Iraq abuse 'as bad as Saddam
era'
BBC News
November 27, 2005
The former Iraqi prime minister, Iyad Allawi, has called for immediate
action against human rights abuses.
Such abuses are as bad today as they were under Saddam Hussein, Mr Allawi
told Britain's Observer newspaper.
Militias are operating within the Shia-led government, torturing and killing
in secret bunkers, he said.
His comments come two weeks after 170 detainees were found at an interior
ministry centre, some allegedly suffering from abuse and starvation.
Mr Allawi - who was displaced earlier this year by Shia factions - said the
militias had infiltrated the police, and warned that their influence could
spread throughout the government.
The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says Mr Allawi's remarks come as Iraq prepares
for parliamentary elections next month, which he hopes could see him return as
prime minister.
His comments are likely to heat up the election debate and will go down well
within the Sunni community, our correspondent adds.
'Contagious'
"People are doing the same as (in) Saddam Hussein's time and worse," Mr
Allawi told the newspaper.
"It is an appropriate comparison. People are remembering the days of
Saddam.
"These were the precise reasons that we fought Saddam Hussein, and now we
are seeing the same things."
Mr Allawi said that if urgent action was not taken "the disease infecting
[the interior ministry] will become contagious and spread to all ministries and
structures of Iraq's government".
He also warned of the danger of Iraq disintegrating in chaos.
"Iraq is the centrepiece of this region," he said. "If things go wrong,
neither Europe nor the United States will be safe."
Mr Allawi was Iraq's first interim prime minister, but he failed to win
January's election which brought the current Prime Minister, Ibrahim
al-Jaafari, to power.
He has since formed a coalition to contest next month's parliamentary
elections.
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