As of Saturday, 100 of the 166 men being held at Guantanamo Bay prison are on hunger strike, with 20 being force-fed and five hospitalized, according to U.S. military officials.
This number has swollen since soldiers raided the camp where the men were being held and placed them into isolation cells on April 13. Detainees have told their lawyers that every prisoner is participating in the nearly three-month-old protest, and, as one put it in a New York Times op-ed, they “will not eat until they restore my dignity” and begin releasing people.
Another detainee, a client of Up w/ Steve Kornacki guest Ramzi Kassem, echoed that sentiment in a phone call to Kassem on Friday, when he said, “I will remain on hunger strike until I leave this place. I have not lost hope. My protest is not driven by despair, but I will maintain my protest until I regain my dignity and freedom.” Some political leaders seem finally willing to revisit the issue of transferring the men who have been held—most of them without charge or trial—for as many as 11 years.








