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Analysis : Middle
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UN warns of growing humanitarian crisis in occupied Iraq
Iraqi government withholds civilian death count
By Kate Randall
26 April 2007
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A new United Nations report on human rights in Iraq paints
a devastating portrait of the conditions of life facing the civilian
population as the US occupation enters its fifth year. The report
from the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) covers the period
from January 1 to March 31, 2007, which includes the beginning
of the Bush administrations Baghdad surge, Operation
Law and Order.
The report depicts a society in which prisoners are tortured
and denied due process, academics and doctors are kidnapped and
assassinated, women are the target of increased honor killings
and civilian men, women and children are dying in huge numbers
as a result of suicide bomb attacks and at the hands of the US
military and Iraq security forces.
The report is also notable for what is does not include: the
number of Iraqi civilian deaths. The Iraqi government has refused
to release these figures, which are collected routinely by the
Iraq Ministry of Healths Operations Center and the Medico-Legal
Institute in Baghdad. The US military does not count civilian
casualties.
In its report issued in January, the UN said that 34,452 civilians
had died violently in 2006, a figure the Iraqi government denounced
as highly exaggerated, claiming that only 12,357 had died. This
time around they simply refused to provide the data, at the same
time criticizing the latest report as inaccurate and
unbalanced.
The UN accused the Iraqi government of withholding the figures
because the data would underscore the worsening humanitarian crisis.
We were told that the government was becoming increasingly
concerned about the figures being used to portray the situation
as very grim, UNAMI human rights officer Ivana Vuco told
a news conference Wednesday.
Both the UN and Iraqi government figures are far lower than
those emerging from a study conducted by researchers from Johns
Hopkins University published by the Lancet last October.
This study estimated that 655,000 excess Iraqi deaths had occurred
since the US invasion in March 2003 and subsequent occupation,
with close to a third of these directly attributable to violence
on the part of US forces and their allies.
Numbers obtained from various Iraqi ministries by the Los
Angeles Times indicate that already this year 5,509 civilians
have died violently in Baghdad province alone, which includes
the capital city. These included 1,991 in January, followed by
a slight drop to 1,646 in February. However, the effects of the
implementation of the Baghdad surge operation in mid-February
resulted in a rise to 1,872 civilian deaths in March.
According to the UN report, civilian casualties between January
and March were concentrated in and around Baghdad, and were also
high in the governorates of Nineveh, Salahuddin, Diyala and Babel.
The report cites the increased levels of US and Iraqi troops involved
in the surge as a major factor in the civilian deaths.
The counterinsurgency operation has intensified raids in Baghdad
neighborhoods and increased security checkpoints across the city,
resulting in increased casualties.
Sectarian violence has claimed scores of lives on a daily basis.
On February 3, a truck packed with a ton of explosives detonated
in a busy market in Sadriyah, a predominantly Shia district, killing
an estimated 135 and injuring 339 others. On April 18, in the
most deadly attack since the 2003 invasion, the same Baghdad marketplace
was the scene of a bomb attack, claiming 140 lives. That same
day, 233 civilians were killed in bomb attacks across Iraq.
Academic professionals and students continue to be the targets
of assassinations and kidnappings, creating an atmosphere of terror
on campuses and further destroying Iraqs higher education
system. Officials of the Ministry of Higher Education told UNAMI
that an estimated 200 academics were killed in the first four
years of the war. Two attacks on al-Mustansiriya University in
January and February of this year claimed an estimated 111 lives.
On January 16, two car bombs killed at least 70 people, mostly
students, and injured another 140. On February 25, a suicide bomb
attack killed 41 students at the university.
Journalists and other media workers have come under sustained
attack, an indication of the deterioration of press freedom under
US occupation. The Iraqi Society for the Defence of Journalists
Rights reports that 170 journalists and media workers were killed
between March 2003 and January 15, 2007.
The following casualties, as cited in the UNAMI report, give
an indication of the increased vulnerability of media professionals
in occupied Iraq. They are only a portion of the media-related
fatalities included in the UNs three-month report:
Hussein al-Zubaidi, a journalist with the weekly al-Ahali
newspaper, was killed by gunmen in Baghdad on 19 February, while
the bullet-riddled body of Abdul-Razzaq Hashim al-Khakani, a journalist
with Jumhuriyat al- Iraq radio, was found at the Medico-Legal
Institute on 20 February. He had been kidnapped a week earlier
in the predominantly Sunni district of al-Jihad in Baghdad. Two
employees of as-Safir daily newspaper in Baghdad were targeted
in February. On 11 February, the newspapers chief editor
Hussein Jasim al-Jibouri was injured in an assassination attempt,
and died on 16 March.
The body of journalist Jamal al-Zubaidi was found on
3 March in Baghdads al-Amel district. He was reportedly
last seen leaving his office on 23 February. A day later, Mohan
Hussein al-Dhahr, editor of the daily al-Mashreq, was killed
outside his home in the al-Jamia district. His would-be
abductors shot him dead as he tried to escape. He reportedly received
six bullets to the head. Al-Mashreq, for which he worked
for four years, is a privately-owned, widely read Baghdad newspaper
whose management was said to have received numerous death threats
to cease publication.
The plight of women continues to worsen. In the three-month
period studied, UNAMI received information on some 40 cases of
honor killings of women in the governorates of Erbit,
Duhok, Sulaimaniya and Salahuddin. These young women were killed
by family members for alleged immoral conduct, while
their deaths were attributed to accidental burns or
other causes. According to the news source Awena, in Duhok
there were 289 burning cases resulting in 46 deaths recorded in
2005, and 366 burning cases resulting in 66 deaths in 2006.
A severe erosion of basic democratic and human rights has accompanied
the US war and occupation. In the wake of the US invasionwhich
promised to bring freedom and democracy to Iraqa series
of regulations have been implemented stripping away basic rights
to due process for Iraqi citizens, and shielding US forces from
prosecution under Iraqi law for violent assaults on the population,
including torture, rape and murder.
New emergency regulations put into force February 13, as the
Baghdad surge began, contain no explicit measures
guaranteeing minimum due process rights. They authorize arrests
without warrants and interrogation of suspects with no time limit
placed on how long they can be held in pre-trial detention. Under
the new measures, suspects accused of offences including murder,
rape, theft, destruction of private property and other crimes
are to be punished in accordance with another set of anti-terror
laws implemented in 2005, which provide for the death penalty
for these and other crimes.
Legal proceedings can only be described as a travesty of justice.
Many confessions are extracted under torture by Iraqi soldiers.
According to the UNAMI report, The use of torture and other
inhumane treatment in detention centers under the authority of
the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Defense continues
to be of utmost concern. The already large number of Iraqi
detainees is expected to increase substantially as a result of
the Baghdad operation. According to the Iraqi Ministry of Human
Rights, at the end of March the total number of detainees, security
internees and sentenced prisoners in the country stood at 37,641.
Suspects detained by the Multinational Force (MNF) can be denied
access to legal counsel during the first 60 days of internment.
After that, defendants are most often represented by court-appointed
attorneys with little knowledge of the substance of the charges
or evidence against their clients. In the vast majority of cases,
defendants are represented by different counsel at the investigative
and trial stages, severely restricting their ability to mount
a competent defense.
Trial proceedings generally last only 15 to 30 minutes, followed
by deliberations of only several minutes per case, including in
death penalty cases and serious felonies resulting in life imprisonment.
Because many defendants are unaware of their rights under the
law, they often miss the 30-day limit to appeal their cases. And
in death penalty cases, which are automatically submitted for
appeal, defendants are denied the right to submit new information
for consideration on appeal.
Death sentences and executions serve as one of the grimmest
indictments of the state of democracy in Iraq. Taking their cue
from US policy, capital punishment was reinstated in the Iraq
in mid-2004. According to Amnesty International, since then Iraq
has sentenced more than 270 people to death and executed at least
100. Higher totals were recorded only in China, Iran and
Pakistan, Amnesty said.
Other indices cited in the report of the human catastrophe
plaguing occupied Iraq include the following:
* An estimated 54 percent of the Iraqi population struggles
to survive on less than US$1 a day; 15 percent live in extreme
poverty (less than 50 US cents a day).
* Acute malnutrition doubled from 2003 to 2005, rising from
4.4 percent to 9 percent.
* The official unemployment rate stands around 60 percent.
* Only 32 percent of Iraqis have access to clean drinking water.
* Health facilities lack critical drugs and equipment; 12,000
of 34,000 doctors have left since the US invasion; 250 have been
kidnapped and 2,000 have been killed.
See Also:
Iraq: Nine US troops dead, 20 wounded
in Baqubah
[25 April 2007]
Iraqis oppose US plan to divide Baghdad
into ghettos
[25 April 2007]
Torture exposed in new US-Iraqi "security
stations"
[24 April 2007]
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