[lbo-talk] more torture tales

Doug Henwood dhenwood at panix.com
Sun May 9 11:45:02 PDT 2004


Iraqi Detainees Allege Torture in U.S.-Run Jails By Ghaith Abdul-Ahad

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Torture, abuse and humiliation of prisoners is widespread in U.S.-run detention centers in Iraq (news - web sites), and not limited to a few cases, non-governmental organizations in Iraq and an American Christian group said Sunday.

"We are here to tell the world that the cases of torture of Iraqi prisoners are not isolated incidents and they are not limited to Abu Ghraib prison, nor to the six U.S. MPs," a spokeswoman for the Iraqi Human Rights Organization (IHRO) told a news conference in Baghdad.

Seven U.S. Military Police (MPs) have been charged with abusing Iraqi prisoners after a global scandal erupted with the publication of photographs of naked detainees being humiliated at Abu Ghraib prison just outside Baghdad.

U.S. spokesman Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt said Specialist Jeremy Sivits would face a court martial in Baghdad next week, accused of abusing detainees.

President Bush (news - web sites) has said the acts were "the wrongdoing of a few" and did not reflect the character of the 200,000 military personnel who have served in Iraq.

But rights groups disputed those assertions.

"These are part of a systematic method of torture and inhuman treatment," the IHRO spokeswoman said.

ELECTRIC SHOCKS, PISTOLS

People who said they had been victims of torture and relatives of detainees told the news conference of their degrading treatment in the U.S. prisons.

None of the accounts could be verified independently and there was no immediate comment on these specific cases from the U.S. military. However, Kimmitt told a separate news conference all allegations would be investigated.

"The primary objective is to point out that there are systematic abuses taking place in the American prisons," said Stewart Vriesinga of the Christian Peacemakers Team.

"Iraqis are treated in a dehumanized way."

Issam al-Hammad said the Americans came to his village near al-Qaim on the Syrian border looking for his father, Abid Hammad al-Mahoosh, a major general in the disbanded Iraqi army.

He wasn't there, so they took Issam and his three brothers, the youngest of them age 16. "We spent five and a half months in four detention centers," Issam al-Hammad said.

Al-Hammad, who is in his late 20s, said they were beaten and given electrical shocks. "I was naked apart from my underpants and they poured water on my back and then electrified me with an electrical stick," he said.

Several times American officers pointed a pistol at one of the brothers to force the others to talk, he said. "They told me if you don't talk we will bring your mothers and sisters here," al-Hammad said.

FATHER "DIED AFTER TORTURE"

The al-Hammad brothers showed a photograph of a body marked extensively with bruises and burns, which they said was their father, who surrendered to U.S. forces after his sons were detained.

"Our father handed himself to the Americans three days after we were arrested. For two months he was tortured, and when he died because of the torture they dropped his body at the front gate of a hospital and left him there," Issam al-Hammad said.

The brothers said they had a hospital autopsy report stating their father died of a heart attack caused by extensive torture.

"We are not looking for compensation. We want to expose what happened to our father to the rest of the world and make sure other detainees won't suffer like us," al-Hammad said.

Najim Abdul-Majid, 45, a Baghdad shop owner detained with his 17-year-old son last August, said during interrogation his captors would chain him to the ceiling for three hours. "Beating and humiliation was the norm," he said.

"Once they took me to watch my son being tortured with electricity. He was tied to a pole while two wires were dangled on his back," he said.

Accused of storing explosive material, Abdul-Majid said he spent six months in Abu Ghraib prison before being released with an apology. His son was still in detention, he said.



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