Guantanamo dangles new incentive for detainees
Max-security Camp 6 will be modified to let
compliant detainees interact by eating and exercising together.
By Carol J. Williams
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 3, 2008
GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA —
In hopes of encouraging better behavior among terrorism suspects in a
maximum-security facility here, parts of it will be gradually
transformed to let some of the men eat, visit and exercise together.
The
planned easing of conditions in some cell blocks of Camp 6 is part of
an effort to provide more "intellectual stimulation" for the prisoners,
said Rear Adm. Dave Thomas, who two months ago took over command of the
military prison and interrogation network.
"The effect I hope to
achieve is to get greater compliance," Thomas said Saturday as he
showed journalists the construction work underway to reconfigure guard
posts and access.
Prisoners excluded from the initial
communal-living group "would see that others got this, and that might
be an incentive," he said.
Camp 6, where about 75 prisoners live
in individual cement-walled cells with steel doors, was modeled after a
prison in Michigan, with a common area outfitted with tables and stools
for meals, games and conversation.
The detainees have been able
to see those areas from the narrow windows in their cell doors, but
they haven't been allowed to use them.
Camp 6 was nearing
completion in May 2006 when a riot in Camp 4 -- which housed detainees
considered the most compliant -- prompted prison officials to tighten
restrictions throughout the sprawl of what are now eight prison camps.
Camp
4 held 175 men before the riot -- which was reportedly sparked by
guards' mishandling of a Koran during a search for contraband.
Only
75 men are now at the barracks-like facility, where they live 10 to a
room, take their meals together and can spend most daylight hours
outside playing sports.
Guantanamo's prisoner population has
dropped in the last few years from more than 700 to about 270, with men
deemed of little threat to U.S. security being released or transferred
to be dealt with by their home countries.
Thomas declined to say whether the prisoner population had become more
difficult as less confrontational detainees had left.
But he did concede that there was no further demand for facilities for
the "highly compliant."
At
Camp 4, which has a capacity of 200, one of the empty rooms has been
outfitted with a flat-screen TV to show taped sports events and TV
programs -- the favorite being the Discovery Channel's adventure
fishing series "The Deadliest Catch," Thomas said.
Another
barracks has been converted into a schoolroom where English lessons are
offered, as are lessons in basic written Arabic and Pashto for
illiterate detainees.
At Camp 5, housing about 50 prisoners in
maximum-security conditions, movies are shown every two weeks to
individual detainees as a reward for good behavior, the admiral said.
The films are shown in the prison's interrogation room.
Though
the changes at Camp 6 are intended to allow more interaction among
prisoners, camp-to-camp communication is still discouraged.
Among the new features of the side-by-side Camps 5 and 6 is an external
speaker system that emanates a gargling sound to muffle shouted
messages from the outside recreation pens of the adjacent compound.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times