Red Cross Was Told Iraq Abuse 'Part of the Process'
LONDON - The Red Cross saw U.S. troops keeping Iraqi
prisoners naked for days in darkness at the Abu Ghraib jail in
October, and was told by the intelligence officer in charge it was
"part of
the process," a leaked report said on Monday.
The International Committee of the Red Cross also described British troops
forcing Iraqi detainees to kneel and stomping on their
necks in an incident in which one prisoner died.
The Red Cross said it had repeatedly alerted U.S.-led occupation
authorities to practices it described as "serious
violations of international humanitarian law" and
"in some cases tantamount to torture."
It confirmed the confidential February 4 report, which appeared on the
Wall Street Journal Web Site Monday, was genuine.
The 24-page report concluded that
"persons deprived of their liberty face
the risk of being subjected to a process of physical and psychological
coercion, in some cases tantamount to torture, in the early stages of the
internment process."
During a visit to Abu Ghraib in October, Red Cross delegates witnessed
"the practice of keeping persons deprived of their liberty completely naked
in totally empty concrete cells and in total darkness," the report said.
"Upon witnessing such cases, the ICRC interrupted its visits and
requested an explanation from the authorities. The military intelligence
officer in charge of the interrogation explained that this practice was
'part of the process'."
It said it met prisoners who were being held naked in complete darkness.
Others had been held naked and were allowed to dress, but given only women's
underwear.
The Red Cross's visit took place two months before pictures were taken of
U.S. troops abusing prisoners, which later led to criminal charges against
seven soldiers.
PICTURES
Those pictures appeared in the media last month, causing international
outrage and prompting apologies by President Bush and other senior
officials. However, Washington has said it believed the practices were
isolated incidents of aberrant behavior by individuals and not its usual
practice.
Although much of the abuse described in the report appears to have taken
place in jails run by U.S. forces, the report also describes the death of an
Iraqi prisoner in custody in the British zone Basra last September. His name
is blacked out.
A spokesman for Britain's defense ministry said the allegation was not
new, but appeared to be a reference to the death of an Iraqi detainee named
Baha Musa, which Britain says it has been investigating since last year.
The Red Cross report described him as one of nine men arrested in a Basra
hotel and "made to kneel, face and hands against the ground, as if in a
prayer position. The soldiers stamped on the back of the neck of those
raising their head."
It said the death certificate for the Iraqi prisoner listed his cause of
death as a heart attack.
"An eyewitness description of the body given to the ICRC mentioned a
broken nose, several broken ribs and skin lesions on the face consistent
with beatings."
The report describes prison guards opening fire with live ammunition
during riots and escape attempts, on detainees who "were unarmed and did not
appear to pose any serious threat to anyone's life."
According to the report, the Red Cross repeatedly drew allegations of
mistreatment to the attention of the authorities. In some cases, they
changed practices. For example, they stopped issuing wristbands marked
"terrorist" to all foreign detainees.
Among the "serious violations of international humanitarian law," the
report listed a failure to set up a system to notify family members of
arrests.
"The uncaring behavior of the CF (Coalition Forces) and their inability
to quickly provide accurate information on persons deprived of their liberty
for the families concerned also seriously affects the image of the Occupying
Powers among the Iraqi population," it said.
source: Reuters - May 10, 2004 |