
© Bob Strong/Reuters
Attorneys for prisoners held at the US military prison at Guantánamo Bay say they have had to purchase shoes, clothes, personal hygiene products and other basic items for detainees they represent. They accuse the prison of "pinching pennies.
The 114 detainees left at Joint Task Force Guantánamo in Cuba are walking around in
ragged clothing and shoes held together with duct tape, several attorneys
told the Miami Herald. The detention center, which has cost more than $5 billion since it opened in 2002 and boasts a staff of more than 2,000 people,
increasingly leaves detainees without adequate clothing, attorneys said. Shampoo, toothpaste and other personal hygiene items are too cheap to be effective, they added.
"Stuff's just not getting replaced," said lawyer George Clarke, who recently purchased new shoes, sandals, T-shirts and towels for his two clients, at a cost of about $300. "They say the stuff they get is crap. Or they're not getting it."
A Gitmo spokesman insisted standards "have not changed," but refused to comment on whether the situation is based on budget cutbacks or new prison policy.
"Any reports of shortages are baseless," Navy Captain Christopher Scholl, public affairs officer at the prison, told the
Herald. "The JTF [Joint Task Force Guantánamo] is committed to ensuring detainees are kept in a safe, secure and humane environment. The physical and mental well-being of detainees is our primary responsibility, and their security is of vital importance to our mission."
The International Committee of the Red Cross would not indicate whether it had raised any issues with the prison regarding basic prisoner provisions.
Comment: Mr. Sajjadi offers an interesting and provocative end-game analysis. See also:
Let's get Syrious (it's a mess!)
Putin has shifted the power balance and the world knows it