Untitled Document
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Massive protests swept Mosul
over the past few days to demand the immediate release of detained Iraqi
women. |
MOSUL, June 19, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – US occupation forces completed
on Sunday, June 19, the release of twenty one Iraqi women held as a bargain chip
in the northern city of Mosul.
"The release came after massive protests organized by the Islamic Party
and the Islamic organization for human rights over the past three days,"
Nour Al-Din Al-Hayalli, the Islamic Party's media officer in Mosul, told IslamOnline.net.
The Islamic party championed a massive demonstration following the Friday prayers
on June 17 to press for the immediate release of all Iraqi women in the US custody.
Assembling outside the Sedek Rashan mosque, protestors denounced the American
occupation for dishonoring the Iraqi people by detaining women.
They carried photos of detained women, demanding the government of Ibrahim
Jaafari to live up to its responsibilities toward the Iraqi people.
The demonstrators also issued a statement calling for an immediate release
of all Iraqi women detainees across the occupied country.
There is no available figures on Iraqi women in the custody of American occupation
forces, including former regime officials and scientists.
Bargain Chip
Al-Hayalli said many Iraqi families have complained that the occupation forces
were holding women as a bargain chip against relatives reportedly involved in
resistance operations.
In a demonstration staged on Thursday, June 16, an Iraqi woman said her daughter-in-law
was detained by US soldiers after they failed to find her husband.
"They stormed the house on May 24, searching for my son. When they failed
to find him they detained his wife and threw his six-month-old child to the
ground," she recalled.
Another Iraqi female detainee, who was released days earlier, recounted her
own nightmare.
"The US forces attacked the house after midnight, blowing up the doors
and killing my husband's brother and injuring me along with my husband and brother."
"They arrested me along with my husband and brother. We suffered horrible
detention conditions."
Abuses
Harith Adeb, the head of the Islamic organization for human rights, said his
group registered 21 cases of Iraqi women detained by the American occupation
forces across the city.
"Five women, all of the same family, were detained in western Mosul, two
in Al-Nour district and another from Mosul University in addition to others
released few days ago," he said.
Abdeb lambasted American abuses of Iraqi women including open-ended detention
without charges.
Amnesty International said in a report last month that several women detained
by US troops had complained of beatings, threats of rape, humiliating treatment
and long periods of solitary confinement.
Britain’s mass-circulation The Guardian revealed in May, 2004, that US
soldiers in Iraq have sexually humiliated and abused several Iraqi female detainees
in Abu Ghraib.
In its May 10-17 issue of the same year, Newsweek said that unreleased Abu
Ghraib abuse photos include an American soldier raping a female Iraqi detainee.