Lisa Ashkenaz Croke of the New Standard reports on a legal team from the Detroit area that has discovered evidence of rampant torture and abuse throughout the U.S.-run prison system in Iraq, involving some 25 U.S.-run detention centers, most so far not mentioned in media reports. -- Thanks to Ted Nation for this piece....
TORTURE AND RAPE RAMPANT IN IRAQ PRISONS By Lisa Ashkenaz Croke
New Standard September 23, 2004
http://newstandardnews.net/content/?action=show_item&itemid=1029 or http://www.antiwar.com/orig/croke.php?articleid=3645
HUNTINGTON WOODS, MICH. -- American legal investigators have
discovered evidence of abuse, torture and rape throughout the U.S.-run prison
system in Iraq. A Michigan legal team meeting with former detainees in Baghdad
during an August fact-finding mission gathered evidence supporting claims of
prisoner abuse at some 25 U.S.-run detention centers, most of them so far not
publicly mentioned as being embroiled in the Iraq torture scandal.
"That list was something that we came back with -- we only knew of three
prisons going there," investigator Mohammed Alomari told the New
Standard, referring to the few detention centers in Iraq where concerns over
treatment of prisoners have already been raised publicly.
The list includes some actual prisons, such as al-Salihiya Prison in Baghdad,
the notorious prison in Abu Ghraib, and a prison at Camp Bucca, a
Coalition-built POW camp in the southern port city of Um-Qasr. Other detention
centers have been established at military bases, such as the U.S. military
compound at al-Dhiloeia, north of Baghdad; a U.S. base outside Fallujah; and the
Hilla military compound, a joint U.S.-Polish base where Alomari said he has
recently been informed of allegations against U.S. and Polish personnel.
"Nobody talks about it. All everyone talks about is Abu Ghraib because of the
pictures," said Alomari. "But in these other places, there's tons of acts of
torture, abuse, rape."
During an interview with Alomari and attorney Shereef Akeel, TNS reviewed
documentation the men accumulated covering 53 separate cases of former detainees
alleging gross mistreatment at the U.S.-run prisons in Iraq. All of the
witnesses have been vetted, said Akeel, their presence at various detention
centers corroborated by official, U.S. military-issued paperwork and
identification information.
Some of the plaintiffs allege U.S. captors committed severe abuses against
them as recently as this summer, challenging the widely-held assumption that the
military has put an end to the violations.
A steady stream of reports from a contact in Iraq has kept new cases crossing
Akeel's desk almost daily since the team returned from Iraq over a month ago.
Cases raised since the team's return stateside will be verified and investigated
in the future.
Akeel says he learned of the horrible conditions and practices at Abu Ghraib
almost a month before the rest of the American public, when a man he calls
"Saleh" came into his Huntington Woods, Mich., office with an ID bracelet from
Abu Ghraib and a horrific story of his rape and abuse at the infamous U.S.-run
prison.
"I said, 'Abu what?'" recalled Akeel. "I didn't even know about Abu Ghraib. I
couldn't believe it. I mean, I didn't -- it was so outlandish."
"Then the pictures came out," Akeel said.
While many of the detention centers where Akeel's clients say abuses took
place were established under Saddam Hussein, most appear to be facilities put to
use as prisons during the U.S.-led occupation.
A group called the Committee for the Release of Hostages and Detainees in
Iraq (CROHDI), a Saddam-era human rights group based in Scotland, counted over
50 known prisons and detention centers in Iraq. CROHDI's list includes the
airport near the al-Habbaniya Resort Island and various places now used as
military bases where the American investigative team uncovered cases of prisoner
abuse last month.
Shortly after the invasion in 2003, the U.S. Army established Camp Cropper, a
massive, mostly outdoor facility located at Baghdad International Airport. Camp
Cropper was mentioned in a Red Cross report [.pdf] leaked to the press last
spring and received some press attention after the U.S. military banned Amnesty
International from visiting prisoners there last summer.
During their trip, the American investigators heard accounts of abuse from
former Camp Cropper and Abu Ghraib detainees, but also from released inmates
held at another airport camp in Baquba, an hour northeast of Baghdad.
Since returning, Alomari says that they have learned of prison abuse at the
airport at al-Habbaniya Resort Island located an hour west of the city, and at
an airport camp in the northern city of Mosul.
The majority of detention centers where former inmates allege American
soldiers and contractors committed acts of abuse were found in and around
Baghdad, most of them buildings that had been converted into prisons. Students
living at Mustansiriya University student housing were "kicked out," said
Alomari, and U.S. troops reportedly turned the dorms into a detention center.
Other such facilities were reported on the grounds of the Akai Pharmaceutical
Company Compound, the Palace of Conferences located across from the al-Rasheed
hotel, the Scania transportation depot and the al-Sijood Palace in Baghdad.
Tikrit is the only other city listed with multiple prisons where former
inmates have so far reported abuses to the American investigators. First
enclosed with barbed wire at the end of the war, Tikrit's neighboring villages
were similarly imprisoned in the weeks leading up to Hussein's capture, when
residents say they woke one morning to find that the U.S. military had enveloped
their villages in barbed wire and set up checkpoints during the night.
Detention centers in Tikrit reportedly include one of Saddam Hussein's
Presidential Palaces, Uday Hussein's former horse stables, and the
U.S.-confiscated Tikrit Elementary School. All of these appear to be newly
established prisons, as none appear on CRODHI's list of known centers of
incarceration.
As the vice president and media director for the nonprofit Focus on American
& Arab Interests & Relations (FAAIR), Alomari had been traveling in and
out of Iraq since December, giving seminars on American democracy to Iraq's
academic and political leaders. "I came back about mid-June and about a week
later Shereef [Akeel] called me," said Alomari. "He told me he wanted to go to
Iraq; he wanted to investigate these cases."
Akeel had teamed up with attorneys in Philadelphia and New York to work with
the Center for Constitutional Rights in bringing a lawsuit against private
security firms Titan Corp. and CACI International. The class action suit accuses
the U.S. firms of violating the Alien Tort Claims Act and the Racketeer
Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) by engaging in illegal abuse and
torture of detainees with the goal of securing lucrative government contracts.
In fact, despite a recent military report recommending criminal charges be
filed against at least two Titan employees contracted as translators at Abu
Ghraib prison, the U.S. Army has awarded a six month "bridging contract" to the
San Diego-based security firm to continue providing translators and interpreters
after its current contract ends this month. The Associated Press reports that
the new contract could bring Titan as much as $400 million.
Both Titan and CACI have repeatedly denied allegations that their personnel
have been involved in any illegal activity or wrongdoing. They have said the
lawsuit against them is unfounded and have stood by specific employees accused
of torture.
Akeel says the discovery of gross mistreatment at over two dozen prisons
controlled by the U.S. military is "another piece of the puzzle," and could
strengthen the legal team's case. Pieces have been put into place with the
declassified sections of three military reports investigating prison abuse in
Iraq. Though the findings have been limited to activities at Abu Ghraib, Akeel
says they still provide evidence of private contractors at both firms engaging
in crimes against former detainees.
The legal team's next move is to fit former detainees' descriptions of
assailants and prison release papers with names and photographs of Titan and
CACI employees contracted to the prisons. It is not yet known if Titan or CACI
workers were contracted to the majority of the prisons where detainees allege
abuse took place. |