May 21 2013

Wired: Hunger Striker Launches Twitter Campaign to Close Gitmo

Newswire | Published 21 May 2013, 10:37 am | Comments Off on Wired: Hunger Striker Launches Twitter Campaign to Close Gitmo -

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Petitions have failed. Lawsuits have failed. Even campaign pledges from future presidents have failed. So now one Guantanamo Bay detainee is hoping that Twitter can help him shut down the infamous detention facility.

Shaker Aamer, a Saudi citizen and former British resident, is one of 103 Guantanamo detainees currently on a hunger strike in protest of his seemingly endless incarceration without trial. Eleven years into his confinement, Aamer’s interactions with the outside world are limited. But through his lawyers, Aamer is testing the ability of social media to pressure President Obama into finally closing Guantanamo.

Clive Stafford Smith, who runs the UK human-rights legal firm Reprieve, tweeted this morning that “Shaker Aamer would like everyone” to call the U.S. embassy in London “to demand action on Guantanamo Bay.” He’s got 80 retweets as of this writing.

Lawyers routinely take their cases into the court of public opinion to stir sympathy, and social media provides a new route for doing so. According to Stafford Smith, however, the idea for the tweets came from Aamer, whose detention on suspicion of being a member of al-Qaida predates the existence of Twitter by four years.

“He really does know about Twitter and all the social media,” says Stafford Smith, “as I have sent him copies of what people have said and done for him to keep his spirits up.”

The specific request came through the Reprieve lawyer working on Aamer’s case, Cori Crider, who visited Aamer at Guantanamo at the beginning of the month. According to Crider’s notes from a May 1 meeting, the air conditioning in Aamer’s cell is kept at 70 degrees, “which is very cold for someone who has not eaten for 90 days,” and a Guantanamo official referred to as “the Rover” informed Aamer that detainees who meet with their lawyers “must be searched thoroughly and including your private parts.”

Of the 166 detainees still at Guantanamo, 103 are on a hunger strike, according to Army Lt. Col. Todd Breasseale, a Pentagon spokesman. Breasseale declined to comment on the Twitter campaign, but confirmed that 30 of the Guantanamo hunger strikers have been force-fed via an enteral feed. Stafford Smith said that Aamer is not one of them.

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