US Judge Orders Guantánamo Authorities to Allow Independent Doctors to Assess Health of Hunger Striker Abu Wa’el Dhiab

Last week there was some good news regarding Guantánamo in the US courts in the long-running case of Abu Wa’el Dhiab, a hunger striker who has spent the last 14 months attempting to get the US courts to stop him being force-fed, and who, in the last three months, briefly secured an order stopping his force-feeding, and also secured access for his lawyers to videotapes of his force-feeding and the “forcible cell extractions” used to remove him from his cell. In response, the authorities have now taken to confiscating his wheelchair, and, as Reprieve put it, “manhandling him to be force-fed.”


On August 12, District Judge Gladys Kessler ordered the authorities at Guantánamo to allow two independent doctors to visit the prison to evaluate Mr. Dhiab’s health. As his lawyers at the legal action charity Reprieve explained in a press release, his health “has deteriorated so much that there are now concerns for his life.” As Reprieve also explained, the doctors will “also testify, along with a force-feeding expert, at a hearing scheduled for October 6, about the medical effects of the force-feedings on Mr Dhiab.”


Mr. Dhiab is one of 75 men still held (out of the remaining 149 prisoners) who were cleared for release by the high-level, inter-agency Guantánamo Review Task Force  appointed by President Obama shortly after taking office in January 2009. He has not been released because he cannot be safely repatriated and a third country must be found that will take him.


It was recently revealed that he is one of six men who, it is expected, will soon be given new homes in Uruguay, but for the last five years he, like other cleared prisoners, has been stuck in Guantánamo as lawmakers raised obstacles cynically designed to prevent them from being freed, and President Obama refused to spend political capital prioritizing their release. Mr. Dhiab’s suffering is such that he is now confined to a wheelchair, and his despair at ever being reunited with is wife and his four children is such that last year he embarked on a hunger strike — and ended up being painfully force-fed — as part of the prison-wide hunger strike that reawakened the world’s media to the plight of the Guantánamo prisoners, and forced President Obama to promise renewed action regarding the release of prisoners.


As Reprieve explained, Judge Kessler also ordered Guantánamo’s warden, Col. John Bogdan, a controversial figure whose heavy-handed approach to security seems to have played a major role in provoking last year’s hunger strike, “to answer three questions in writing under oath regarding his involvement in the punitive force-feeding and FCE (Forcible Cell Extraction) tactics used at Guantánamo.” In addition, “Current and former senior medical officers have been ordered to each answer seven questions about their role in the force-feedings.” Reprieve also noted that Col. Bogdan “instituted a policy during his tenure in which wheelchair-bound hunger-strikers have to be hauled to force-feedings by a riot squad, even if the detainee asks to go by himself.”


Mr. Dhiab’s lawyer Cori Crider, who is Reprieve’s Strategic Director, last saw her client during a visit three weeks ago and immediately submitted a sworn declaration to the court as part of the filing requesting an urgent independent medical examination. As was explained in a press release, Crider wrote that his health has “deteriorated to the point that she now fears his life is at risk,” adding that he “appeared frail and listless, his face had no color and [he] spent the afternoon lying prostate on the floor, his agony evidently unrelieved by pain medication he had been given.” She also described how he had “clutched his side in pain and grimaced repeatedly … as he lay on the floor.”


Crider added that, the day after she returned from her visit, Mr. Dhiab was “unable to come to the phone … compounding worries for his state,” and explained that if he “does not now receive a medical assessment independent of the military command structure,” he “may become incurably ill or worse.”


On August 7, Reprieve explained in another press release that, in hearings prior to Judge Kessler’s latest ruling, Justice Department lawyers claimed that Mr. Dhiab was “very functional,” and refused to tell the District Court in Washington D.C. why Guantánamo officials confiscated his wheelchair, calling questions about its policies “time-consuming and burdensome.”


The DoJ lawyers also said it was “improper” for Mr. Dhiab’s lawyers “to ask why Guantánamo authorities forbade him from using a wheelchair to be moved to the force-feeding chair,” as Reprieve put it, noting also that the US government “refused to respond to written questions about its force-feeding policy.”


Another ruling by Judge Kessler regarding government secrecy


Providing further details, Courthouse News reported on August 15 that Judge Kessler’s order for Col. Bogdan asks “why he would not let Dhiab go to his feeding by wheelchair, whether he considered alternatives to a restraint chair, the reason behind conducting force-feedings every time a detainee drops below 85 percent of his ideal body weight, and other queries.”


The author of the article, Adam Klasfeld, also noted that Judge Kessler “wanted to know whether risk of infection increases from ‘keeping a nasogastric feeding tube in place for days or weeks at a time or from multiple daily insertions,’ the ‘largest quantity and quickest speed of enteral feeding that a patient can tolerate comfortably,’ and if the process is ‘unnecessarily painful or could be made less painful.’”


As the article also explained, Col. Bogdan “has until Sept. 5 to answer the questions, and Dhiab’s lawyers must submit expert medical reports about preferred practices ten days later.”


The Courthouse News article was prompted by another ruling from Judge Kessler, this one granting a government request to “prohibit the distribution of, or discussion of, the Forcible Cell Extraction (‘FCE’) videotapes related to this case with any other counsel than the attorneys of record in this case and the security-cleared attorneys in three related cases.”


Interest in the the videotapes has come not just from lawyers, but from 16 major US news organizations who are seeking access to the tapes and who, on August 8, “criticized what they said was the Obama Administration’s ‘blunderbuss claims’ that disclosing the tapes would be harmful to national security,” as Reprieve described it, adding that the news organizations called the claims “illogical and implausible,” and “contradicted by the Government’s own past disclosures” of details about Guantánamo during press tours.


In its article, Courthouse News reflected on what Judge Kessler’s ruling about the secrecy of the videotapes might mean for the news organizations’ request, noting that, while the order “does not impact that request,” Judge Kessler noted that she “anticipates that consideration of that motion will, almost inevitably, raise some of the substantive arguments” addressed in it.


If a ruling is taken regarding the news organizations’ request, I will of course respond swiftly with my own commentary, but in the meantime it’s worth adding October 6 to your calendar — and also worth keeping an eye on the news for the anticipated release of Abu Wa’el Dhiab. As noted above, however, there are three other cases in which videotapes are being sought by prisoners, and I’ll be reporting soon on one of those cases.


Andy Worthington is a freelance investigative journalist, activist, author, photographer and film-maker. He is the co-founder of the “Close Guantánamo” campaign, and the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon — click on the following for the US and the UK) and of two other books: Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion and The Battle of the Beanfield. He is also the co-director (with Polly Nash) of the documentary film, “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo” (available on DVD here – or here for the US).


To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to Andy’s RSS feed — and he can also be found on Facebook (and here), Twitter, Flickr and YouTube. Also see the six-part definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, and “The Complete Guantánamo Files,” an ongoing, 70-part, million-word series drawing on files released by WikiLeaks in April 2011. Also see the definitive Guantánamo habeas list, the full military commissions list, and the chronological list of all Andy’s articles.


Please also consider joining the “Close Guantánamo” campaign, and, if you appreciate Andy’s work, feel free to make a donation.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 19, 2014 13:49
No comments have been added yet.


Andy Worthington's Blog

Andy Worthington
Andy Worthington isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Andy Worthington's blog with rss.