Camp Iguana (Guantanamo Bay)

Camp Iguana (Guantanamo Bay)

Camp Iguana is a small compound in the detainment camp complex on the US Naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Camp Iguana originally held three child detainees who camp spokesmen then claimed were the only detainees under age 16. It was closed in the winter of 2004 when the three were sent home. When the Department of Defense was forced, by US District Court Judge Jed Rakoff's court order to release the identities of all the detainees, they acknowledged that they had held up to twenty minors in the adult portion of the prison.

In 2005 Camp Iguana was re-opened to hold some of the 38 detainees classified as "no longer enemy combatants", while they await diplomatic efforts to find them a permanent home in a country other than their country of origin or the United States.

Read more about Camp Iguana (Guantanamo Bay):  Used To Hold Child Detainees, Used To Hold Those Not Classified "enemy Combatants"

Famous quotes containing the word camp:

    When the weather is bad as it was yesterday, everybody, almost everybody, feels cross and gloomy. Our thin linen tents—about like a fish seine, the deep mud, the irregular mails, the never to-be-seen paymasters, and “the rest of mankind,” are growled about in “old-soldier” style. But a fine day like today has turned out brightens and cheers us all. We people in camp are merely big children, wayward and changeable.
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