‘Medical ethics-free zone’: US doctors call to stop force feeding in Gitmo

Doctors at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp should refuse participation in the force-feeding of hunger strikers since such an activity is a political statement, not a medical condition argues three senior medical professors.
“Hunger striking is a peaceful political activity to protest
  terms of detention or prison conditions; it is not a medical
  condition, and the fact that hunger strikers have medical
  problems that need attention and can worsen does not make hunger
  striking itself a medical problem,” wrote Drs. George Annas,
  Sondra Crosby and Leonard Glantz in the prestigious New England
  Journal of Medicine.
  
  Physicians stationed at Guantanamo Bay, the authors write, are
  sacrificing their ethical obligations by permitting the military
  to “use them and their medical skills for political
  purposes.”
  The article then mentioned the participation of military doctors
  who are used to ‘monitor’ the torture of detainees.
  
“Force-feeding a competent person is not the practice of
  medicine; it is aggravated assault,” the senior professors
  wrote. “Using a physician to assault prisoners no more changes
  the nature of the act than using physicians to ‘monitor’ torture
  makes torture a medical procedure.”
“Military physicians are no more entitled to betray medical
  ethics than military lawyers are to betray the Constitution or
  military chaplains are to betray their religion,” they added.
  
  Of the 166 detainees in Guantanamo, at least 104 of them are
  participating in a hunger strike to protest their indefinite
  detention without the benefit of a fair trial. Of the hunger
  strikers, 43 have lost enough weight that military doctors are
  feeding them through tubes inserted in their noses and down into
  their stomachs, a military spokesman said.
  
  The procedure has been described as very painful. Prisoners who
  refuse are strapped into restraining chairs to immobilize them
  during the process.
  
  In order to combat what has been described as unethical treatment
  of detainees, the professors from Boston University said
  “individual physicians and professional groups should use
  their political power to stop the force-feeding, primarily for
  the prisoners' sake, but also for that of their colleagues.”

  The medical community’s position on the issue, however, does not
  flush with that of the military.
  
  Navy Captain Robert Durand, a spokesman for Guantanamo, said the
  tube-feeding procedure of detainees is court-approved and
  medically sound.
  
"It is the policy of the Department of Defense to protect the
  life and health of detainees by humane and appropriate clinical
  means, and in accordance with all applicable law and policy,"
  Durand said, as quoted by Reuters.
  
"The policy on treatment of hunger strikers is focused solely
  on preserving the life and health of detainees in Department of
  Defense custody, and is consistent with treatment that would be
  provided for US military personnel under similar
  circumstances."
  The journal contributors refuted the US military’s position on
  the issue, arguing that force-feeding hunger strikers is wrongly
  connected to suicide prevention.
  
"Hunger strikers are not attempting to commit suicide. Rather,
  they are willing to risk death if their demands are not met.
  Their goal is not to die but to have perceived injustices
  addressed," they wrote.
  
  The authors offered their recommendations as to how military
  physicians stationed at Guantanamo may preserve their ethical
  standards in the face of military coercion.
  
“They should approach congressional leaders, petition the DoD
  to rescind its 2006 instruction permitting force-feeding, and
  state clearly that no military physician should ever be required
  to violate medical ethics. We further believe that military
  physicians should refuse to participate in any act that
  unambiguously violates medical ethics,” they recommended.
  
  The doctors reminded that the American Medical Association and
  the World Medical Association, which represents the medical
  affiliations of about 100 countries, are of the position that
  force-feeding mentally competent adults is a violation of medical
  ethics.
  
  In April the American Medical Association wrote the secretary of
  defense that “forced feeding of [competent] detainees violates
  core ethical values of the medical profession.”
  On May 23, President Barack Obama pledged to restart the
  repatriation process for about 86 detainees at Guantanamo Bay who
  were cleared of the charges brought against them. The process has
  bogged down, however, as Congress continues to debate whether
  releasing a portion of the detainees will present a security risk
  for the United States.
  
  Meanwhile, the ongoing hunger strike only serves to remind the
  world of President Obama’s failed promise, made on the campaign
  trail in 2008, to shutter the Guantanamo detention center, which
  has been described by Human Rights Watch as “the Gulag of our
  times.” 
Robert Bridge is the author of the book, "Midnight
  in the American Empire," which discusses the dangerous
  consequences of excessive corporate power in the United
  States.













