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MARCHA DE PROTESTA EN WASHINGTON POR LOS 10 AÑOS DE GUANTANAMO

Washington, 11 de enero (Télam).- Activistas de los derechos humanos vestidos con mamelucos naranja y con sus cabezas cubiertas por capuchas negras marcharon hoy frente a la Casa Blanca para protestar contra la prisión de Guantánamo en el décimo aniversario de la inauguración del centro de detención estadounidense.
Pese a una fría lluvia, cientos de personas de todas las edades se unieron a la protesta y marcharon hacia la Corte Suprema desde la Casa Blanca para deplorar la existencia de la prisión de la bahía de Guantánamo, en Cuba, a la que denunciaron como una afrenta a los valores de la nación.
Unos 100 de los manifestantes llevaban mamelucos naranja y capuchas como las de los presos de Guantánamo, la infame prisión para presuntos islamistas radicales creada por el anterior presidente Goerge W. Bush tras los atentados a las Torres Gemelas de 2001 y que hace 10 años recibió a su primer recluso.
Un manifestante estaba sentado en una jaula, con cadenas en los tobillos y muñecas, en protesta por el trato que reciben los detenidos en Guantánamo, que calificó de inhumano, informó la agencia de noticias DPA.
Además, la multitud entonó cánticos y demandó al presidente Barack Obama el cierre de la prisión con carteles en los que se leía "Obama Close Gitmo" (Obama cierra Guantánamo).
Entre los participantes había miembros de la organización Testigos contra la Tortura, Amnistía Internacional (AI) y el Centro de Derechos Constitucionales.
Más temprano, la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (CIDH) exigió una vez más que el gobierno de Obama que cierre la prisión "sin demora", investigue y "sancione" los actos de tortura contra los detenidos y le permita visitar la instalación.

Goerge W Bush - News


MARCHA DE PROTESTA EN WASHINGTON POR LOS 10 AÑOS DE GUANTANAMO

Unos 100 de los manifestantes llevaban mamelucos naranja y capuchas como las de los presos de Guantánamo, la infame prisión para presuntos islamistas radicales creada por el anterior presidente Goerge W. Bush tras los atentados a las Torres Gemelas de




Why George W. Bush is the Arab Spring's forgotten man | McClatchy

WASHINGTON — On Nov. 6, 2003, then President George W. Bush gave a major foreign policy address in which he called for the spread of democracy across the Middle East, an appeal that seems to be resonating in this year of Arab Spring revolts.

Yet less than three years after leaving office, Bush's name isn't associated with the uprisings from Cairo to Tripoli, and he gets little credit for having inspired them.

That's in marked contrast with President Ronald Reagan, whose 1987 exhortation "Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" in Berlin became the defining cry of a leader now lionized for having ended the Cold War.

In his speech eight years ago, delivered scarcely seven months after he'd invaded Iraq in the face of widespread international opposition, Bush sought to make freedom in the Middle East an extension of Reagan's legacy.

Addressing the National Endowment for Democracy on the 20th anniversary of its founding, Bush said Reagan had established the federal agency with the goal of bringing down the Soviet Union.

The time had come, Bush said, to launch a similar initiative in another critical part of the world.

"Are the peoples of the Middle East somehow beyond the reach of liberty?" Bush asked. "Are millions of men and women and children condemned by history or culture to live in despotism? Are they alone never to know freedom and never to have a choice in the matter? I, for one, do not believe it. I believe every person has the ability and the right to be free."

Castigating his predecessors and allied leaders for "sixty years of Western nations excusing and accommodating the lack of freedom in the Middle East," Bush proclaimed:

"The United States has adopted a new policy, a forward strategy of freedom in the Middle East," one that would require "the same persistence and energy and idealism we have shown before.


Goerge W Bush - Bookshelf

Bush's Brain, How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential

Bush's Brain, How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential

" -The New York Review of Books "Bush's Brain isn't a hatchet job on George W. Bush.

Spoken from the Heart

Spoken from the Heart

Laura Bush's compassion, her sense of humor, her grace, and her uncommon willingness to bare her heart make this story revelatory, beautifully rendered, and ...

Decision Points

Decision Points

The author offers a strikingly candid journey through the defining decisions of his life and presidency, discussing the hotly contested 2000 election, 9/11, the ...

W Juliet

W Juliet


Bill W., The Absorbing and Deeply Moving Life Story of Bill Wilson, Co-Founder of Alcoholics Anonymous

Bill W., The Absorbing and Deeply Moving Life Story of Bill Wilson, Co-Founder of Alcoholics Anonymous

This is the story of a man whose discovery and vision have changed the lives of millions of people throughout the world.