I am prepared to die, if it comes to it. I look
ahead, and all I see is suffering. But what is the
point of good health in life, if I cannot be home?
By Asadullah Haroon
July 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - I am an expert hunger
striker now. I have been going for almost nine weeks and
have lost thirty pounds. I now weigh now 115 pounds—I
checked this morning.
The first three days were hard but after that, my
stomach shrank and I was no longer hungry. I drink water
because otherwise I would soon die, but I am not feeling
thirsty. I am feeling very weak, though.
The new Senior Medical Officer is a decent guy. He comes
by to check on me, and says he is sympathetic. He asks
if I am going to harm myself or anyone else. I say no,
it is just a peaceful protest.
"Give me freedom or give me death." This principle is
very important to me. I don't want to just sit patiently
in my cell until I die here. I do not want to die here
at all, but I have to do something.
I thought of a phrase I learned in English: "It's a dog
eat dog world." For now, I am the cannibal, because my
body is eating itself. It has nowhere else to go for
nutrition.
They still bring the food at every meal. I asked the
guards not to but they insist they are under orders to
offer me something to eat, so they just leave it there.
It is quite torturous, though I have no appetite now.
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I find myself slipping away. My immune system is sinking
slowly. When I lie down it is hard to stand up. I have
trouble focusing. My memory is bad. I forget the names
of my family and close friends. I have forgotten parts
of the Holy Qur'an that I had memorised. When I pray, I
find that I cannot remember my prayers.
If I try to send a letter to my family, I find myself
writing the same sentence over and over. They are very
important to me, and I am desperately worried about
them. Afghanistan is a poor country, without the
resources to fight Covid-19, and they live in a crowded
refugee camp. I want nothing more than to put food on
the table and share it with them.
I have nightmares. They repeat and repeat. I am in a
very dirty area. I try to avoid stepping, bare foot, in
feces, though it turns out to be a land mine. Sometimes
there are snakes, and I must find a path through them. I
wake up suddenly, feeling cold, with my heart beating
very fast.
Maybe they will start force feeding me if I go under 110
lbs. They did it to me in 2013. They force you to take
liquid nutrient. The nicer guards allow you to drink it
in front of them but normally they put a 110 centimeter
pipe up your nose. It is very painful. As it goes in you
feel you must throw up and become desperate to take it
out. It is more painful for me than when I was thrown
out of the bus and my bones were broken. And this is
every day. It can take an hour and a half but they cheat
and do it quicker, which is actually more painful. All
this time you are sitting in the Torture Chair, strapped
down tightly.
One day a woman tried to put it in and couldn't. She
tried for five or ten minutes. She just did not know
what she was doing. It was excruciating.
I am prepared to die, if it comes to it. I look ahead,
and all I see is suffering. But what is the point of
good health in life, if I cannot be home? My daughter
was three months old when I last saw her. She is now
thirteen, growing up without a father in a refugee camp
where school has been closed for five months now because
of the virus. If I was there I could help to teach her.
I could even teach her the English I have learned here
in Guantánamo.
I am not hunger striking to make the military
administration unhappy. After thirteen years detained
without trial, it is the only form of protest left to
me—the only way to assert my humanity. Guantánamo strips
us of every human right but the right to life. Perhaps
as my life ebbs away, the U.S. will at least be
confronted with the pointless cruelty of keeping me
here.
Asadullah Haroon is an Afghan citizen detained at
the offshore U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba without charge or trial since 2007. -
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