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News Report
Summary of Leaked Red Cross Report
on Iraqis Tortured in US Custody
by NewStandard Staff
May 13 2004
Editor's Note: Last February, the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) produced a confidential report based on nearly a year
of investigations and inspections carried out in Iraqi communities and
Coalition detention facilities. The ICRC provided copies of the report
to numerous Western officials and military officers. This week, the Wall
Street Journal obtained and posted a copy of the report to the Web. We
have posted a copy on The NewStandard website, and have distilled the major
findings of its 24 pages into the following summary.
Download
the Full Report (PDF, 1.4MB)
http://newstandardnews.net/content/documents/icrc_report_iraq-prison-abuses.pdf
Conditions of and treatment during arrest
The report begins with an assessment of trends found in common among
various reports of abductions by Coalition Forces:
€ ³Arresting authorities [sic] entered houses usually after
dark, breaking down doors, waking up residents roughly, yelling orders,
forcing family members into one room under military guard while searching
Š breaking doors, cabinets and other property.²
€ Arresting forces hooded the suspects and tied their hands with painful
flexi-cuffs.
€ Arresting forces sometimes abducted elderly, disabled or sick people.
€ Treatment at point of arrest regularly included insults, the aiming
of rifles at suspects, punching, kicking, and striking with rifles.
€ ³Certain [Coalition Forces] military intelligence officers told the
ICRC that in their estimate between 70% and 90% of the persons deprived
of their liberty in Iraq [by Coalition Forces] had been arrested by mistake.²
€ Arresting forces almost never provided family members with information
about who the arresting authorities were, where they were taking arrestees,
what charges suspects were being held under, if any, or for how long they
would be in custody.
€ When Iraqis were captured at checkpoints or otherwise away from home,
families were left to wonder if arrested persons were even alive and usually
received no word from the arresting forces about the detained person or
their whereabouts.
€ Abductions by Coalition Forces in some cases amounted to the ³de
facto 'disappearance'² of a given arrestee, with no family contact or notification
allowed for a period of months.
€ Arresting parties were in numerous documented cases accused of stealing
large amounts of cash and valuables from detainees.
Documented instances of mistreatment during transfer and custody
This is by no means a complete list, even from the limited report provided
by the ICRC. These are just some of the cases of inmate torture documented
by Red Cross personnel. None of these incidents has been proved in a court
of law, at least not to the knowledge of the ICRC at the time of writing.
€ Nine freshly arrested Iraqi men were forced to kneel while
soldiers stamped on the backs of their necks. Their money was confiscated
and not returned. One of the arrestees died of as a result of a severe
beating. Two others were hospitalized with severe injuries, including massive
bruising on the abdomen, buttocks, thighs, sides, wrists, nose and forehead
determined by ICRC doctors to be consistent with accounts of beatings.
€ In a separate incident, a man was hooded, handcuffed and made to
lie face down on a hot surface while transported, resulting in burns that
required 3 months of hospitalized treatment, including skin grafts and
the amputation of a finger.
Treatment during interrogation
Persons arrested in connection with suspected security offenses or otherwise
deemed to have intelligence value were ³systematically² subjected to verbal,
physical and psychological abuse by Coalition Forces, especially US personnel
at US facilities, as part of what ³appeared to be part of the standard
operating procedures by military intelligence personnel.²
The most frequently alleged methods of torture included:
€ Hooding
€ Handcuffing with flexi-cuffs that caused long-term after effects,
such as nerve damage
€ Beatings with hard objects, including rifle and pistol butts
€ Punching and kicking, especially to the legs, sides, lower back and
groin
€ Pressing the detainee's face into the ground with boots
€ Threats of reprisals against family members, transfer to Guantanamo
Bay or imminent execution of the prisoner
€ Stripping naked of prisoners for days at a time
€ Being made to stand naked against a cell wall, handcuffed to the
bars, paraded through wards naked, wearing women's underwear, etc
€ Holding in solitary confinement, sometimes for extremely long periods
of time
€ Food deprivation
€ Water deprivation
€ Sleep deprivation
€ Forced stress positions, such as squatting, for prolonged periods
€ Combinations of sensory deprivation and sensory overstimulation,
such as hooding of inmates combined with prolonged exposure to direct sunlight
in excess of 122 degrees F (50 degrees C) or exposure to loud noise
The report stresses that these methods of torture were used ³in
a systematic way to gain confessions and extract information or other forms
of co-operation.² When questioned by ICRC personnel, a military intelligence
officer referred to the methods as ³part of the [interrogation] process.²
Mistreatment and torture by Iraqi police
At one facility, a member of the US-installed Iraqi Police (IP) forces
tortured prisoners by staging mock executions using an unloaded pistol.
At the same facility, IP officers reportedly administered electrical shocks
to prisoners.
On one occasion, an inmate's mother was allegedly brought and threatened
with rape in front of her detained son. These techniques were all used
to force the signing of confessions to be used against prisoners later
in the event of a trial.
Treatment at ³regular internment facilities²
The ICRC refers to the treatment in facilities other than those where
³high value² prisoners were kept or where prisoners were being interrogated,
as ³respectful, with a few individual exceptions² which were ³quickly reprimanded
and disciplined² when reported.
But even here, ICRC inspectors personally witnessed Coalition personnel
slapping prisoners, roughing them up, and pushing them around or to the
ground as well as generally displaying ³disrespectful attitudes.² As punishment
for various perceived infractions in such facilities, inmates were forced
to squat or lie down in the sand under hot sun for hours at a time, as
well as other acts. Guards at such facilities were, however, found to have
generally avoided the use of collective punishment.
Placing inmates in harm's way
The report cites two significant ways in which Coalition Forces have
placed inmates in significant danger.
€ Prisoners kept outdoors Abu Ghraib were vulnerable to attacks
on prisons, camps and bases by insurgent mortar and rocket fire. Numerous
prisoners were killed or injured in such attacks, including five dead and
67 wounded in a single incident on August 16, 2003.
€ Inmates who volunteered for work assignments were in at least one
instance made to clean up garbage in an area where unexploded ordinance
was mixed in with normal litter. What is thought to be a cluster bomb exploded,
wounding three inmates severely. All three required leg amputations --
both legs for two of the inmates and the left leg of the third.
The ³rewards²
Interrogators employed a system of ³drip-fed² rewards of items and privileges,
granted to prisoners who cooperated to varying extents with their interrogators.
Rewards included:
€ Clothing
€ Bedding
€ Hygiene articles
€ Cell lighting
€ Water
€ Cigarettes
€ Access to showers
€ Family phone calls
The effects
The ICRC found lasting psychological results of the treatment dealt
prisoners at detention facilities. Some presented signs of concentration
difficulties, memory problems, verbal expression difficulties, incoherent
speech, acute anxiety reactions, and suicidal tendencies.
Other effects of prisoner mistreatment cited in the report include numerous
cases of severe, permanent physical disability as well as death.
Previous ICRC actions and Coalition Forces' improvements
The ICRC issued a number of reports to Coalition officials during 2003,
detailing numerous allegations of documented abuse. In fact, by May 2003,
when George Bush declared an end to ³major combat² in Iraq, the Red Cross
had already documented (and notified Coalition officials of) more than
200 allegations of ill treatment of prisoners. The report notes some improvements
that were made as a result of ICRC criticism. They are:
€ Following a May 2003 report, the ICRC notes, the single improvement
appreciated in subsequent inspections was that Coalition Forces stopped
fastening bands inscribed ³terrorist² to foreign detainees' wrists.
€ In July 2003, the ICRC sent a ³working paper² to Coalition authorities
detailing various extraordinary abuses at one facility, which included
an inmate being urinated on, severely beaten and force-fed a baseball.
Following that report, the inmates were moved to a different facility where
their mistreatment ³declined significantly and even stopped.²
€ After the ICRC complained that prisoners exposed to mortar and rocket
fire should be protected, US military police guards at Abu Ghraib began
permitting inmates housed in tents to line the edges of their tents with
sandbags. The report notes, however, that the sandbags were insufficient
for protection from shelling.
Beyond the report's limited scope
As wide-ranging and thorough as the ICRC report seems, nothing in its
24 pages refers to the specific incidents, or even the types of incidents,
pictured in many of the photographs which have been leaked to the press
in the past few weeks or other photos and videos that are in possession
of the Pentagon but have to some extent been described to the media. There
is no mention in the Red Cross report of inmates being forced into naked
human piles, forced into sexual and mock sexual positions or forced to
have sex with guards.
© 2004 The NewStandard.
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