First it was the force-feedings, genital searches, and transfers to solitary confinement. Then came the media blackout.

In its latest bid to deprive Guantánamo Bay inmates of what Algerian prisoner Ahmed Belbacha has called their “sole peaceful means” of protest, the U.S. military announced it will stop providing information to the press about the ongoing hunger strikes within this notorious offshore prison.

“The hunger strike has been the only way the prisoners can effectively protest and force world attention back on Guantánamo Bay,” said Omar Farah, staff attorney for Center for Constitutional Rights, in an interview with Common Dreams. “The government has tried to undermine that in many ways. We saw that in the summer with raids on Camp 6 and forcing prisoners into solitary confinement. This is a new and different way to silence the protests.”

In an interview with Al Jazeera-America published Wednesday, Navy Commander John Filostrat acknowledged that the withholding of information is a deliberate move to undermine public knowledge of a protest that has garnered international support. “It’s [the strikers’] desire to draw attention to themselves, and so we’re not going to help them do that,” he stated.

“JTF-Guantánamo allows detainees to peacefully protest but will not further their protests by reporting the numbers to the public,” Filostrat told the Miami Herald last week upon announcing the blackout.

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British Guantánamo inmate Shaker Aamer said last week that the hunger strike is growing despite the wall of silence. The “Guantánamo hunger strike is back on,” stated Aamer in a phone call with his attorney Clive Stafford Smith, director of the U.K.-based human rights charity Reprieve, that was reported by Al Jazeera-America. Aamer said at least 29 prisoners are still taking part—19 of them being subjected to painful force-feedings that have been widely denounced as torture.

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