WASHINGTON, May 30 (Xinhua) -- About 75 detainees
have been staging a new wave of hunger strike since last weekend in the prison
of the U.S. Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, U.S. media reported Tuesday.
Robert Durand, the U.S. commander at Guantanamo, was quoted as saying that the hunger strike is a "short term,
sympathy" protest to gain attention from the outside world in advance of the
June 12resumption of war-crimes trial proceedings there.
He said the protest "reflects detainee attempts to
elicit mediaattention to bring international pressure on the United States to
release them back to the battlefield."
According to U.S. definition, a hunger strike refers
to a detainee refuses nine meals in a row, which means the 75 detaineesbegan
fasting overnight last Thursday.
The U.S. military did not disclose the names of
hunger strikers,nor their nationalities, but said the 10 men facing war-crimes
trials are not among them.
Food has frequently been the subject of a struggle
for international legitimacy of the Guantanamo prison, where the United States
holds about 460 detainees on suspicion of links to al-Qaeda or the Taliban.
The U.S. military has emphasized from the opening of
the prisoncamps in January 2002 that captives are well fed, and given
Islamic-approved halal meals in keeping with a cultural sensitivity.
Still, detainees have staged on-again, off-again
fasts since the earliest days of the detention center.
Human rights groups said the hunger strikes reflect
the growingfrustrations of the detainees, many of whom are being held
indefinitely without a trial.
Many in the international community, including the
United Nations and U.S. allies, have been urging the United States to close the
prison for the concerns of the conditions of the detainees. Enditem