Posted on 04/12/2003 3:29:06 PM PDT by MadIvan
THEY called it the Black Hole, for it was the room from which no prisoner ever emerged alive. The walls and ceiling were coated with treacly black paint and there were no windows so it was impossible to tell night from day.
The floor was several inches deep in charred remains and faeces, and there was the scuffling sound of something rat-sized in the dark. Whatever had happened in there was so unspeakable that, seven years after being freed from Basras most feared interrogation centre, Ismael Samoi could not bring himself to look inside.
They would go into your mind and whatever was your worst horror they would find it, he said, as he used his cigarette lighter to guide the way down the crumbling stairs under the headquarters of the Amn al-Amm, the internal security agency, most hated of all Saddams secret police.
The building was struck by a British shell in the battle that led to the fall of Basra last Monday, but the detention blocks for political prisoners remained intact, as had the underground jail where Samoi spent what he describes as a 22-month living nightmare.
Last week, as the news reached Basra that US Marines had entered the heart of Baghdad, he summoned up the courage to return. He was not the only one. The secret police headquarters was full of former political prisoners returning terrified to be back there and at the same time astonished to be wandering freely around and families searching for the missing.
Ismael! shouted a thickset man in his forties, crushing Samoi in a bear-hug. For a moment they held each other in silence, too choked with emotion to speak.
The two men had been in the cell together, along with 15 to 20 others. It was often so crowded that Samoi and his friend, a boxing champion who asked to be identified as Fala, often slept standing.
They had helped keep each others spirits up over long months, but had lost touch when Samoi was transferred to Baghdad. Neither knew whether the other had survived.
Look, said Fala, the older man, pointing to two faded marks on the wall. This is where we wrote our names in blood so people would one day know we had been here.
Are you still strong, Fala? asked Samoi with a mischievous grin. Fala immediately knelt on the ground, allowing his old cell mate to climb onto his shoulders so that Samois fingertips just reached a small grille high on the wall. This was how we dreamt of freedom, just to touch the free air.
The story was typical among those returning last week. I was 23 years old and just married when they came for me, said Samoi. I had been sending information to the Shiite opposition based in Iran and someone reported me. I knew the regime was looking for me but I had to go to my job because my wife was pregnant and we needed the money. I was imprisoned for speaking the truth.
His hands were shaking as he led the way to a series of small, stone-walled rooms. Pointing out the meat hooks in the ceiling from which he had been suspended by a rope tied round his ankles or hands, Samoi showed raised burn marks on his wrist. They would beat us with rubber hosepipes while we were hanging until we dripped blood, he said.
In another of the torture cells, bare wires dangled from the ceiling. They would pour water on our heads, then attach the wires to our skulls to electrocute us. Other times they brought in a machine for generating electricity and would put a wire in each ear to give us electric shocks of 125 volts. Sometimes they would run it from the nail of my little finger to that of my friend. They had plenty of methods. This corridor would echo with screams of grown men.
In the next corridor were a series of even smaller cells, with barely room for one person, where torture by scorpion was carried out. We called these the lonely cells, he said. My 15-year-old cousin died here in the dirt and dust. Many died here.
They would put you in alone with these big, very ugly creatures that get on your clothes so you cant get them off and they sting.
Samoi never had to endure the scorpion rooms. For him, the hardest thing to deal with was the hunger. We were fed old bread so hard it hurt our mouths, and sometimes soup with insects. When I left I weighed 30kg (4st 10lb). I was like a skeleton.
After being transferred to Baghdad and then released, Samoi was so malnourished that he spent three months in hospital with anaemia. Although he recovered, the mental scars remain, as they do for much of Iraqi society.
All that time in prison my wife had no idea if I was alive or dead and had to give birth to our son all alone and in hiding, said Samoi. I hate Saddam for causing that anguish and for stealing the first 18 months of my son Basils life from me. And we have never been able to have another baby.
The lack of information about Samois fate was a typical tool of the regime to demonstrate what would happen to anyone who stepped out of line. Wives would sometimes even remarry, only for their husbands to reappear. Mothers cried every day for missing sons.
But it was not just men who were taken prisoner. When Fala was arrested for praying too much, because of his regular attendance at the local Shiite mosque, his wife was seized too. My wife was in a different block at the back and held for four months. They shaved their heads and made them run naked.
I dont know how he survived that, said Samoi. At least I could reassure myself that my wife was safely outside.
You dont know how much your friendship helped me, replied Fala. I am a simple man, a poor man of no education, whereas you are a man of books; you taught yourself English, you write your memories. In all this, when we were treated like animals your friendship made me feel I was a person of value.
The regime had no qualms about taking children prisoner either. Ali al-Mousawi, an English teacher who came to the Amn al-Amm last week to search for news of his lost brother, was arrested in 1999 with his entire family, including his sick mother and four-year-old son.
My elder brother had taken part in an uprising to protest at Saddams assassination of one of our religious leaders, Imam Mohammed Saddar, in the holy city of Najaf, he said.
It was a big uprising they shot up the Baath (party) headquarters but it failed and the next day they came for my brother. We know he was tortured here for three weeks but then we dont know what happened to him.
After three weeks they arrested 200 men and their families, anyone who prayed in our mosque. They came to our house in the night and arrested me and my wife, son, mother, father and younger brothers. We were all held for seven months.
My little girl was born in jail with encephalitis. She is disabled and cannot walk or speak. For what? We had always kept our heads down.
When the family was finally released, they discovered their house had been bulldozed, as had those of eight other families in the street who had also been arrested. Taking us to see the ruins on Al Hakamia street, al-Mousawi said: They destroyed us. We had lived here 18 years. They took all we had fridge, air-conditioners, television, furniture then crushed the house.
Even the land is worthless because they told us if we came back here theyd kill us. Now we live like beggars.
The al-Mousawi family was refused any information about the fate of the missing son, even though the Baath regime, like the Nazis, documented everything obsessively. We think he was hanged but my mother cries every day because we just dont know, al-Mousawi said.
Over the past few days most of the records have been wiped out with the ransacking and burning of government buildings. But the ruins are full of people like al-Mousawi, sifting through dossiers and scattered papers for clues about missing loved ones.
Among the documents are interrogation and execution orders, reports on people showing photographs of their children, and pictures of those executed or tortured. If I was to collect all the bad words in all the languages, it still would not be enough to describe Saddam, said al-Mousawi.
Some of the most incriminating files may have been burnt by party officials such as the Amn al-Amms director, General Mehdi Aljobari, before they took flight, but witnesses remain. A former captain in the Iraqi army who gave his name as Kadhem took me to a naval complex, called the Academia of the Arabian Gulf, where he said he had witnessed the shooting in March 1991 of 24 political prisoners who had taken part in an uprising against Saddam the previous month. He said the bodies were bulldozed into the ground.
The man most Basrawi blame for the reign of terror is Saddams cousin and chief hatchet man, Ali Hassan al-Majid, who was sent to deal with Basra after the 1991 uprising and again after the attack on the Baath party in 1999. Known as Chemical Ali after he used chemical weapons to kill thousands of Kurds in 1988, al-Majids brutal suppression of these uprisings explains why the population was so reluctant to rise up again when the war started.
Sheikh Adnan Salem Jassim, an influential figure in Basra, said al-Majid had called a meeting of all the tribal leaders a day before the war started. He asked them to warn their people against taking part in any rebellion. When one of them, Sheikh Abdul Rahim Bassooni, refused, al-Majid had him shot at the door of his house.
British forces claimed last week they had killed Chemical Ali, but most Basrawi still believe he escaped across the Shatt al-Arab towards Iran.
After 35 years of Baathist repression, old fears take a long while to die. Back at the prison the next day, Fala whispered that he had something to show me and we arranged to meet later on a bridge where nobody might report back on him.
Ive found my cousin, Abu Nathan, he said. He held out a photograph of a dead man, his body spattered with blood from multiple gunshot wounds inflicted after the 1991 uprising. At least we know, he said. The world should note all this and not forget, because none of this should be repeated.
Regards, Ivan
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It is in the breaking news sidebar! |
There will be a special place in hell for all those who were complicit in hiding this from the world.
They deserve Hell, and their childen, and their grandchildren.
CNN, too. Dear Lord, this is horrible. I couldn't read it all the way through.
Pelosi still criticizes the liberation.
Bill and Hillary Clinton fought to preserve Saddam.
Jacques Chirac, Gerhard Schroder, Jiang Zemin and Vladimir Putin defended this butchery against our efforts to depose it.
Dan Rather, Peter Jennings, Tom Brokaw, Peter Arnett, Christine Amanpour, Judy Woodward defended this regime.
Scott Ritter, Robert Fisk, Tim Robbins, Susan Sarandon were on the side of this torture and execution.
George Clooney, Barbra Streisand, Sean Penn, Jeanean Garafolo, Sharon Stone supported this murder and maiming.
The Dixie Chicks were loud and proud about it.
CNN led the propaganda effort to conceal this epic barbarity.
Kofi Annan and Hans Blix and the rest of the UN fought for Saddam Hussein's right to continue killing thousands at whim.
Against this epic monstrosity Bush and Blair stood shoulder to shoulder leading those of conscience in the drive to cast out Satan.
And that MF is cast out, and all you other lesser Satans, every rock and shrub you hide behind will call in a strike to JDAM you.
Regards, Ivan
It doesn't matter what you show these people, they are convinced it's all a fake created by BushCo to justify their War for Oil.
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