12 Prisoners Subjected to Severe Torture in
New Prison Scandal
Washington Post
Abuse Cited In 2nd Jail Operated by Iraqi Ministry
By Ellen Knickmeyer
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, December 12, 2005; A01
BAGHDAD, Dec. 11 -- An Iraqi government search of a detention center in
Baghdad operated by Interior Ministry special commandos found 13 prisoners who
had suffered abuse serious enough to require medical treatment, U.S. and Iraqi
officials said Sunday night.
An Iraqi official with firsthand knowledge of the search said that at least
12 of the 13 prisoners had been subjected to "severe torture," including
sessions of electric shock and episodes that left them with broken bones.
"Two of them showed me their nails, and they were gone," the official said
on condition of anonymity because of security concerns.
A government spokesman, Laith Kubba, said Sunday night that any findings at
the prison would be "subject to an investigation," but he declined to comment
on the allegations.
The site, which was searched Thursday, is the second Interior Ministry
detention center where cases of prisoner abuse have been confirmed by U.S. and
Iraqi officials.
U.S. troops found the first site last month when they entered an Interior
Ministry building in central Baghdad to look for a Sunni Arab teenager they
believed had been detained, officers said at the time. Several prisoners at
that site appeared to have suffered beatings, and many were emaciated, U.S. and
Iraqi officials and witnesses said.
The abuse alleged at the prison found this week appeared to have been more
severe. Asked specifically what types of torture were found in the commandos'
prison, the official cited breaking of bones, torture with electric shock,
extraction of fingernails and cigarette burns to the neck and back.
International law, including the U.N. Convention Against Torture, bans
torture in all cases. U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad issued a sharp public
rebuke of the Iraqi government after the secret prison was discovered last
month, demanding in a statement that all detainees nationwide be treated in
accord with human rights.
Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari, under heavy pressure from Khalilzad and Army
Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the top U.S. commander in Iraq, ordered a nationwide
investigation of detention centers after that discovery. The prison
investigated Thursday was the first center examined as part of the
government-ordered inquiry.
Lt. Col. Guy Rudisill, a spokesman for U.S. military detention issues, said
American authorities had already been aware that the prison searched Thursday
existed. U.S. forces had not known about the previous facility.
Prison inspectors from the Ministry of Human Rights and representatives of
other ministries participated in the commando prison search, the ministry said
in a statement. Authorities did not say whether any Americans were involved in
the inquiry.
Investigators said they found 625 prisoners at the center but declined to
give details about them. Most of the detainees found at the secret prison last
month were Sunni Arabs who had been picked up by forces of the Shiite
Muslim-dominated Interior Ministry.
"The team discovered a number of problems, which the ministries of Interior
and Human Rights are working together to correct," the statement said. "The
facility was overcrowded: As a result, the Ministry of Justice has agreed to
receive 75 detainees from this facility at Rusafa Prison; Iraqi judges released
56 detainees directly following the inspection. . . . Thirteen of the detainees
were removed from the detention facility to receive medical treatment.''
Rudisill said the 56 freed prisoners were released on the recommendation of
Iraqi judges who took part in the inspection. "They quickly looked through and
found in these cases specifically there were no reasons to hold these
individuals," he said.
U.S. diplomatic and military officials said Iraqi officials were leading the
investigation and declined to offer further comment.
Torture was routine in Iraqi prisons under former president Saddam Hussein.
U.S. forces in Iraq drew international criticism for abuses at the Abu Ghraib
prison near Baghdad in which military guards photographed themselves
humiliating naked Iraqi detainees. There was no suggestion of U.S. involvement
in the latest abuses at the Interior Ministry prisons. The Iraqi government,
led by Shiite parties with strong ties to Iran, has strongly rejected
allegations of Iranian intelligence involvement in Interior Ministry
prisons.
The Iraqi Interior Ministry has a significant number of former militia
members and members of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq,
a Shiite party that is the largest in the government.
The country's Sunni minority has accused the Interior Ministry of taking a
leading role in severe abuses, including the targeting of Sunnis by alleged
death squads. Since the current government took office in late April, the
bodies of scores of Sunni men have been found dumped on roadsides, in dry
riverbeds and in fields. Most of the men were found handcuffed and shot. In
several cases, family members have said the men were taken away by people in
Interior Ministry uniforms and vehicles.
The government has repeatedly said it was investigating the allegations. No
results of any investigations have been announced.
"The investigation was extended," Jafari, a member of another Shiite
religious party in the governing coalition, told the Reuters news agency on
Sunday. "It is not finished. We are investigating all violations. We do not
accept any violations committed against any Iraqis."
Last week, the Interior Ministry fired its top human rights official, Nouri
Nouri, without providing an explanation.
Sunni political leaders charge that similar incidents of torture are
occurring at other Interior Ministry detention facilities and have identified
some of the sites by name.
Shiite political leaders say the U.S. military frequently visits the
facilities and suggest that American authorities would know about any
abuse.
Last week, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld ordered military commanders
to come up with clear rules for how U.S. forces should respond if they witness
detainee abuse. The order followed an exchange between Rumsfeld and Marine Gen.
Peter Pace, the Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, at a news conference Nov.
29.
Pace said then that it was "absolutely the responsibility of every U.S.
service member if they see inhumane treatment being conducted to intervene to
stop it."
Rumsfeld said, "I don't think you mean they have an obligation to physically
stop it; it's to report it."
Pace responded, "If they are physically present when inhumane treatment is
taking place, sir, they have an obligation to try to stop it."
U.S. officials have said the FBI and the U.S. military are aiding the prison
investigation. Authorities have identified more than 1,000 detention centers
across Iraq.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company
|