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Analysis : Middle
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Iraqi prime minister accused of murdering detainees
By James Conachy
19 July 2004
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In an exclusive report in the Sydney Morning Herald
and Age newspapers, two Iraqi men claim to have witnessed
Iyad Allawi, the US-installed Iraqi interim prime minister, murder
six handcuffed and blindfolded prisoners. The summary executions
allegedly occurred in mid-June, while Allawi was visiting the
Al-Amariyah security center in Baghdad.
The newspapers appear to have had the story for several weeks.
They finally decided to publish the article on July 17, noting
that the failure by Iraqi and US officialdom to mount convincing
denials makes the witness accounts impossible to ignore.
According to their Baghdad correspondent, Paul McGeough,
who conducted the interviews, the two witnesses were found independently
of one another and spoken to separately. Neither received payment.
One of the men told the journalist: The prisoners were
against the wall and we were standing in the courtyard when the
interior minister [Falah al-Naqib] said that he would like to
kill them all on the spot. Allawi said they deserved worse than
death, but then he pulled the pistol from his belt and started
shooting them.
The other witness said the prisoners, all young men who had
been detained on suspicion of involvement in the anti-US resistance,
had been subjected to repeated torture in the days before Allawi
gunned them down. He stated: They were happy to die because
they had already been beaten by the police for two to eight hours
a day to make them talk.
The two witnesses alleged that Allawi shot seven men in cold
blood. Six died instantly, while the other was severely wounded.
The article gave the names of three of the victims as Ahmed Abdulah
Ahsamey, Amer Lutfi Mohammed Ahmed al-Kutsia and Walid Mehdi Ahmed
al-Sammarrai.
One of the witnesses said he watched as Allawis bodyguards
threw the bodies into the back of a Nissan utility and drove off.
The other claimed the bodies were buried in the desert on the
outskirts of Baghdad, west of the Abu Ghraib prison. The fate
of the wounded man is unclear from the report.
According to the witnesses, as many as 30 people were present
during the murders, including Iraqi police and five or six civilian-clad
Americans from the US Special Forces assigned to Allawis
security detail. Allawi allegedly told them after murdering the
six men that he wanted to show the Iraqi police how to deal
with the opposition to the US occupation of Iraq.
One of the witnesses explained: Allawi wanted to send
a message to his policemen and soldiers not to be scared if they
kill anyoneespecially, they are not to worry about tribal
revenge. He said there would be an order from him and the Interior
Ministry that all would be fully protected. He told them: We
must destroy anyone who wants to destroy Iraq and kill our people.
Allawis office did not issue an official denial for almost
a week after the newspapers informed it of the accusations, and
rejected outright any suggestion of an investigation. US officials
were informed 10 days before the story was published and to date
the Bush administration has not issued a denial. The US embassy
in Baghdad baldly dismissed the allegations as rumors and declared:
As far as this embassys press office is concerned,
this case is closed.
Iraqs Human Rights Minister Bakhtiar Amin told the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation today that he would investigate the allegations
but added that he did not believe them to be true. He also threatened
defamation action against the journalist.
Australian Defence Minister Robert Hill attempted to downplay
the allegations, claiming that the Australian, British and US
missions in Iraq knew nothing of the story. He was joined by newly
appointed Labor shadow defense minister Kim Beazley who declared
that the Middle East was a giant bazaar of rumors
and that in this country two anonymous sources would be
regarded as rather thin to go to print.
To dismiss the story as rumors amounts to a cover
up. McGeough is an experienced and recognized journalist, whose
sources were eyewitnesses and have provided specifics of the incident,
including the names of three of the dead. To date, no one has
refuted the details. That the two Iraqis were reluctant to be
named is hardly surprising. Given the nature of the allegations,
they clearly fear for their lives.
Thus far, no major American newspaper or television network
has reported the allegations, which were considered credible enough
to publish by two of Australias leading dailies and which,
if substantiated, should result in the immediate arrest of Allawi
on murder charges. The censorship is continuing despite calls
over the weekend by figures such as former British foreign secretary
Robin Cook for an independent inquiry headed by the International
Red Cross.
The same American media that promoted last years invasion
with stories of murder, torture and rape-rooms under the Baathist
regime of Saddam Hussein is displaying no interest in the growing
evidence that the US-installed regime of Allawi will rule in essentially
the same fashion.
Allawi has a particularly unsavory past, which is well known
in Washington. He was an alleged spy and hit-man for the Baathist
dictatorship until 1975, an agent of British and American intelligence
agencies from the 1980s, a collaborator with the US ambitions
to conquer Iraq in the 1990s, and a supporter of the American
invasion of his country in 2003.
A recent article in the New York Times, citing comments
by former CIA agents, alleged that Allawis organization,
the Iraqi National Accord (INA), had been involved in a series
of bombings in Iraq in the mid-1990s that killed a number of civilians.
The INA includes a significant number of former Baathist military
officers and intelligence officials.
In an accompanying article entitled Hard Man for a Tough
Country, McGeough cites the opinion of former CIA case officer,
Reuel Marc Gerecht, who told the New Yorker: He [Allawi]
was a very effective operator and a true believer. Two facts stand
out about Allawi. One, he likes to think of himself as a man of
ideas; and two, his strongest virtue is that hes a thug.
In the first three weeks of the interim government, Allawis
unelected and despised administration has assumed the power to
impose martial law, ban demonstrations and monitor citizens
phones and email. He has declared his intention to recruit the
military and intelligence operatives of Husseins regime
and this week announced the formation of a secret police agency
to annihilate opposition. He is already being contemptuously
referred to in Baghdad as Saddam without the moustache
or Americas Saddam.
Far from denouncing the Bush administration for establishing
a US-protected police-state in Iraq, commentary over the past
week in the New York Times and the Washington Post
has lauded Allawi for his reputation for sadism and ruthlessness.
It is part of a shift that is underway: previous claims that the
US occupation was to establish democracy are being jettisoned
in favor of increasingly open support for the strongman
Allawi and his methods.
On July 11, the New York Times Dexter Filkins
wrote with relish of the rumor that Allawi had used an ax to chop
off the hand of a man during a recent interrogation. Describing
the alleged atrocity, Filkins wrote: No-one was talking.
Bring me an ax, the prime minister is said to have
announced. With that, the story went, Mr Allawi lopped off the
hand of one of the Lebanese men, and the group quickly spilled
everything they knew.
In Filkins opinion, Allawi seems to be the perfect
man, under the circumstances, to bring this fractious country
together.
On July 14, David Ignatius of the Washington Post hailed
Allawi for projecting the image of a burly ex-Baathist who
is tough enough to manage this unruly country. Just last
November he declared that America did a good deed in liberating
Iraqis from a tyrannical regime.
The American people were told by such commentators that last
years invasion would bring democracy and liberation to Iraq.
The reality is that the Bush administration, as part of a criminal
imperialist strategy to dominate the resources of the Middle East,
has imposed an unelected, pro-US cabal that is under siege from
the Iraqi people. Lacking any legitimacy or popular support, the
regime of Allawi is dependent upon repression to terrorize the
population into submitting to indefinite US control over the country.
See Also:
Iraqi regime prepares for martial law
[8 July 2004]
Iraqs new prime minister,
the CIA and their record of terrorist bombings
[17 June 2004]
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