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Analysis : Middle
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Red Cross report documents US torture of Iraqi prisoners
By Kate Randall
14 May 2004
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In the wake of the publication of photos depicting the brutal
and humiliating treatment of Iraqi prisoners at the hands of US
troops at the Abu Ghraib prison, the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) has released to the press its February 2004
report on the handling of prisoners and other detainees by Coalition
Forces (CF) in Iraq.
The report covers the period between March and November 2003,
and deals with treatment of Iraqi detainees during arrest,
internment and interrogation. The document details gross
violations of numerous articles of the Geneva Conventions by US
and British forces and paints a picture of widespread and systemic
abuse of prisonersparticularly those persons arrested
in connection with suspected security offences or deemed to have
an intelligence value.
The executive summary of the ICRC report says that these so-called
High Value Detainees were at high risk of being
subjected to a variety of harsh treatments ranging from insults,
threats and humiliations to both physical and psychological coercion,
which in some cases was tantamount to torture, in order to force
cooperation with their interrogators.
In contradiction to military and Bush administration officials
claims that the abuse depicted in the Abu Ghraib photos came as
a shock, the report explains how numerous memoranda on Geneva
Conventions violations were sent to the Coalition Forces, with
recommendations for correcting the abusive treatment of prisoners.
In most cases, however, the abuse continued and appeared to have
been sanctioned at high levels of the military.
At every stagefrom arrest to final internment in regular
prison facilitiesviolations of the Geneva Conventions occurred.
The Third and Fourth conventions mandate that prisoners be protected
against acts of violence, intimidation and insults and that the
human dignity, physical integrity and cultural sensitivity of
captured individuals be protected at all times. The ICRC states,
however, that during arrests the rights of the vast majority of
arrestees were violated and that these procedures tended
to follow a pattern:
Arresting authorities entered houses usually after dark,
breaking down doors, waking up residents roughly, yelling orders,
forcing family members into one room under military guard while
searching the rest of the house.... They arrested suspects, tying
their hands in the back with flexi-cuffs, hooding them, and taking
them away. Sometimes they arrested all adult males present in
a house, including elderly, handicapped or sick people. Treatment
often included pushing people around, insulting, taking aim with
rifles, punching and kicking and striking with rifles. Individuals
were often led away in whatever they happened to be wearing at
the time of arrestsometimes in pyjamas or underwearand
were denied the opportunity to gather a few essential belongings,
such as clothing, hygiene items, medicine or eyeglasses.
Furthermore, certain CF military intelligence officers
told the ICRC they estimated that between 70 and 90 percent of
those rounded up in these terror raids were arrested by mistake.
The Geneva Conventions also require that within one week of
capture prisoners must be allowed to fill out capture or internment
cards, indicating their arrest, the address of their current place
of internment and their health. This has been routinely violated
by the Coalition Forces, resulting in what the ICRC describes
as the de facto disappearance of the vast
majority of detainees.
The report states, Nine months into the present conflict,
there is still no satisfactorily functioning system of notification
to the families of captured or arrested persons, even though hundreds
of arrests continue to be carried out every week. Family
members go for weeks and months with no information about their
loved ones, often fearing they may be dead. Many only learn about
the condition and whereabouts of their relatives when they return
home or through word from released detainees.
The ICRC has repeatedly raised this issue with detaining authorities
since March 2003, including at the highest level of the
CF in August 2003, but there has been little improvement
in the notification system.
The report next addresses the treatment of prisoners during
their transfer and initial custody. Witnesses described to the
ICRC the arrest of nine men in a Basra hotel on September 13,
2003. According the report, they were made to kneel, face
and hands against the ground, as if in a prayer position. The
soldiers stamped on the back of the neck of those raising their
head. They confiscated their money without issuing a receipt.
The suspects were taken to Al-Hakimiya [an office formerly used
by the Iraqi secret police] ... and then beaten severely by CP
personnel.
One of the men, a 28-year-old father of two, subsequently died.
His co-arrestees heard him screaming and asking for assistance,
according to the report. His International Death Certificate indicated
cardio-respiratory arrestasphyxia as the condition
leading to deathwith the cause unknown.
The ICRC also heard allegations of other deaths as a result
of harsh internment conditions, ill-treatment, lack of medical
attention, particularly in the Tikrit holding area known
formerly as the Saddam Hussein Islamic School.
Some of the most egregious violations of prisoners rights
are detailed in the section of the document on treatment during
interrogation. Prisoners of intelligence value whose
interrogation was supervised by military intelligence were
subjected to a variety of ill-treatments ranging from insults
and humiliation to both physical and psychological coercion that
in some cases might amount to torture in order to force them to
cooperate with their interrogators, according to the report.
The ICRC states that in some interrogation locations, such
as the Abu Ghraib military intelligence section, these methods
of torture appeared to be part of the standard operating
procedures by military intelligence personnel to obtain confessions
and extract information.
The brutal procedures utilized by interrogators are too numerous
to list, but include the following:
* Hooding of prisoners for periods lasting from a few hours
to four consecutive days, during which hoods were lifted
only for drinking, eating or going to the toilets. This
allowed the interrogators to remain anonymous and also heightened
the anxiety in conjunction with beatings, as prisoners would be
unsure when blows would be delivered.
* Handcuffing with tight (plastic) flexi-cuffs, in some cases
resulting in permanent bodily damage;
* Pressing the face into the ground with boots;
* Threats, including ill-treatment, reprisals against
family members, imminent execution or transfer to Guantanamo;
* Being held naked in solitary confinement, with insufficient
sleep, food or water deprivation, minimal access to showers, denial
of access to open air;
* Being paraded naked before other prisoners, sometimes hooded
or with womens underwear over the head;
* Exposure to loud music, prolonged exposure to the sun in
temperatures reaching as high as 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees
Fahrenheit).
Prisoners examined by ICRC medical personal presented physical
marks and psychological symptoms consistent with such treatment.
When the Red Cross visited the isolation section
of Abu Ghraib in mid-October 2003, they witnessed the practice
of keeping persons deprived of their liberty completely naked
in totally empty concrete cells and in total darkness, allegedly
for several consecutive days. When the ICRC investigators
requested an explanation from the authorities, the report states,
The military intelligence officer in charge of the interrogation
explained that this practice was part of the process.
According to information collected by the ICRC, prisoners were
regularly questioned without knowing the reason for their arrest
or the charges against them.
The Red Cross also visited Umm Qasr camp and its successor,
Camp Bucca. Prisoners selected for interrogationwhether
arrested by British, Danish, Dutch or Italian armed forceswere
segregated in a separate section of the facility for investigation.
There they were routinely treated by their guards with general
contempt, with petty violence such as having orders screamed at
them and being cursed, kicked, struck with rifle butts, roughed
up or pushed around. They were also threatened with indefinite
internment or transfer to Guantanamo.
A former prisoner at Camp Cropper alleged that he had been
hooded and cuffed with flexi-cuffs, threatened to be tortured
and killed, urinated on, kicked in the head, lower back and groin,
force-fed a baseball ... and deprived of sleep for four consecutive
days. Interrogators would allegedly take turns ill-treating him.
When he said he would complain to the ICRC he was allegedly beaten
more.
The Red Cross report makes clear that Coalition Authority officials
were repeatedly informed of these violations of the human rights
of prisoners. In May 2003, the ICRC sent the CF a memorandum reporting
on more than 200 allegations of mistreatment of prisoners during
capture and interrogation. In early July the ICRC also sent the
CF a working paper detailing about 50 allegations of ill-treatment
in the military intelligence section of Camp Cropper.
The ICRC also documented the widespread abuse of power and
mistreatment of prisoners in the custody of Iraqi police. This
included the practice of threatening to hand them over to the
CF, or extorting money to prevent it. Former detainees reported
Iraqi police whipped them with cables, and kicked them in the
lower parts of the body, including the testicles. Prisoners alleged
they were also burned with cigarettes, a claim substantiated by
marks found on their bodies by ICRC delegates. Detainees often
drew parallels between Iraqi police practices and those of the
former Saddam Hussein regime.
The report also describes instances when detaining authorities
fired on prisoners with live ammunition. On June 13, 2003, at
Abu Ghraib, guards from three watchtowers opened fire on demonstrating
prisoners, injuring seven and killing one. In another incident
on November 24, 2003, at Abu Ghraib, deadly force was applied
in response to a riot by prisoners, who were protesting inadequate
food and clothing, lack of judicial guarantees and lack of family
contact. The detainees allegedly attempted to force open the gate
to the camp. After firing with non-lethal weapons, the guards
opened fire with lethal ammunition, resulting in the deaths of
four detainees.
The Third Geneva Convention stipulates that use of firearms
is an extreme measure which should only be used in response to
armed resistance or threat to the lives of detaining personnel
or other prisoners. These incidents were summarily investigated
by the CF, which concluded that legitimate use of firearms had
been made.
The Red Cross also reports the September 3, 2003, case of three
detainees who were severely injured by the explosion of what seemed
to be a cluster bomb while they were working to clear rubbish
along the barbed-wire fence of Camp Bucca. All three required
limb amputations.
The ICRC also collected numerous allegations of outright theft
by Coalition Forces, who confiscated money, cars and other valuables
during arrests, without providing receiptsa violation of
the Fourth Geneva Convention. One individual alleged that upon
arrest at his home in May 2003 the CF seized 71,450,000
Iraqi dinars, 14,000 US dollars, two wedding rings, a video camera,
a watch, real-estate property documents, his wifes residential
documents, his fathers will, his private diaries, as well
as most of the family private documents and personal identification
and other papers.
See Also:
What the record shows: hypocrisy and
lies over US torture of Iraqis
[12 May 2004]
Rumsfeld testimony reveals: New photos
will show blatantly sadistic, cruel and inhuman torture
of Iraqi prisoners
[10 May 2004]
Socialist Equality Party presidential
candidate
Bush and the Democrats are responsible for torture in Iraq
[1 May 2004]
US war crimes: Torture of
Iraqi prisoners exposed
[30 April 2004]
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