Guantanamo psychiatric ward
The Guantanamo detention camp complex includes a psychiatric facility.
In addition to the regular camps for detainees held in extrajudicial detention there is a Guantanamo psychiatric ward at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp complex in Cuba.[1]
The Department of Defense announced the opening of the psychiatric facility in March 2003.
Camp Commandant Geoffrey Miller denied that the opening of the psychiatric facility was solely in response to detainees' suicide attempts.
In April 2008 the Adam M. Robinson, the United States Navy's Surgeon General, wrote that the "...core psychological health team comprised of one psychologist, one psychiatrist, five behavioral nurses and 14 psychiatric technicians."[2]
On June 7, 2010, the Washington Post reported, after obtaining the first official figures for capital costs of the Guantanamo camps to be made public, that the current building cost $2.9 million USD.[3]
Detainees known to have held in the psychiatric facility
See also
References
- ↑ Ian James (2003-03-07). "Mentally ill terrorism suspects to have ward". Wilmington Morning Star. p. 6A. Retrieved 2009-07-16.
- ↑ Adam M. Robinson, Jr. (2008-04-03). "Comprehensive Medical Care for Detained Enemy Combatants in Guantanamo". Department of Defense. Retrieved 2009-07-24.
- ↑ Scott Higham, Peter Finn (2010-06-07). "At least $500 million has been spent on Guantánamo Bay renovations". Seattle Times. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
The Pentagon spent $18.2 million on a prison hospital and $2.9 million on a psychiatric ward next door. The ward has 12 beds housed inside an elongated metal trailer-like building with reflective-glass windows and a small sign that reads "Behavioral Health Unit." The military would not permit Post reporters to look inside the facility, citing patient confidentiality.
- ↑ Jennifer Daskal, Stacy Sullivan (2008-06-10). "The insanity inside Guantánamo: A new report reveals that a number of prisoners -- even some long ago cleared to leave -- are spiraling into hallucinations, despair and suicide". Salon magazine. Retrieved 2009-07-19.
- ↑ Jane Perlez, Raymond Bonner, Salman Masood, Jane (2009-01-06). "An Ex-Detainee of the U.S. Describes a 6-Year Ordeal". The New York Times.
- ↑ http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2008/09/04/rendered-to-egypt-for-torture-mohammed-saad-iqbal-madni-is-released-from-guantanamo/
- ↑ Carol Rosenberg (2011-06-28). "Latest Guantánamo prison camp suicide was ‘indefinite detainee’: The last two men to leave Guantánamo, both dead, were among the secret population of captives called "indefinite detainees."". Miami Herald. Retrieved 2012-05-05.
‘We were hopeful that we would be able to complete a psychiatric profile of him and present that information to the government in the hopes they would release him,’ said Rashkind... Rashkind said his client had a history of psychological problems and spent long stretches in Guantánamo’s psychiatric ward.
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- Camp one -- April 2002 -- open air cages, but with plumbing
- Camp two -- open air cages, but with plumbing
- Camp three -- open air cages, but with plumbing
- Camp four -- more pleasant surroundings for the most compliant detainees
- Camp five -- permanent facility modeled after a bureau of prison maximum security facility
- Camp Five Echo "disciplinary block" for "non-compliant" prisoners
- Camp six -- permanent facility modeled after a bureau of prison maximum security facility
- Camp seven -- secret location, former CIA "high value detainees" held here
- Camp No (Camp seven) -- secret interrogation center
- Camp X-Ray -- January - April 2002 -- open air cages with no plumbing
- Camp Delta -- blanket term used to refer to most of the other camps
- Camp Iguana -- originally held child detainees, now holds the men determined to be innocent
- Camp Echo -- isolation cells, and cells where detainees are held prior to meeting their lawyers
- Guantanamo psychiatric ward -- opened in March 2003
- Strawberry Fields -- black site run by the CIA
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