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WSWS : News
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Norway: anti-terror investigation exposes US-backed
torture in northern Iraq
By Niall Green
18 August 2004
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Norwegian authorities have dropped terrorist charges against
exiled Iraqi cleric Mullah Krekar after investigators discovered
that the main evidence against him, provided by the US, was obtained
through torture.
Krekar, an Iraqi Kurd who has been living as a political refugee
in Norway since 1991, had been the subject of a seven-month investigation
by Norwegian police. He had previously been acquitted of terrorism
charges by Norways highest court in April 2003, but was
charged again in January after US authorities passed on supposed
new evidence of his association with suicide bombings that had
been planned in northern Iraq in 2003 by the Islamic militant
group Ansar al-Islam.
Norwegian police travelled to Iraq to re-interrogate the key
witness who had testified against Krekar to US agents while being
held by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). The PUK is closely
allied with US forces, and its leader Jalal Talabani serves on
the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council. However, it turned out
that the new evidence had been extracted using torture
on prisoners held by the PUK.
According to Brynjar Meling, Krekars attorney, one of
the main witness against his client said that he had been a PUK
prisoner last year when he was interrogated by US agents. The
witness, Didar Khalan, said that after being tortured over a weeklong
period by the PUK he had told his tormentors what they wanted.
He claimed that, among other abuse, his arm was broken during
one beating, and that he was made to stand in a freezing room
without clothing and sit on blocks of ice.
During his subsequent questioning by Norwegian police this
year, Khalan took the opportunity to refute his previous confession
to having worked with Krekar in planning the suicide bombing,
telling them that he had, in fact, never met Krekar.
According to human rights charities, including Human Rights
Watch, the PUK has a record of subjecting its prisoners to mistreatment
and torture. Despite this the US authorities have continued to
treat the evidence handed over by the PUK as good
coin. A US State Department official told a June 15 press briefing:
We have no independent confirmation of his allegation of
abuse while under detention by Patriotic Union of Kurdistan forces.
Any credible allegations of mistreatment by US authorities would,
of course, be investigated, and if evidence of criminal behaviour
were to be found, the responsible individuals would be held accountable.
On July 15, a Norwegian state prosecutor announced that all
charges had been dropped against Krekar for lack of evidence and
fears that witness testimony in Iraq was coerced. Krekar had been
detained in custody for seven weeks prior to his acquittal.
US frames Krekar as the missing link
The US has pursued Krekar, one of the main religious and ideological
figures of Ansar al-Islam, since mid-2002. Prior to this Ansar
al-Islam had been in talks with their long-time rivals the PUK,
talks that seem to have broken down due to Ansars unwillingness
to support a US invasion of Iraq.
Following this failure to recruit Ansar to its campaign to
conquer Iraq, Washington swung into action against Krekar and
his organisation. The cleric was detained in Holland for three
months from September 2003, during which time Krekar claims he
was questioned by US agents. At this time Jordanian authorities
also demanded his extradition on drug-smuggling charges.
Meanwhile Ansar al-Islam was presented by the Bush administration
as the missing-link between the Saddam Hussein regime
and Al Qaeda. The New York Times conveniently uncovered evidence
of Ansar being linked to Osama bin Laden during an investigation
by the newspaper into Al Qaeda in Afghanistan in January 2003.
The PUK provided the other end of the link, claiming
that it knew of Ansar al-Islams connections with the secular
Baathist regime. The following month Ansar was placed on the United
Nations list of terrorist organisations.
Returning to Norway after his detention in Holland, Krekar
was arrested following an intervention by US Secretary of State
Colin Powell in January 2003.
After meeting with Norways Foreign Minister Jan Petersen,
Powell proclaimed that the US did not want people suspected of
terrorist activities going out and taking part in new actions.
The Norwegian government then moved against Krekar, with the cleric
being investigated by police and Norways special Economic
Crime Unit (Oekokrim) and charged with terrorist offences, while
government ministers, including Prime Minister Bondevik and Immigration
Minister Erna Solberg, issued statements against him.
Following Krekars acquittal by the Norwegian Supreme
Court in April 2003 the US continued its pursuit. During a visit
to Norway in September, US Attorney General John Ashcroft reiterated
that the Bush administration was concerned that Krekar be dealt
with.
After an initial reluctance to support the US invasion of Iraq
without a UN mandate, the Norwegian government moved quickly to
re-establish itself as a US ally in the so-called war on
terror. As well as its willingness to hound Krekar at the
behest of Washington, the Bondevik government sent 150 Norwegian
troops to aid the occupation of Iraq. Although the deployment
in southern Iraq has come to an end, Peterson has indicated the
governments willingness to continue Norwegian co-operation
with the US in Iraq and has refused to rule out future deployment.
The Norwegian authorities continued to pursue Krekar until
July 2004, when his legal team discovered that key witnesses against
Krekar had been tortured into giving evidence against him.
According to Krekars lawyers, Norwegian investigators
failed to reveal any evidence linking Krekar to Al Qaedathe
central claim of the US for the past 18 months. They have described
the case as a political trial, with the Norwegian
police under pressure from the US. Meling has gone on record as
saying that the US persecution of his client was not based on
any verifiable evidence, and that claims that Krekar and Ansar
al-Islam represented a missing link between Saddam
Hussein and Al Qaeda had been created with the help
of the PUK in order to justify the war.
Meanwhile, in Denmark allegations of prisoner abuse by members
of the 500-plus deployment of Danish soldiers in Iraq have led
to the recall of all top officers including the battalion commander,
the head of military police, the head of military intelligence
and the chief legal officer.
The Danish army is investigating complaints from several of
its own soldiers about the use of stress positions and water deprivation
against Iraqi prisoners by Danish interrogators at Camp Eden in
southern Iraq. As well as the two senior officers, a lower ranking
intelligence officer and several troops are being investigated.
Denmarks Defence Minister Soren Gade, told Danish television,
There may be doubt about the leaderships judgement
and I have therefore decided to send home the commanders.
Later an armed forces spokesman Lt. Col. Hans-Christian Mathiesen
told Reuters that there would be an investigation involving several
Danish personnel.
It is the second case to have leaked out alleging prisoner
abuse by Danish forces in Iraq. In May, a Danish soldier was officially
reprimanded for assaulting an Iraqi prisoner with the butt
of a rife.
See Also:
US commanders stop troops from protecting
Iraqi torture victims
[12 August 2004]
US torture in Iraq, Afghanistan:
Authorized at the highest levels
[15 June 2004]
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