The story below heightens, once again, my concern that the electoral,
political, social and sexual abuse of the people of other countries
by the US government most of my life will eventually turn on the
American people who, in the main, have so quietly acquiesced in the
wrongdoings of the government. The Florida voting fiasco was, to me,
the coming home of our destruction of the electoral process in other
countries, especially Latin and South America. Today Reuters'
reporters, tomorrow Sy Hersch?

Dan Scanlan

------------------

Reuters staff abused by U.S. troops in Iraq

By Andrew Marshall

BAGHDAD, May 18 (Reuters) - U.S. forces beat three Iraqis working for
Reuters and subjected them to sexual and religious taunts and
humiliation during their detention last January in a military camp
near Falluja, the three said on Tuesday.

The three first told Reuters of the ordeal after their release but
only decided to make it public when the U.S. military said there was
no evidence they had been abused, and following the exposure of
similar mistreatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad.

Two of the three said they had been forced to insert a finger into
their anus and then lick it, and were forced to put shoes in their
mouths, particularly humiliating in Arab culture.

All three said they were forced to make demeaning gestures as
soldiers laughed, taunted them and took photographs. They said they
did not want to give details publicly earlier because of the
degrading nature of the abuse.

The soldiers told them they would be taken to the U.S. detention
centre at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, deprived them of sleep, placed bags
over their heads, kicked and hit them and forced them to remain in
stress positions for long periods.

The U.S. military, in a report issued before the Abu Ghraib abuse
became public, said there was no evidence the Reuters staff had been
tortured or abused.

Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez, commander of ground forces in
Iraq, said in a letter received by Reuters on Monday but dated March
5 that he was confident the investigation had been "thorough and
objective" and its findings were sound.

The Pentagon has yet to respond to a request by Reuters Global
Managing Editor David Schlesinger to review the military's findings
about the incident in light of the scandal over the treatment of
prisoners at Abu Ghraib.

Asked for comment on Tuesday, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said
only: "There are a number of lines of inquiry under way with respect
to prison operations in Iraq. If during the course of any inquiry,
the commander believes it is appropriate to review a specific aspect
of detention, he has the authority to do so."

The abuse happened at Forward Operating Base Volturno, near Falluja,
the Reuters staff said. They were detained on January 2 while
covering the aftermath of the shooting down of a U.S. helicopter near
Falluja and held for three days, first at Volturno and then at
Forward Operating Base St Mere.

The three -- Baghdad-based cameraman Salem Ureibi, Falluja-based
freelance television journalist Ahmad Mohammad Hussein al-Badrani and
driver Sattar Jabar al-Badrani -- were released without charge on
January 5.

"INADEQUATE" INVESTIGATION

"When I saw the Abu Ghraib photographs, I wept," Ureibi said on
Tuesday. "I saw they had suffered like we had."

Ureibi, who understands English better than the other two detainees,
said soldiers told him they wanted to have sex with him, and he was
afraid he would be raped.

Schlesinger sent a letter to Sanchez on January 9 demanding an
investigation into the treatment of the three Iraqis.

The U.S. army said it was investigating and requested further
information. Reuters provided transcripts of initial interviews with
the three following their release, and offered to make them available
for interview by investigators.

A summary of the investigation by the 82nd Airborne Division, dated
January 28 and provided to Reuters, said "no specific incidents of
abuse were found". It said soldiers responsible for the detainees
were interviewed under oath and "none admit or report knowledge of
physical abuse or torture".

"The detainees were purposefully and carefully put under stress, to
include sleep deprivation, in order to facilitate interrogation; they
were not tortured," it said. The version received on Monday used the
phrase "sleep management" instead.

The U.S. military never interviewed the three for its investigation.


On February 3 Schlesinger wrote to Lawrence Di Rita, special assistant to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, saying the investigation was "woefully inadequate" and should be reopened.

"The military's conclusion of its investigation without even
interviewing the alleged victims, along with other inaccuracies and
inconsistencies in the report, speaks volumes about the seriousness
with which the U.S. government is taking this issue," he wrote.

ABUSE SCANDAL

The U.S. military faced international outrage this month after
photographs surfaced showing U.S. soldiers humiliating and abusing
Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib prison west of Baghdad.

An investigation by Major General Antonio Taguba found that "numerous
incidents of sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses were
inflicted on several detainees" in Abu Ghraib.

Seven U.S. soldiers have been charged over the Abu Ghraib abuse and
the first court martial is set for Wednesday.

U.S. officials say the abuse was carried out by a small number of
soldiers and that all allegations of abuse are promptly and
thoroughly investigated.

Copyright 2004, Reuters News Service
--
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IMPEACHMENT: BRING IT ON NOW!
NOVEMBER COULD BE TOO LATE.
--------------------------------------------------

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