolutely nothing better than a fascist state. I'm thoroughly disgusted.
1 comment:
Well, I'd have to agree that this is horrid. Holding these people for years without charges is inhuman. I hardly know what to think about the alleged banning of the cartoons. I haven't been able to verify if it is true that the army has banned them. If it is, it's amazing. As if they didn't get out anyway!
As for the whole Guantanamo situation, that's another thing that I have trouble sorting out. Some aspects of it make some sense, but others (if true) are barbaric. I wonder if we'll ever know the whole truth in our lifetimes?
It's scary to think how much power our government has--I think even Alexander Hamilton would be rolling over in his grave.
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