Greetings from Guantanamo Bay ... and the sickest souvenir shop in the world

sister herb

Official TTI Chef
ANGELA LEVIN

The sands are white, the sea laps gently and crowds of bronzed Americans laze in the Caribbean sunshine.

They have a cinema, a golf course and, naturally, a gift shop stocked with mugs, jaunty T-shirts and racks of postcards showing perfect sunsets and bright green iguanas.

Only the barbed wire decoration, a recurring motif, hints at anything wrong.

Welcome to "Taliban Towers" at Guantanamo Bay, the most ghoulishly distasteful tourist destination on the planet.

As these astonishing mementoes show, the US authorities are promoting the world's most notorious prison camp as a cheap hideaway for American sunseekers – a revelation that has drawn international anger and condemnation.

Just yards from the shelves of specially branded mugs and cuddly toys, nearly 300 "enemy combatants" lie sweltering in a waking nightmare.

It is six years since foreign prisoners, many captured in Afghanistan, were first taken to this US-occupied corner of Cuba. Yet even now, no charges have been brought against them.

While the detainees lie incarcerated, visitors can windsurf, take boat trips and go fishing for grouper, tuna, red snapper and swordfish.

The United States' 1.5million service personnel and Guantanamo's 3,000 construction workers are eligible to visit the "resort", which boasts a McDonald's, KFC and a bowling alley.

They even have a Wal-Mart supermarket.

The vacation comes at a knock-down price: just $42 (£20) per night for a suite of air-conditioned rooms, including a kitchen, bathroom, living room and bedrooms.

But it is the souvenirs that have led to the greatest criticism. One T-shirt from the gift shop is decorated with a guard tower and barbed wire. It reads: "The Taliban Towers at Guantanamo Bay, the Caribbean's Newest 5-star Resort."

Another praises "the proud protectors of freedom". A third displays a garish picture of an iguana and states: "Greetings from paradise GTMO resort and spa fun in the Cuban sun."

A child-sized shirt says: "Someone who loves me got me this T-shirt in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba."

Full article: http://www.uruknet.de/?p=m43718&hd=&size=1&l=e
 

palestine

Servant of Allah
this is just sick. i promise you someday that somehow those prisoners will be freed who were concealed without evidence. salam.
 

warda A

Sister
:salam2:

when the heart is blakened if can feel no resmorse and that is what is happening now
but,
the truth always comes out no matter what
we will know of all the happenings there.

:wasalam:
 

q8penpals

Junior Member
Salam

I want to make it clear that I am not commenting of the detainment of people at the Guantanamo Naval base, only on parts of the posting (which are not completely accurate - or at least, are portrayed in a misleading manner). I hate when people write articles (the author) and then things get posted around that are not accurate.

1 - the Guantanamo Naval base was founded in 1898 - many young people seem to think it has always been there as a prison - it has not; that is only a recent thing (since the detainment of the people rounded up in Afghanistan).

2- Nearly all military bases around the world have fast food restaurants, cafes, shops, etc - the post seems to make it look like this is all there just for the pleasure of the guards at the prison. Now, I would agree that some of the merchandise (especially with reference to the current detainees) may not necessarily be appropriate, but even the bases here in Kuwait (and the US embassy) sell T-shirts and mugs, and keychains, and other knick-knacks for military people to bring back for their friends and families. No big surprise that a 100+ year old military base would do the same.

3 - The talk of "closing Guantanamo" generally refers ONLY to the prison, not the base itself. Therefore, even if the prison were closed, the fast-food joints, shops, etc., would stay for the US Military personnel who would still be stationed there, and generally have nothing to do with the job that is being carried out by the Military - they are there to provide a piece of home (which is why they are all over the world - the ONLY Taco Bell in Kuwait is on the US Air Force base, so no tacos or burritos for me - and Taco Bell beans are pork free!).

So, be angry about the prisoners not being allowed a trial, but to me, it seems bit silly to be angry that the personnel working there are allowed to buy a Whopper, Venti Latte, or a post card of the beach in Cuba.

Lana
 
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