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Libyan Guantánamo Detainee Infected with AIDS

By Andy Worthington, Andy Worthington's Blog. Posted February 1, 2008.


Even after six years of lawless brutality, the case of a Abdul Hamid al-Ghizzawi is almost too horrifying to believe.

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It really doesn't get any worse than this.

Candace Gorman, lawyer for Abdul Hamid al-Ghizzawi, a Libyan detainee at Guantánamo, reports that her client has been infected with AIDS. Mr. al-Ghizzawi explained to his lawyer in a letter that he was told about his infection by a doctor at Guantánamo, adding that he believes that the infection took place in 2004, when he was given a blood test, which "resulted in alarm amongst the hospital staff," although he was not given any explanation for the alarm at the time.

On January 28, Candace Gorman filed an emergency motion with the US Supreme Court, asking for the US military to provide urgent medical treatment to Mr. al-Ghizzawi, and also asking for access to her client's medical records. Yesterday morning, however, Chief Justice John Roberts denied the motion.

While this news is so alarming that it almost defies description, Mr. al-Ghizzawi's plight is compounded by the fact that he already suffers from tuberculosis, which he also contracted in Guantánamo, and hepatitis B, which was dormant before his arrival at the prison.

In an affidavit filed with the US District Court in September 2006, Dr. Ronald Sollock, the Chief Medical Doctor at Guantánamo, confirmed that Mr. al-Ghizzawi "was subjected to complete medical tests by the military upon his arrival in Guantánamo in 2002," and that he "entered [the prison] in good health," although he admitted that "a history of hepatitis B was identified in tests performed in August 2002" (even though Mr. al-Ghizzawi was never informed of this fact), and that he "was exposed to tuberculosis while at the base."

Dr. Sollock also claimed that Mr. al-Ghizzawi "does not want to be treated for his life threatening illness[es]," although this is strenuously denied by Mr. al-Ghizzawi himself, who insists that he has never been informed about his health problems, and has never been offered any kind of medical treatment whatsoever.

Despite the gravity of Mr. al-Ghizzawi's condition, the authorities at Guantánamo have refused to either confirm or deny Mr. al-Ghizzawi's claim that he has been infected with AIDS. When Candace Gorman approached Andrew Warden, the Department of Justice attorney assigned to the case, Warden also refused to be drawn, stating only, "We are not privy to the particulars of what your client may have been told by his doctor, if anything, but Guantánamo provides high-quality medical care to all detainees."

Even before this latest awful revelation, Candace Gorman had documented the suffering of her client in painful detail, explaining, in a habeas corpus submission to the Supreme Court last August, that during her first visit with him, in July 2006, it was apparent that he was seriously ill. She described him as "very noticeably jaundiced," adding that he was "constantly rubbing his back, his leg and his abdomen," and that he appeared to be "in constant pain."

Mr. al-Ghizzawi confirmed that his health had begun to deteriorate during his first year at Guantánamo, and had "progressively worsened" each year. He explained that he had lost 10-15 kilos since his arrest, that he had "severe pain in his abdomen, left side and back that travels down his legs," that the pain was "constant when walking or standing," that his stomach area was "bloated with two black lines appearing horizontal across his stomach," and that he had "digestive problems including vomiting and diarrhea." In this first meeting, Mr. al-Ghizzawi also explained that "the increased intensity of the pain in the previous months" had been "so severe that he had been unable to get up from a lying down position."

During further visits, in September and November 2006, and in February, May and July 2007, Mr. al-Ghizzawi's health evidently deteriorated further, prompted, in part, by the conditions in which he was held. On one occasion, he was dressed in orange (reserved, in recent years, for "non-compliant" detainees), and had been stripped of all "comfort items," including a thermal shirt that provided a meager defense against the cold, because he inadvertently had some toilet paper in his pocket when he went for a shower, and in December 2006 he was moved to Camp 6, a new supermax facility designed to hold the "general population" at Guantánamo (including those who have been cleared for release).

The conditions in Camp 6 are, bluntly, barbaric. Held in severe isolation, the detainees, in contrast to convicted criminals on the US mainland, are only allowed one book a week, are prevented from reading newspapers, watching TV or listening to the radio, and are, of course, completely cut off from their families. Mr. al-Ghizzawi explained that he was "compelled to complain to get so much as clean clothes," and his health problems are compounded by the fact that, despite Guantánamo's tropical heat, the solid metal cells, which "admit no natural light," are air-conditioned and freezing cold. In addition, "the men are not provided blankets but instead are given plastic sheets that are cold and smelly."


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Andy Worthington is a writer and historian, and author of The Guantánamo Files.

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samd11
Posted by: samd11 on Feb 1, 2008 4:18 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a most disturbing report as are all references to the victims in the guantanamo gulag. How did Mr. al-Ghizzawi become infected with the Aids virus? How can Americans allow these gross injustices to continue? I feel ashamed and helpless. If there is a God, as so many Americans seem to believe, may he have mercy on all our souls....more mercy than we have shown to Mr. al-Ghizzawi and his fellow inmates.

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» RE: samd11 Posted by: bayed
Hmm...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Feb 2, 2008 7:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yeah... I believe these folks have no knowledge of what his doctor told him. Don't you? I mean, its not like they have little to no privacy in there. I mean... they do get to speak with their lawyers in confidentiality, don't they? Oh, wait... they don't.

So.. Hep B which he was not told about. TB and HIV. Sounds like great health care and a thoroughly clean and sanitary environment to me.

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» RE: Hmm... Posted by: clvngodess
And this is
Posted by: desidid on Feb 3, 2008 1:19 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the government we want to determine a healthcare policy for a nation? Gad zooks we're in deep doo-doo!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: And this is Posted by: carcinoid112
I have a problem with the whole concept.....
Posted by: PDJane on Feb 6, 2008 7:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just sweep people up from wherever they happen to be, stick them in a jail, deny them due process and proper health care, torture them when you feel it justified, and talk about bringing freedom to the world?

Omar Khadr is still there, remember him? A minor, no proof of his having done anything at all, now he's an "enemy combatant" and he's being tried yet again (3 times now). However, the man who pulled him in shot an injured man and shot Khadr twice....in the back. Obviously, a real danger to the shooter, yes? Those are war crimes......but Khadr is the one being tried.

This is not good for the international image of the US, which is beginning to look more and more like a rogue state.

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Waddaya mean, almost too HORRIFYING to believe?
Posted by: willymack on Feb 6, 2008 7:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If it's connected to the name george bush, it's BELIEVEABLE. This psychotic regime is guilty of far worse and is capable of ANY horror. Shh; don't give them any ideas.

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It's amazing Bush can sleep
Posted by: Quannah on Feb 6, 2008 11:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
at night! Any human being would be racked, at some point, with a pang of conscience, wouldn't they?

"...his military-appointed panel declared that there was insufficient evidence to declare him an "enemy combatant," and that he should therefore be released."

May Bush and all his cronies and any military personnel involved with this or any other war prison rot in hell.

They need to be brought up on charges for war crimes and serve out their sentences at Gitmo, in the same conditions as are there now.

I will volunteer as an "interregator."

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» RE: It's amazing Bush can sleep Posted by: wisegalah
» RE: It's amazing Bush can sleep Posted by: wisegalah
salamah mahdi
Posted by: salamah on Feb 6, 2008 11:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bush's America and for that matter MacCain's or Hillary's have no shame because Empires have no shame! USA is an Empire and it seems Americans can do nothing re-instate their erstwhile federal democratic state, at least not in the foreseeable future. The stakes and vested interests in any Empire are 'extremely' attractive for those who make billions out of them to let go freely or by choice, repent, amend and return to 'humanity'/ 'sanity'. America is a lost case. It will end catastrophically as did most Empires before it and it will take down the rest of humanity with it!

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» RE: salamah mahdi Posted by: kimbari
A horrifying story
Posted by: CJC on Feb 7, 2008 3:49 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On Tuesday the New York Times published a story about an Afghan who died of cancer at Gitmo in December. He claimed his innocence until the end and said that there were reliable witnesses in Afghanistan who could verify his story, but our government couldn't "find" them although the reporters did.

Now we have this story, with the implication that this prisoner may have been infected with HIV at Gitmo. And he too seems unlikely to be guilty of any wrong doing, just an Arab who happened to be married to an Afghan and then given up by scoundrels who took our money.

I feel so ashamed to be reading these stories about what our government is doing in our name.

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UPDATED ACTION NEEDED!
Posted by: Dazey on Feb 22, 2008 1:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ACTION NEEDED NOW! See his attorney's entry at http://gtmoblog.blogspot.com/
Below is a "form letter" you can use, please fax/write ASAP! This is very URGENT!
The Honorable John D. Bates

United States District Court Judge
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse
333 Constitution Avenue, Northwest
Washington, DC 20001
(202) 354-3433 fax)


Honorable John Bates;


I am writing to you today about Abdel Al-Ghizzawi, a detainee who has been in Guantanamo Bay detention facility for over five years. Al-Ghizzawi was sold to U.S. Troops as part of a bounty, he is not a “high value” detainee. Al-Ghizzawi was one of the “no hearings hearings” detainees who had new Tribunals convened in his absence when the initial Tribunals determined that he should never have been determined to have been an enemy combatant. Later in 2005 a new tribunal was conducted that declared him an enemy combatant. In fact, Abdel Al-Ghizzawi never fought with the Taliban, Al-Qaeda, or anyone else.


Abdel Al-Ghizzawi has Hepatitis B as well as Tuberculosis. His condition is worsening, and is very grave. On January 28 2008 his attorney H. Candace Gorman filed an emergency motion with the Supreme Court asking the US military to provide urgent medical treatment to Abdel Al-Ghizzawi, as well as access to his medical records. Chief Justice John Roberts denied the motion.


This is shameful. Our country is supposed to be run by us – the citizens of these United States, we are supposed to be the Government. However, in the past few years we have had very little say in what goes on, and none in how this country treats it's POWs or detainees. This needs to change. We care what's done in our name. Our country, while once a beacon of human rights is now one of the worlds worst offenders.


I ask you to help Abdel Al-Ghizzawi by providing him with the medical care he needs so desperately. I urge you to provide his attorney, H Candace Gorman access to his medical records so that she can assure that he gets the treatment that he needs for his condition.


The world is watching. Our reputation has been sullied enough. Please act in the best interest of everyone. Give us back our good conscience.


Sincerely,

[name]

[address]
-----
Linda
http://freedetainees.org

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