Perks for Gitmo detainees are plentiful, and halal

More insight into the perks afforded Islamic terrorists at Gitmo. While not reading commentaries on the Qur’an (Bukhari and Kathir) and watching Harry Potter, they are exercising in the Caribbean sun, eating halal food, praying toward Mecca, and some will be playing football soon.

Peter King, a Republican congressman who visited earlier this year and wants the prison kept open, said that “if there’s any scandal at Guantánamo, it is that the detainees are treated too well”.

The 221 remaining inmates receive between four and 20 hours outdoor recreation in the Caribbean sun and anything from weekly to almost unlimited access to DVDs and receive three newspapers (USA Today, plus one Egyptian and one Saudi Arabian title) twice a week. Every bed has an arrow pointing towards Mecca and every cell a prayer rug.

Adm Copeman said “generally speaking the rules are about the same” for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-confessed mastermind of the September 11 attacks, and the 15 other “high value detainees”, who are held at Camp 7, which is out of bounds to the media.

The detainees’ diet is exclusively Middle Eastern and halal, in observance of regional and religious sensitivities. Dates, olive oil and honey are provided daily and pita bread is baked on the premises. They drink the same bottled water as the prison’s staff and have the same access as other prisoners to 16,000 books and 1,600 magazines held at the library.

An escorted tour of Guantánamo by the Daily Telegraph revealed that Camp 7’s requested reading included Gardens of the World by Mick Hales, Fine Art Flower Photography by Tony Sweet and a copy of Birds and Blooms magazine, material in keeping with nature-bound leisure pursuits approved by conservative Islam. Two volumes of the Tales of the Arabian Nights were also in the pile. Tomes on Islamic theory are in plentiful supply and demand, said library staff.

At the low security Camp 4, detainees could be seen sitting in the yard chatting and hanging up their laundry. A new gravel football field was recently completed.

Since 2005 an Arab American cultural adviser, who for security reasons is identified only by the name of Zak, has been employed at Guantánamo to liaise with detainees.

He said that some detainees would rather stay put than go on trial in the US, where they would probably receive a life sentence or could wait years for a death sentence to be carried out.

via Guantánamo suspects want to stay, say officials – Telegraph.

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