The planet’s most expensive prison: Guantanamo by the numbers
The Department of Defense wants to spend nearly $200 million to upgrade facilities at Guantanamo Bay. President Obama wants to shut it down for good. We take a look at the numbers behind the planet's most expensive prison.
The Department of Defense wants to spend nearly $200 million to upgrade facilities at Guantanamo Bay detention camp where the U.S. holds suspected terrorists. President Obama has a very different plan for the future of the Gitmo. He wants to shut it down for good. Here’s a look at the numbers behind the planet’s most expensive prison:
166: Number of detainees currently at Gitmo.
$177 million: Total operating budget for 2013.
$1,066,265: Amount U.S. taxpayers will spend on each detainee in 2013.
$33,903: Average cost per inmate at a maximum security Federal prison.
$38.45: Spent each day to feed a Guantanamo detainee. (2011)
$3.16: Spent each day to feed the average Federal inmate (2011)
100: Guantanamo prisoners classified as hunger strikers the Army.
23: Number of hunger strikers who are being force-fed through feeding tubes.
4: Prisoners being force fed are cleared for release.
55: Total number of detainees currently held who have been cleared for release by the Justice Department.
$40 million: Cost of a fiber optic cable from Florida to Cuba that is currently under construction to increase internet speed at the detention camp.
2: Factor by which the cost of an item increases when it has to be shipped from the U.S. to Cuba.
2060: Days that have passed since Barack Obama first promised to close Guantanamo Bay.
90: Senators who voted against Obama’s 2009 proposal to spend $80 million to close Gitmo.
6: Senators who voted in favor of funding the closure of Guantanamo.