IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Torture in Iraq worse since Abu Ghraib |
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by Bill Van Auken World Socialist Web Site Entered into the database on Tuesday, March 07th, 2006 @ 15:13:57 MST |
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The US and its allies in Iraq are holding more than 14,000 civilian
prisoners—in some cases for years—without charges or trials, while
torture and abuse in detention camps are now worse than when the horrors of
Abu Ghraib were exposed nearly two years ago. These are the damning conclusions of a report entitled “Beyond Abu Ghraib:
Detention and Torture in Iraq,” released Monday by the London-based human
rights group Amnesty International. The arbitrary detention of tens of thousands of Iraqis in the three years since
the US invaded the country and the physical abuse of those held are ongoing
war crimes by the US occupation. These practices, carried out in flagrant violation
of international law, go a long way towards explaining the inexhaustible supply
of recruits willing to die fighting to expel American troops from their country. Describing the human rights situation in Iraq as “dire” and the
record of US and British troops in the country as “unpalatable,”
the report charges that the “continuing detentions without charge or trial
of thousands of people in Iraq who are classified by the MNF [Multinational
Force] as ‘security internees’” had facilitated and encouraged
the kind of torture seen in the images that emerged from Abu Ghraib in April
2004 and again in February of this year. The US-led occupation, Amnesty continued, “has established procedures
which deprive detainees of human rights guaranteed in international human rights
law and standards.” The report points out that detainees have no means of challenging their detention
or even learning the charges against them. In many cases, their arrests are
not even reported, amounting to forced “disappearances,” a practice
barred by international law and associated with fascist military dictatorships. “Some of the detainees have been held for over two years without any
effective remedy or recourse; others have been released without explanation
or apology or reparation after months in detention, victims of a system that
is arbitrary and a recipe for abuse,” the document states. The human rights group arrived at the figure of 14,000 detainees by using numbers
supplied by the US occupation forces. Undoubtedly, the real figure is considerably
higher. According to this official count, there are 4,710 Iraqis still held at Abu
Ghraib prison, another 138 at Camp Cropper, near the Baghdad airport, 7,365
at Camp Bucca, in the south near Basra, and 1,176 at Fort Suse, near Suleimaniya.
In addition, 650 are listed as being detained in US and British military facilities
elsewhere in Iraq. 4,000 held for over a year without charges The report states that at least 750 Iraqis have been held for nearly three
years since the onset of the US invasion, without ever having been charged with
any crime, much less brought to trial. Nearly 4,000 have been held for more
than a year under these conditions. While some of these prisoners include senior Iraqi government officials captured
by American troops—the so-called “high-value” detainees—the
vast majority are innocent Iraqis caught up in the continuous security sweeps,
without any evidence against them. The report notes that two of these “high-value” detainees have
died as a result of torture and physical abuse. Abd Hamad Mawoush, an Iraqi
army general, was suffocated to death in November 2003 by an American army interrogator,
who had forced a sleeping bag over his head and then sat on his chest. A court
martial of the interrogator resulted only in a forfeiture of salary. The second such fatality was that of Muhammad Mun’im al-Izmerly, 65,
a chemical scientist, who was detained soon after the invasion and taken to
Camp Cropper, where he died in January 2004. According to a US autopsy report,
he “died from a sudden hit to his head.” The continued US detention of such individuals is a violation of international
law and gives the lie to Washington’s so-called handover of power to the
Iraqi government. The US authorities had claimed that they were holding them
as enemy prisoners of war, a status that no longer has even a pretense of legality
following the formal transfer of power in June 2004. Torture has become even more widespread since the formal transfer of power,
Amnesty charges, as a result of US-backed Iraqi security forces taking charge
of some detention facilities. Among other methods, “victims have been
subjected to electric shocks or have been beaten with plastic cables.” Among the case studies cited by Amnesty is that of a 47-year-old imam referred
to as Karim R, who was “detained and tortured by US forces in 2003 and
then by Iraqi forces in 2005.” In both cases, he was subsequently released
without ever having been charged. After being picked up in Baghdad by American occupation troops in October 2003,
“He was insulted, blindfolded, beaten and subjected to electric shocks
from a stun gun (taser) by US troops at a detention facility in the Kadhimiya
district of Baghdad,” the report states. He was held for seven days. In May 2005, Karim R was detained for 16 days by Iraqi Interior Ministry forces
at one of their detention facilities in Baghdad. He described his torture to
Amnesty International: “They tied my hands to the back with a cable. There was an instrument
with a chain which was attached to the ceiling. When they switched it on the
chain pulled me up to the ceiling. Because the hands are tied to the back this
is even more painful (...) Afterwards they threw water over me and they used
electric shocks. They connected the current to my legs and also to other parts
of my body. (...) The first time they subjected me to electric shocks I fainted
for 40 seconds or one minute. It felt like falling from a building. I had a
headache and was not able to walk. The interrogator said: You better confess
to terrorist activities, in order to save your life. I responded that I was
not involved in these activities and that I had a heart condition. (...) Later
they forced me to confess on camera. They asked questions claiming that I was
a terrorist but they did not even give me the chance to reply. They just stated
that I was a terrorist. (...).” US complicit in torture, killing by Iraqi forces Accounts of similar electric shock torture are common among those detained
by the US-backed Iraqi security forces, the report states. Other frequently
reported tortures include beatings with plastic cables, burnings with lighted
cigarettes and ripping out victims’ nails. The report says that some victims
have reported the presence of US military personnel during their torture and
interrogation. In a growing number of cases, however, the victims of torture are not left
alive to testify about their experiences. They are victims of extra-judicial
executions, killed by Iraqi death squads linked to the Interior Ministry after
they have been tortured, their bodies dumped by the roadside. Once such case cited in the report is that of Hassan al-Nu’aimi, a Sunni
cleric who was a member of the Association of Muslim Scholars. His body was
found a day after he was picked up by an Iraqi police commando unit. The report
quotes from a description of the body’s condition that was provided by
a correspondent for the British Observer newspaper: “There are police-issue handcuffs still attached to one wrist, from which
he was hanged long enough to cause his hands and wrists to swell. There are
burn marks on his chest, as if someone has placed something very hot near his
right nipple and moved it around. A little lower are a series of horizontal
welts, wrapping around his body and breaking the skin as they turn around his
chest, as if he had been beaten with something flexible, perhaps a cable. There
are other injuries: a broken nose and smaller wounds that look like cigarette
burns. An arm appears to have been broken and one of the higher vertebrae is
pushed inwards. There is a cluster of small, neat circular wounds on both sides
of his left knee. At some stage [he] seems to have been efficiently knee-capped.
It was not done with a gun—the exit wounds are identical in size to the
entry wounds, which would not happen with a bullet. Instead it appears to have
been done with something like a drill. What actually killed him however were
the bullets fired into his chest at close range, probably by someone standing
over him as he lay on the ground. The last two hit him in the head.” Also cited is the case of 12 men who suffocated to death last July after being
thrown into a police van and left there for 14 hours in the searing summer heat.
Amnesty cites sources who report that the 12 “were a group of bricklayers
who had been detained on suspicion that they were insurgents and then brutally
tortured by police commandoes before being confined in the police vehicle.”
Medical staff who examined the bodies confirmed that there were signs of torture,
including electric shocks. The report charges that the US and British occupation authorities are fully
complicit in these atrocious crimes. “Close day-to-day collaboration between
MNF forces and those of the Iraqi government suggests that MNF commanders and
the governments to which they are responsible have been well aware for a considerable
time that the Iraqi forces they support are responsible for gross abuses of
human rights,” it states. “Yet, as part of their cooperation with
Iraqi government forces, the MNF continued to hand over some of those whom its
forces detained into the custody of Iraqi forces.” As further confirmation of this complicity, the report cites a December 2005
radio interview with a former commander of special forces at the Interior Ministry,
General Muntazar Jasim al-Samarra’i. He acknowledged that torture was
routine, but went on to affirm: “Members of the US forces visited this
prison every day. The US troops knew everything about the torture.” Nor has torture stopped in the US-run facilities, despite claims by the Pentagon
that new procedures were put in place in the wake of the worldwide outrage triggered
by the images of physical abuse and sexual humiliation that came out of Abu
Ghraib. The report cites a number of exposures of US troops using electric shocks
to torture prisoners in recent months. That such practices continue is hardly surprising. Amnesty notes that only
a handful of lower-ranking military personnel were prosecuted for the crimes
at Abu Ghraib. This was despite the clear evidence that a policy of torture
had been implemented on the orders of the highest echelons of the Pentagon,
including Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and those of the White House itself. In a number of cases, those prosecuted “received sentences that fail
to reflect the gravity of these violations,” including fines or brief
confinement to quarters for personnel found to have killed detainees through
torture and abuse, the report points out. The report states that the torture and abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib constituted
“war crimes,” adding that governments must allow “no impunity
for anyone found responsible for war crimes, regardless of position or rank.” While this is a noble sentiment, the assertion of a right to torture with impunity
starts at the top of the US government. President Bush and his lawyers have
repeatedly argued that he is empowered to carry out any action—including
unlawful detentions, torture and even murder—as “commander in chief”
in the so-called war on terror. This assertion of impunity has been largely accepted by the Democratic Party,
which has shown no interest in making a political issue of the unending revelations
concerning torture in Iraq, Guantanamo Bay, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Likewise,
the mass media has relegated such revelations to a footnote. Just as it dropped
any references to the appalling new photographs and videotapes of torture at
Abu Ghraib after barely a day last month, the revealing report from Amnesty
International was largely ignored by major US newspapers and broadcast news
outlets. |