Torture in Iraq Still Routine, Report Says
   By Doug Struck
   The Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A33349-2005Jan24.html
   Tuesday 25 January 2005

Detainees beaten, hung by wrists, shocked by security forces, rights group 
finds.

   BAGHDAD - Twenty months after Saddam Hussein's government was toppled and 
its torture chambers unlocked, Iraqis are again being routinely beaten, hung by 
their wrists and shocked with electrical wires, according to a report by a 
human rights organization.

   Iraqi police, jailers and intelligence agents, many of them holding the same 
jobs they had under Hussein, are "committing systematic torture and other 
abuses" of detainees, Human Rights Watch said in a report to be released 
Tuesday.

   Legal safeguards are being ignored, political opponents are targeted for 
arrest, and the government of interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi "appears to be 
actively taking part, or is at least complicit, in these grave violations of 
fundamental human rights," the report concludes.

   A spokesman for Allawi declined to comment, Monday and said "I will put this 
report on the prime minister's desk tomorrow to see if he has any reaction."

   Ibrahim Jafari, an interim vice president, said in an interview that 
security forces needed to be tougher to combat the campaign of violence by 
opponents of the election.

   "I think the security people are not arresting enough and are releasing them 
too quickly," Jafari said. "And many of the security people are cooperating 
with the criminals. I think we have to put security as our priority."

   The Human Rights Watch report acknowledged that Iraq was "in the throes of a 
significant insurgency" in which 1,300 police officers and thousands of 
civilians were killed in the last four months of 2004. But it argued that "no 
government, not Saddam Hussein's, not the occupying powers and not the Iraqi 
Interim Government, can justify ill-treatment of persons in custody in the name 
of security."

   The report was based on interviews with 90 current and former detainees in 
Iraq conducted between July and October last year, many of them interviewed 
when they were brought to court for initial proceedings. Of those, 72 said they 
were "tortured or ill-treated," the report says. It recounts numerous 
individual cases of torture, and says the victims often had fresh scars or 
bruises.

   "I was beaten with cables and suspended by my hands tied behind my back," 
Dhia Fawzi Shaid, 30, a resident of Baghdad, told the human rights 
investigators, according to the report. "I saw young men there lying on the 
floor while police [stepped] on their heads with boots. It was worse than 
Saddam's regime."

   Another, identified in the report as Ali Rashid Abbadi, 21, said he was 
arrested by police after the bombing of a liquor store on July 11. "The police 
came and started hitting us," he told Human Rights Watch. "They shouted at us 
to confess. . . . We were blindfolded and our hands were tied behind our backs. 
They poured cold water over me and applied electric shocks to my genitals."

   Abbadi was later released by a judge for lack of evidence, the report says.

   The report deals with the conduct of Iraqi authorities but not that of U.S. 
military forces at three U.S.-run detention facilities in Iraq, including Abu 
Ghraib. The three sites currently hold about 9,000 prisoners.

   The Washington Post contacted several people whose cases were included in 
the report. They declined to speak to a reporter, saying they feared 
retaliation by police.

   "The majority of detainees . . . stated that torture and ill-treatment 
during the initial period was commonplace" in jails run by the Interior 
Ministry, the report says. The abuses included "routine beatings . . . using 
cables, [rubber] hosepipes and metal rods . . . kicking, slapping and punching, 
prolonged suspension from the wrists," as well as electric shocks to the 
genitals and long periods spent blindfolded and handcuffed.

   Hania Mufti, the Baghdad director of Human Rights Watch and chief author of 
the report, said she did not find examples of abuses that were on a par with 
the worst atrocities committed under Hussein's rule, such as mock executions, 
disfigurement with acid or sexual assaults on family members in front of 
prisoners. But in many other respects, she said, treatment of those swept up by 
police had changed little.

   "Many of the same people who worked in Saddam's time are still doing those 
jobs today. So there is a continuity of personnel and of mind-set," she said in 
an interview. "I think the Iraqi people themselves thought there was going to 
be a different system. Every day, they are finding it is not so different."

   The report also says authorities made a mockery of legal safeguards. People 
said they were arrested without warrants and held without charges for days, 
weeks or months. Police officials ignored summonses from judges, and judges who 
became too demanding of authorities were removed from their jobs.

   "The message has not gone out from the government that torture will not be 
tolerated," Mufti said. And foreign advisers hired to assist the Iraqi police 
have failed to object, she said.

   The report relates "the only known case in which U.S. forces intervened to 
stop detainee abuse." It said scouts from an Oregon Army National Guard unit 
saw Iraqi guards at an Interior Ministry compound abusing detainees on June 29. 
A soldier took pictures through his rifle scope of detainees who were 
blindfolded and bound.

   According to an account related in the report by Capt. Jarrell Southal of 
the National Guard, his soldiers entered the compound and found bound prisoners 
"writhing in pain" and complaining of lack of water. They gave water to the 
men, moved them out of the sun and then disarmed the Iraqi police. But when the 
Oregon soldiers radioed up their chain of command for instructions, they were 
ordered to "return the prisoners to the Iraqi authorities and leave the 
detention yard."


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