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GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA — Under gray skies all but obscured by an opaque canopy and high concrete walls topped with razor wire, two bearded young men in tan tunics are having “rec time” inside separate chain-link pens. One jogs frenziedly back and forth in the 30-foot enclosure; the other is curled like a fetus at the base of a cement block.
It’s a dreary winter afternoon, but the scene could be any time of the day or night. The hour for rec time is one of the few unpredictable features in a day in the life of a detainee. [LA Times]
That’s just an excerpt from a great article in today’s LA Times that traces a day in a Guantanamo detainee’s life. The article goes on to detail the schedule of someone who is in the prison starting with their 5am reveille and their end of a day which is signaled at 10 p.m. by the arrival of the bedsheet. But don’t think this means lights out - prisoners have to sleep with the lights on, many growing their hair long to try and cover their eyes with it.
to read the entire article here and be sure to
again to learn more about Errol Morris’ documentary about torture at Abu Ghraib and the photos associated with it and also how you can be a part of the film’s social action campaign!
A clip from the film is below:
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Filed under:
Global Health • Human Rights
Related Links:
The Penal Colony
Is America Ready for a Guantanamo Comedy?
What Do You Do With Sex Offenders?
“Taxi to the Dark Side” Takes Torture to Task and Oscar for Best Documentary
The Lucifer Effect: Cheney Ok’d Harsh Interrogations
Tagged as:Abu Ghraib • Abu Ghraib photos • Bedsheet • cuba • Detainee • Errol Morris • Guantanamo • Guantanamo Bay • Guantanamo Detainee • LA Times • Morris • Standard Operating Procedure
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