Friday, July 12, 2013

Human Rights: Court Orders US Gov't to Stop Guantanamo Genital Searches

Source: Voice of America

"It's an unmistakable reminder that the court, not the government, is custodian of the legal rights of the detainees," Remes said.
 
Cori Crider of the British human rights group Reprieve said the judge’s decision was “fantastic news.”

“Those searches were clearly established to stop clients coming out to speak to attorneys and therefore the world outside,” she said, noting that many prisoners were refusing calls because they did not want to undergo the "groping."

“I hope their being discontinued will convince the clients to come out and speak to lawyers again, so we can learn what is happening with the hunger strike more easily," she said.

Of the 166 men imprisoned at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, more than 100 are refusing to eat to protest their indefinite detention. The government is force-feeding 45 prisoners. The hunger strike began in February.

In a separate Guantanamo case Monday, U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler said she did not have the jurisdiction to rule on a detainee's petition to stop the force feedings, which she called a "painful, humiliating and degrading process." That action, she said, should be taken by U.S. President Barack Obama.