¶ … blanket media coverage of U.S.-Iraq war has forced many other important national and international issues in the background. One of these is the controversial policy of the U.S. government regarding the prisoners kept in the Guantanamo Bay camps without trial. In this paper about the Guantanamo bay prisoners we shall explore the conditions under which they are kept, their rights under international and U.S. law, the possibility that some of them may be innocent, the U.S. administration's view point about the issue, and what options are being considered for their future.
Hooded and Shackled
After the Taliban regime was defeated in Afghanistan, prisoners suspected of having links to the Al-Qaeda organization were brought, hooded and shackled, to the prison camps at Guantanamo Bay. More than a year later, the U.S. government is still holding some 650 prisoners there without any bringing any charges against them. (Kay, "No Fast track...")
No Rights
Guantanamo Bay is the site of a U.S. Naval base in the southeastern part of Cuba, which was leased to the United States under a 1934 treaty with Cuba. Technically it is not a part of the U.S.A. And the U.S. laws do not apply there; the prisoners being kept there, therefore, do not have the rights that apply to prisoners in the territories of the United States.
A recent ruling of a U.S. federal appeals court has upheld a ruling that the Guantanamo Bay prisoners have no right to hearings in American courts since the inmates are aliens held outside U.S. sovereign territory. ("Guantanamo Bay prisoners lose appeal") This ruling has given the excuse to the U.S. administration to continue to...
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