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In cells, telling reminders of Saddam's repressive regime
AP ^ | April 14, 2003

Posted on 04/13/2003 9:48:55 AM PDT by sarcasm

The evidence is in the scars, stories and memories of the maimed. The proof is in the cattle prods, branding irons, meathooks and manacles made purely for pain, which was often a prelude to death.

In cities and towns across Iraq, US-led military forces and local Iraqis are looking at the hard, cold, bloodstained evidence of what human rights organisations have been saying for years: Iraq had the world's most sadistic system of state-sponsored torture.

In Basra, a putty-coloured compound once run by Iraq's internal security police has become, like other such torture chambers, an unholy shrine for people who survived a stay there, and to those who didn't.

"I am very happy today, like I have been reborn," Karim Kadem, a 27-year-old man who returned yesterday to see the place where he was imprisoned for two years.

"I thought I would die here."

Human rights groups have criticised Pentagon plans to use Iraqi jurists for tribunals on Iraqi human rights crimes precisely because of places such as this one.

Iraqi courts have been "instruments of repression rather than impartial judicial institutions," said the New York-based Human Rights Watch.

"The US government can't solve this problem by offering some technical assistance to the Iraqi judicial system," said Richard Dicker, director of the group's International Justice Program.

"That system needs to be rebuilt from the ground up."

Of course, many prisoners were never in a court before they were imprisoned, tortured or summarily executed, often for such small infractions as failure to join President Saddam Hussein's Baath Party.

In Nasiriyah on Wednesday, US Marines cleared out a security complex equipped with wooden stocks - contraptions to restrain the head and hands - and a crude electric chair powered by a hand-cranked generator.

Other objects, like a long steel rod, made the Marines' imaginations run wild. They also found photos of badly burned bodies.

Numerous photos of women and children were found in torture chambers. Rape was a principal form of torture, human rights groups say, with prisoners sometimes being forced to hear tape recordings of their screaming wives being assaulted.

The British military on Monday took Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, and uncovered the sort of chambers of horror troops are finding elsewhere.

The victims of such treatment were mainly, though not exclusively, Kurds or Shi'ite Muslims suspected of having taken part in the 1991 uprisings against Saddam that followed the Gulf War.

The seven-storey Basra compound, known as "White Lion," was shelled by British forces, and local Iraqis have been combing through the crumbled compound ever since, looking at files, fingerprints and other documents for evidence of people who went into custody but never came out.

Other visitors included those who made it out alive, telling tales of eyes gouged out, acid baths and agonising, midair suspensions by leather straps - the latter evidenced by the rusty rings stuck in the ceilings.

"It was a place of evil," resident Hamed Fattil said.

"They used to strap a leather cord around our head, hands and shoulders and hoist us two feet (half a metre) off the ground. Then they would beat us as we hung there," he said.

"They did unthinkable things - electrocution, immersion in a bath of chemicals and ripping off people's finger- and toenails."

Kadem said he was accused of opposing Saddam and the party. Five other friends arrested with him were either killed or blinded. He has permanent injuries to his arms; he can no longer lift them fully.

Kadem said he returned to the prison to exorcise his fears.

"I wanted to see the place. I wanted to relieve my heart of the bad memories," he said.

Fluttering in the debris were hundreds of handwritten documents about inmates who had been imprisoned or executed. Many former prisoners who came to the site were combing through the rubble for their dossiers.

In one set of documents found on the grounds, authorities detailed the capture and subsequent execution of one Habib Ali Hassan, a 20-year-old student accused of "frequent visits from suspicious people".

His picture, clipped to the file, showed a young clean-cut man in a white shirt and tie. He was killed in 1983.

One older man, who identified himself only as Ali, lifted his shirt to reveal the scars on his back - from jailhouse beatings, he said. He was arrested in 1991 for participating in Shi'ite ceremonies.

Asked if he was happy Baghdad had fallen, he nodded his head, then stopped to whisper: "Saddam may kill me".


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: atrocities; iraqicivilians; iraqifreedom; torturechamber

1 posted on 04/13/2003 9:48:55 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
The article makes perfect sense to me. The Ba'aths were socialists.
2 posted on 04/13/2003 9:54:01 AM PDT by Enterprise
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To: All


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3 posted on 04/13/2003 9:54:52 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: sarcasm
Iraqi jurists

Prime candidates ... for U. S. Senatorial approval by Democrats such as Barbara Boxer and Tom Daschle.

4 posted on 04/13/2003 10:01:17 AM PDT by thinktwice
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To: sarcasm
Human rights groups have criticised Pentagon plans to use Iraqi jurists for tribunals on Iraqi human rights crimes precisely because of places such as this one.

Iraqi courts have been "instruments of repression rather than impartial judicial institutions," said the New York-based Human Rights Watch.

Since these human rights terrorist/commie-lover organizations were against Iraqi liberation from the beginning, they've waived their right to input on these issues. Their "help" isn't needed, they just need to go away. If we let them and the U.N. have their way, a government just as bad as Saddam's will be built and put into place.

5 posted on 04/13/2003 10:32:56 AM PDT by Excuse_My_Bellicosity
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To: sarcasm
I want to mark this thread. Some friends of mine, upon hearing that I supported President Bush, warned me that they were against the war. When we speak again, now that the war is for all intents and purposes over, I'd like to share this post with them. How can their liberal hearts stand knowing that they wanted the US to stay out of Iraq and thus keep that horrible system in power.
6 posted on 04/13/2003 10:44:30 AM PDT by Moonmad27 ("Run free, Samurai Jack")
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To: sarcasm
"The US government can't solve this problem by offering some technical assistance to the Iraqi judicial system," said Richard Dicker, director of the group's International Justice Program."

"That system needs to be rebuilt from the ground up."

When Jesus rode into Jerusalem on the back of an ass'es colt, the Jews were looking for (and thought they had) a military/political deliverer.

What they got and did not want (and ultimately rejected) was a deliverer from their sin (nature), consequently He was rejected.

It is ironic we entered Baghdad during the Easter season, but the crux of Islam/muslim problems is not in the politics but in the hearts of the people.

Say what you will about 'religion', but the fact is ... America was built upon a Christian foundation with Jesus as Lord and Creator.

Ishmael's descendents will also reject the basis for a peaceful operation ... the individual repentence of one's sins and the acceptence of the only Saviour from sin, (not political oppression), Jesus Christ.

Happy Easter Iraq ....

if you can keep it.

7 posted on 04/13/2003 11:24:11 AM PDT by knarf (RA 11448419)
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To: knarf
bump
8 posted on 04/13/2003 1:37:47 PM PDT by knarf (RA 11448419)
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