Demonstrators hold rally to mark 17 years of Guantanamo

By Umar Farooq</p> <p>WASHINGTON (AA) – More than a hundred people gathered in front of the White House on Friday for a demonstration marking the 17 years since Guantanamo Bay prison opened.</p> <p>Men and women wearing orange jumpsuits with their heads covered by black hoods stood silent to represent the detainees currently being held at the notorious facility in Cuba.</p> <p>&quot;This isn't a war prison where people are taken off the battlefield and held protected by the Geneva Conventions until the end of hostilities,&quot; Andy Worthington, co-founder of the group Close Guantanamo, said at the rally. &quot;This is a prison where people were taken to in the first place so they could be held absolutely without any rights whatsoever.&quot;</p> <p>The demonstration was held by a coalition of organizations including the Center for Constitutional Rights, Amnesty International and the Justice for Muslims Collective.</p> <p>The Guantanamo Bay prison was opened shortly after the U.S. invaded Afghanistan following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.</p> <p>The first detainees were transferred to the prison on Jan. 11, 2002 under the order of then-President George W. Bush.</p> <p>Former U.S. President Barack Obama promised to shut down the controversial prison after taking office in 2009 but was met with stiff opposition in Congress.</p> <p>To this day, the prison remains open with 40 detainees. </p> <p>At the rally, Maha Hilal, co-director of the Justice for Muslims Collective, read out a statement from Muna Abougoush, the wife of former Guantanamo detainee Omar Khadr.</p> <p>&quot;Seventeen years ago, the cells of Guantanamo opened, revealing the true ugly face of Islamophobia. As you all know, this is not the first time a minority group was targeted and painted as the enemy. These groups were always viewed and treated as less than human,&quot; the statement said. &quot;Every nation has its history with a minority group.”</p> <p>Khadr, a Canadian, was sent to the prison at the age of 16 and remained there for 10 years before being released and repatriated to Canada.</p> <p>&quot;Had he not been Muslim, had he been a child who hadn't been Muslim who practiced some other faith, he more than likely would have never been in Guantanamo,&quot; Hilal said about Khadr.</p> <p>

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