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Gitmo Saudi vows to continue hunger strike
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 26 - 05 - 2008

After almost three years of a hunger strike and force-feeding at Guantanamo, a Saudi detainee said he would persist with his protest until he sets foot in his native land.
Certain legal papers obtained by The Associated Press this week give the first detailed look at Ahmed Zaid Salem Zuhair since he was captured in Pakistan and taken to Guantanamo in 2002. The US military calls him an enemy combatant, an allegation he denies.
“He looks extremely skinny, just like you would expect someone to look who has been on hunger strike for three years,” said Ramzi Kassem, part of a Yale Law School legal team representing Zuhair, who visited him this month. “There was no meat on his bones.”
Zuhair and another long-term hunger striker, Abdul Rahman Shalabi, are members of a mass protest that began in the summer of 2005 at Guantanamo Bay Naval base in Cuba, where the US now holds about 270 men on suspicion of terrorism or links to Al-Qaeda and the Taleban.
The US military says two men have been on hunger strike since August 2005, but has not named them. Lawyers have identified them as Zuhair and Shalabi.
At its peak, 131 prisoners were on strike, but that number dropped sharply after the military began force-feeding them. It dwindled further after Guantanamo authorities began using a special padded restraint chair during the feedings, and at one point only Zuhair and Shalabi were still refusing meals.
Zuhair says he has been wrongfully imprisoned at the US Navy base in southeast Cuba and should be returned to his country. “This injustice will only end when I leave this island.
Only then will I end my strike,” a petition filed Monday in a federal court in Washington quotes Zuhair as saying.
His lawyers said he vowed to maintain the strike until he returns to Saudi Arabia.
He also asks the judge to prevent the US from sending him to any third country, as has been done with some Guantanamo prisoners, and that he be allowed to call his family.
As of Thursday, there were seven men on hunger strike and none was in immediate medical danger, said Navy Cmdr.
Pauline Storum, a spokeswoman for the detention center.
Storum said six of the strikers were being “enterally fed,” the military term for force-feeding liquid nutrients through a flexible tube inserted into a nostril. Military records show that Zuhair is about 5 feet 5 inches tall, and Kassem said he appeared to weigh between 130 and 135 pounds (59 and 61 kg) when they met earlier this month.
Zuhair's lawyers filed their petition this week, hoping the US Supreme Court will soon overturn a 2006 law that stripped Guantanamo prisoners of the right to challenge their detentions in US courts. A Supreme Court ruling on their right to come before a judge is expected by June 30.
The US has not charged Zuhair and has given no indication he will be among the approximately 80 prisoners prosecuted before a war crimes tribunal at Guantanamo.
A military panel that declared him an enemy combatant alleged he was involved in the 2000 USS Cole bombing and the slaying of William Arnold Jefferson, a US employee of the UN killed near Tuzla, Bosnia-Herzegovina, in November 1995.
Zuhair's lawyers deny he was involved in the Cole attack and say authorities confused him with another detainee, who has an alias similar to Zuhair's name. The attorneys say their client has never been to Tuzla, had no involvement with the Jefferson killing and that authorities suspect another man, also a Saudi, in the still-unsolved crime.


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