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Former US soldier charged in rape and murder of Iraqi girl
By Kate Randall
4 July 2006
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A former US soldier was charged by federal prosecutors Monday
with rape and murder following an investigation into the brutal
killing of a teenage Iraqi girl and three members of her family.
The new charges come in the wake of a raft of revelations of atrocities
committed against Iraqi civilians by US soldiers.
Steven D. Green, 21, a former private first class, appeared
in a federal magistrates court in Charlotte, North Carolina
in connection with a March 12 incident in Mahmoudiya, 20 miles
south of Iraq, involving up to five soldiers from the US Armys
101st Airborne Division, 502nd Infantry Regiment.
Prosecutors said Green and other soldiers entered the familys
home, where he and others raped the girl, after which Green shot
her and three of her relatives to death, and then burned the corpse
of the rape victim. Green faces a possible death sentence if convicted
of murder.
Four members of the 502nd Infantry have been confined to a
US base near Mahmoudiya, according to military officials, and
could receive the death penalty under US military law if convicted
of premeditated murder. One active soldier has reportedly been
arrested after admitting his role in the alleged attack.
Private Green served 11 months with the 101st Airborne Division,
based in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, but his case is being handled
by federal prosecutors because he is no longer in the military.
According to an affidavit filed with the criminal complaint in
the case, he was discharged before this incident came to
light. Green was discharged due to a personality disorder.
Since the US military revealed last Friday that it was investigating
the rape and murders, chilling details have emerged about the
rape victim and her family in the days leading up to the atrocity.
This new informationwhich paints a picture of Iraqi civilians
terrorized by the American occupiersalso strongly suggests
a cover-up of the incident, which until June 24 had been officially
attributed to insurgent activity.
According to the Washington Post, the rape victim, Abeer
Qasim Hamza, was only 15 years old. She was killed along with
her mother and father and her seven-year-old sister. Preliminary
information in the US military investigation puts the age of the
rape victim at 20, contradicting hospital records and statements
of neighbors and local officials in Mahmoudiya. The US military
has not identified the other family members or their ages. Contacted
over the weekend by the Post, officials claimed not to
know most other details of the case.
Omar Janabi, a neighbor of the murder victims, provided harrowing
details of the incident to the Post. He said that Abeers
mother, Fakhriyah, told him that the girl had attracted the unwelcome
attention of US soldiers at a checkpoint in their village, which
she was forced to pass through almost every day.
Janabi recalled a conversation he had with the girls
mother on March 10, two days before the rape and murders, in which
Fakhriyah said she feared the Americans might come for her daughter
at their home at night. She asked if Abeer could sleep at his
home with the women in his family.
Although he agreed to her request, Abeer did not live
to take up the offer of shelter at Janabis home, the
Post writes. The soldiers came to the girls house
the next day and carried out the rape and killings. Two of Abeers
brothers were apparently at school at the time.
In preparing the case against Green, the FBI conducted interviews
at Fort Campbell with three unidentified soldiers assigned to
his platoon. The affidavit filed by FBI special agent Gregor J.
Ahlers states that Green and three other soldiers from the 101sts
502nd Infantry Regiment were manning the traffic checkpoint on
March 12 when they conspired to rape the young girl.
According to the affidavit, to avoid detection, the soldiers
changed their clothes before going to the familys home.
One of the soldiers said he witnessed Green and another soldier
rape the woman once inside the home. At one point, Green
came to the bedroom door and told everyone, I just killed
them. All are dead, the soldier related.
After the rape, [the soldier] witnessed Green shoot the
woman in the head two to three times, the affidavit states.
According to the details provided to the Washington Post,
when the soldiers came to the home they separated Abeer from the
other family members and raped her, and then fatally shot the
four. They then attempted to set Abeers body on fire, according
to Omar Janabi and another neighbor who spoke to the Post
on condition of anonymity.
Janabi was one of the first people to arrive at the home following
the attack. According to the Post account, He said
he found Abeer sprawled dead in a corner, her hair and a pillow
next to her consumed by fire, and her dress pushed up to her neck.
I was sure from the first glance that she had been raped,
he said.
Photos taken by Army investigators, according to the affidavit,
showed a burned body of what appears to be a woman with
blankets thrown over her upper torso. Family members have
given permission for the girls body to be exhumed for examination
as part of the US militarys investigation into the incident,
which began last Saturday.
Many questions are raised by the militarys handling of
the Mahmoudiya atrocity. US soldiers at the scene initially attributed
the civilian killings to insurgent activityin
particular, to Sunni Arab insurgents active in the area. This
was perplexing to villagers who knew the murdered family was Sunni.
The US militarys official acceptance of this explanation
of the incident is suspect at best.
The circumstances of Private Greens discharge from the
US Army due to a personality disorder are also suspect.
This disorder must have been manifested in some manner
to his fellow soldiers and his superior officers. Was this behavior
connected to the events of March 12?
Then there is the more than three-month delay in beginning
the investigation. It was only initiated after soldiers from the
unit came forward following the discovery in early June of the
mutilated bodies of two soldiers from the same unit. The two had
been taken captive from a military checkpoint.
In all likelihood, there would have never been an investigation
by the Army if these soldiers had not spoken up, and the atrocity
would never have come to the attention of the American public.
As has become all the more clear of late, atrocities such as
the one committed against Abeer Qasim Hamza and her family are
not a rarity in Iraq. They are being repeated every day in villages
across the ravaged nation by an occupation force that has been
dehumanized by the brutality of the imperialist enterprise. The
central responsibility for these unspeakable crimes rests with
the highest levels of the US government and military, who conspired
to launch this illegal war and continue to prosecute it.
See Also:
Another US atrocity in Iraq: Soldiers
under investigation for rape and murder
[1 July 2006]
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