Iraq says abused detainees from all sects (AP) Updated: 2005-11-17 08:54
A top Iraqi Interior Ministry official said Wednesday the 173 malnourished
prisoners found by U.S. forces included all Iraqi sects, playing down
allegations of a campaign by Shiite-led security forces to suppress Sunni Arabs
ahead of next month's election.
The Shiite-led government sought to dampen Sunni outrage over revelations
Tuesday by Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari that the detainees, some showing
signs of torture, were found last weekend by U.S. troops at an Interior Ministry
lockup in the capital. Most were believed to be Sunni Arabs, the leading group
in the insurgency.
But the deputy interior minister, Maj. Gen. Hussein Kamal, said the detainees
also included Shiites, Kurds and Turkomen. He gave no breakdown.
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said there was "no place for torture and
persecution in the new Iraq" and that anyone involved "would be severely
punished."
And government spokesman Laith Kubba defended the Interior Ministry, saying
all the detainees were legally arrested and most were referred to courts for
prosecution. They were kept at the detention center in the Jadriyah district
because of a lack of jail space, he said.
"The Interior Ministry is doing its job at a difficult time and some mistakes
happen," he said.
That did little to assuage Sunni Arab anger, with Sunni politicians saying
the Jadriyah center was not the only place where detainees are tortured. Sunni
leader Adnan al-Dulaimi said he had complained to the government about abuses at
three Interior Ministry compounds.
He and several other Sunni politicians demanded an international inquiry.
Some alleged that Shiite-led security forces were trying to intimidate Sunnis
from voting in the Dec. 15 parliament elections. Many Sunnis saw the hand of
Shiite-dominated Iran, which offered sanctuary to many Iraqi Shiites during
Saddam Hussein's Sunni-led regime.
"Some government officials want to keep the Sunnis away from the next
elections by terrorizing us," Saad Farhan, a Sunni merchant in Ramadi, said,
adding his brother and cousin had been held in Jadriyah. "We believe that Iran's
agents are behind it because normal and genuine Iraqis never do this."
Raad al-Dulaimi, a farmer near Ramadi, said security services were dominated
by "pro-Iranian elements" bent on "settling old sectarian scores with the
Sunnis."
At a Baghdad news conference, Tariq al-Hashimi, secretary-general of the
Iraqi Islamic Party, held up photos of the bodies of people who appeared to have
been tortured and said: "This is what your Sunni brothers are being subjected
to."
The photos were later determined to have been from an incident last summer in
which Sunnis died after being locked in an Interior Ministry van in
100-degree-plus heat. The ministry said the ventilation system failed.
The Sunni call for an international investigation drew support from Manfred
Nowak, a special U.N. investigator on torture.
"That torture is still practiced in Iraq after Saddam Hussein, that is no
secret," Nowak told The Associated Press. "It is shocking, but on the other
hand, we have received allegations of these secret (detention) places in Iraq
already for quite a long time."
Torture allegations illustrate the brutal nature of the Iraq conflict, where
insurgents blow up cars among civilians, kidnap and decapitate "collaborators"
and settle scores in drive-by shootings on crowded streets.
With Sunnis dominating the insurgency, Shiites and Kurds in the security
forces often round up large numbers of Sunnis in hopes of getting a few
insurgents. Reprisal kidnappings and killings are common.
At least four Iraqi policemen were treated at a Baghdad hospital for injuries
they said they suffered in beatings by men who identified themselves as Interior
Ministry commandos. The commandos had stopped them Monday on patrol in Baghdad's
Dora neighborhood, the police said.
An Associated Press photographer and an AP Television News cameraman saw
long, thin black and blue bruises and welts on their backs and shoulders, but
none appeared to be seriously injured.
The men refused to detail their ordeal, fearing reprisals. They said they
were blindfolded and taken to an unknown location but were released after the
"Americans interfered." They refused to give their names.
The AP tried to get comment from the Interior Ministry, but the ministry had
closed for the day and senior officials had switched off their mobile
phones.
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