Prisoners at the Guantanomo Bay detention camp have now been on hunger strike for 100 days. <br />At least 102 of the remaining 166 prisoners at the facility are refusing food.<br />The strike started in February, with prisoners angry at a new system for restraining them, which they said was harsher than the previous one.<br />Claims that their Qurans were mishandled during inspection, which sparked the protest, were denied by the authorities.<br />The prisoners are being force-fed in order to keep them alive.<br />Inmates are restrained and a feeding tube is pushed through their nose and into their stomach - a practice the UN compares to torture. <br />Speaking to Al Jazeera, Dr Otmar Kloiber, Secretary General at the World Medical Association, said the force-feeding was "degrading and inhuman".
