U.S. guards shoot dead 4 inmates in Iraq prison riot (Agencies) Updated: 2005-02-01 08:40
U.S. troops in Iraq shot dead four inmates during a prison riot on Monday,
the military said.
Six prisoners were wounded in the violence, which affected hundreds of
detainees at Camp Bucca in southern Iraq on the day after Iraqis voted in their
first free election in decades.
There were no serious injuries among the Americans during 45 minutes of
rioting, Lieutenant Colonel Barry Johnson told Reuters. Troops shot the four
dead with rifles after failing to quell the riot with plastic pellets fired from
shotguns.
![A US military officer stands in front of the visitation area at the Camp Bucca detention camp on the outskirts of Umm Qasr. [AFP/File]](xin_02020201084432010831.jpg) A US military officer stands in front of the
visitation area at the Camp Bucca detention camp on the outskirts of Umm
Qasr. [AFP/File] | "We're not sure exactly what
sparked it. There's no obvious connection with the election. We're not sure if
that had anything to do with it," Johnson said.
Prisoners began throwing rocks and fashioning weapons after a routine search
of one of 10 compounds at the camp near the port of Umm Qasr, the military said
in a written statement.
Violence spread to three other compounds, which together house more than
2,900 of Camp Bucca's 5,300 inmates.
Some detainees have been held for more than a year, Johnson said, noting that
the camp was now the main internment facility for suspected guerrillas in Iraq.
Baghdad's Abu Ghraib jail, scene of abuses by American guards, now holds fewer
prisoners.
Those injured were hurt variously by U.S. troops or other detainees, the
military statement said. Three of the six wounded were taken to a military
hospital for further treatment.
ALL GUARDS DEPLOYED
"The violence erupted after a routine search for contraband in one of the
camp's 10 compounds," the statement said.
"The facility's commander immediately deployed all available guards to the
camp in an attempt to control the situation.
"The riot quickly spread to three additional compounds, with detainees
throwing rocks and fashioning weapons from materials inside their living areas.
"Guards attempted to calm the increasingly volatile situation using verbal
warnings and, when that failed, by use of non-lethal force. After about 45
minutes of escalating danger, lethal force was used to quell the violence.
"The situation quickly began to subside after the use of lethal force.
Medical personnel on site provided immediate aid to the injured."
Johnson, a spokesmen on detainee affairs, said the prisoners were all men but
declined to identify the casualties. The Iraqi government and Red Cross would be
notified, the military said.
It is not the first time American forces have fired on Iraqi prisoners in
such circumstances.
Johnson said the troops on guard were from a recently arrived reserve unit,
the 105th Military Police Battalion. U.S. military records show that to be based
at Buffalo, New York.
"The cause of the riot and use of lethal force is currently under
investigation by the chain of command and the U.S. Army's Criminal
Investigations Division, which is standard procedure whenever a detainee death
occurs," the military statement said.
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