Untitled Document
|
Britain has been dragged into
the growing scandal of officially condoned killings in Iraq |
British-trained police operating in Basra have tortured at least two
civilians to death with electric drills, The Independent on Sunday can reveal.
John Reid, the Secretary of State for Defence, admits that he knows of "alleged
deaths in custody" and other "serious prisoner abuse" at al-Jamiyat
police station, which was reopened by Britain after the war.
Militia-dominated police, who were recruited by Britain, are believed to have
tortured at least two men to death in the station. Their bodies were later found
with drill holes to their arms, legs and skulls.
The victims were suspected of collaborating with coalition forces, according
to intelligence reports. Despite being pressed "very hard" by Britain,
however, the Iraqi authorities in Basra are failing to even investigate incidents
of torture and murder by police, ministers admit.
The disclosure drags Britain firmly into the growing scandal of officially
condoned killings, torture and disappearances in Iraq. More than 170 starving
and tortured prisoners were discovered last week in an Interior Ministry bunker
in Baghdad.
American troops who uncovered the secret torture chamber are also said to have
discovered mutilated corpses, several bearing drill marks.
Adam Price, the Plaid Cymru MP for Carmarthen East and Dinefwr, who uncovered
the death at al-Jamiyat police station, called for an immediate UN investigation
into police torture. "The Government keeps on saying that respect for human
rights is a pre-condition of withdrawal. Well, it should be a pre-condition for
UK soldiers to continue risking their lives in Iraq," he said.
Mr Reid said: "I am aware of serious allegations of prisoner abuse at
the Jamiyat, including two deaths in custody. We take this very seriously. We
have been pressing the Iraqi authorities very hard to investigate these allegations
thoroughly and then to take the appropriate action."
Ministry of Defence sources privately confirm that the two SAS soldiers seized
and held in Jamiyat in September were investigating allegations of police torture
prompted by the discovery of the bodies.
British forces in armoured vehicles smashed their way into the station to rescue
them, but officers have admitted they are powerless to protect civilians in
southern Iraq from militias, and military patrols have been withdrawn from central
Basra in the wake of the September clashes.
In the US-controlled districts of Iraq, some senior military and intelligence
officials have been accused of giving tacit approval to the extra-judicial actions
of counter-insurgency forces.
Critics claim the situation echoes American collaboration with military regimes
in Latin America and south-east Asia during the Cold War, particularly in Vietnam,
where US-trained paramilitaries were used to kill opponents of the South Vietnamese
government.