Why do cuba allow guantanamo bay




















Clearly Schwab researched this topic thoroughly and has produced a masterfully written narrative useful to historians and the interested public at large. Origins: Current Events in Historical Perspective gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the Stanton Foundation. Skip to main content. The Ohio State University. Department of History.

Home Topics Africa. Middle East. North America. International Relations Religion Education Sports. Search form Search. Connecting History. Hot off the Press. History Talk. Review Printer Friendly Version. This set the stage for the Bush administration to transform Guantanamo Bay into a prison for alleged enemy combatants after the Sept. Conditions there have included imprisonment in cages, sensory deprivation and forced feedings — treatment that many believe amounts to torture.

Nearly prisoners were released to their home countries or resettled elsewhere. But 40 people are still detained there. The vast majority were never charged with a crime. President Donald Trump has since ordered the Guantanamo Bay military prison to remain open indefinitely.

The naval base in Guantanamo Bay will likely have many more anniversaries. Whether anyone celebrates is another matter. Jana Lipman is with Tulane University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Your Military. By Jana Lipman, Tulane University. Dana Lane, the Cuban Community Manager on the Naval base, helps take care of the 19 aging residents, all between the ages of 78 and She organizes cultural activities at the community center, like Cuban food cooking nights, dominoes and bingo games, and helps coordinate care for the residents.

Lane has been the Cuban Community Manager since She is Panamanian. They're relatives," Lane said of the residents. What Cuba wants from Joe Biden. At one point, there were nearly Cuban Special Category Residents living on the base. Over time, people have moved away or passed on. West chose to stay on the base because he had a stable job, he said, and he liked that the base was the size of a small town like the one he'd grown up in, but with more infrastructure.

He believed life on the base would be better than staying in Cuba. No bigger but more advanced," West said. West was also critical of the Castro regime and noticed that it was hard for people to get jobs that paid well in Cuba. Lane said most of the residents who stayed on the US Naval base were "against the regime," referring to the Cuban government. A tense history. This argument was highly contended in the international community.

It also begs the question, would the United States treat its own terrorist-citizens like this? The mistreatment of detainees caused the international community to call upon the United States to change its methods and abide by the Geneva Conventions.

In , the Supreme Court ruled granted detainees the right to challenge their detention in a federal court. When Barack Obama came into office, he swore on his second day to close the detention center that his predecessor created. However, his goal was hard to attain due to a strong opposition in Congress. Without a place to relocate the prisoners, Obama had a hard time closing the detention center. Obama was still able to make progress, moving 70 to detainees to a prison in Illinois CNN Library Since Obama's time in office, the United States government position has changed on the detention center.

In , Donald Trump signed an executive order to keep the prison camp open. Though the detention camp remains open, the number of detainees has decreased as prisoners have either been released or relocated, leaving the camp open with 40 detainees as of May CNN Library Even though progress has been made, these prisoners are still subject to brutal conditions. He spoke specifically about the culture around the detention center and t he pressure the United States Central Intelligence Agency placed on interrogators.

He continued describing torture tactics, including stress positions and mock burials that were used for extended periods of time in order to extract potential information from prisoners. In the United States, prisoners have called out prisons in the South that do not provide air conditioning, that have caused extreme effects on prisoners, including fatal head stroke McCullough In other prisons in Honduras, prisoners suffer from extreme overcrowding, resulting in increased agitation and protests among prisoners.

In December , 16 prisoners were killed due to rival gang violence.



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