Secrets of
Iraq's Death
Chamber
Prisoners
are being
summarily
executed in
the
government's
high-security
detention
centre in
Baghdad
By Robert
Fisk
07/10/08
"The
Independent"
-- -Like all
wars, the
dark, untold
stories of
the Iraqi
conflict
drain from
its
shattered
landscape
like the
filthy
waters of
the Tigris.
And still
the
revelations
come.
The
Independent
has learnt
that secret
executions
are being
carried out
in the
prisons run
by Nouri al-Maliki's
"democratic"
government.
The hangings
are carried
out
regularly –
from a
wooden
gallows in a
small,
cramped cell
– in Saddam
Hussein's
old
intelligence
headquarters
at Kazimiyah.
There is no
public
record of
these
killings in
what is now
called
Baghdad's
"high-security
detention
facility"
but most of
the victims
– there have
been
hundreds
since
America
introduced
"democracy"
to Iraq –
are said to
be
insurgents,
given the
same summary
justice they
mete out to
their own
captives.
The secrets
of Iraq's
death
chambers lie
mostly
hidden from
foreign eyes
but a few
brave
Western
souls have
come forward
to tell of
this prison
horror. The
accounts
provide only
a glimpse
into the
Iraqi story,
at times
tantalisingly
cut short,
at others
gloomily
predictable.
Those who
tell it are
as depressed
as they are
filled with
hopelessness.
"Most of the
executions
are of
supposed
insurgents
of one kind
or another,"
a Westerner
who has seen
the
execution
chamber at
Kazimiyah
told me.
"But hanging
isn't easy."
As always,
the devil is
in the
detail.
"There's a
cell with a
bar below
the ceiling
with a rope
over it and
a bench on
which the
victim
stands with
his hands
tied," a
former
British
official,
told me last
week. "I've
been in the
cell, though
it was
always
empty. But
not long
before I
visited,
they'd taken
this guy
there to
hang him.
They made
him stand on
the bench,
put the rope
round his
neck and
pushed him
off. But he
jumped on to
the floor.
He could
stand up. So
they
shortened
the length
of the rope
and got him
back on the
bench and
pushed him
off again.
It didn't
work."
There's
nothing new
in savage
executions
in the
Middle East
– in the
Lebanese
city of
Sidon 10
years ago, a
policeman
had to hang
on to the
legs of a
condemned
man to
throttle him
after he
failed to
die on the
noose – but
in Baghdad,
cruel death
seems a
speciality.
"They
started
digging into
the floor
beneath the
bench so
that the guy
would drop
far enough
to snap his
neck," the
official
said. "They
dug up the
tiles and
the cement
underneath.
But that
didn't work.
He could
still stand
up when they
pushed him
off the
bench. So
they just
took him to
a corner of
the cell and
shot him in
the head."
The
condemned
prisoners in
Kazimiyah, a
Shia
district of
Baghdad, are
said to
include
rapists and
murderers as
well as
insurgents.
One
prisoner, a
Chechen,
managed to
escape from
the jail
with another
man after a
gun was
smuggled to
them. They
shot two
guards dead.
The
authorities
had to call
in the
Americans to
help them
recapture
the two. The
Americans
killed one
and shot the
Chechen in
the leg. He
refused
medical
assistance
so his wound
went
gangrenous.
In the end,
the Iraqis
had to
operate and
took all the
bones out of
his leg. By
the time he
met one
Western
visitor to
the prison,
"he was
walking
around on
crutches
with his
boneless
right leg
slung over
his
shoulder".
In many
cases, it
seems, the
Iraqis
neither keep
nor release
any record
of the true
names of
their
captives or
of the
hanged
prisoners.
For years
the
Americans –
in charge of
the
notorious
Abu Ghraib
prison
outside
Baghdad –
did not know
the identity
of their
prisoners.
Here, for
example, is
new
testimony
given to The
Independent
by a former
Western
official to
the Anglo-US
Iraq Survey
Group, which
searched for
the infamous
but mythical
weapons of
mass
destruction:
"We would go
to the
interrogation
rooms at Abu
Ghraib and
ask for a
particular
prisoner.
After about
40 minutes,
the
Americans
brought in
this hooded
guy,
shuffling
along,
shackled
hands and
feet.
"They sat
him on a
chair in
front of us
and took off
his hood. He
had a big
beard. We
asked where
he received
his
education.
He
repeatedly
said
'Mosul'.
Then he said
he'd left
school at 14
– remember,
this guy is
supposed to
be a missile
scientist.
We said: 'We
know you've
got a PhD
and went to
the Sorbonne
– we'd like
you to help
us with
information
about
Saddam's
missile
project'.
But I said
to myself :
'This guy
doesn't know
anything
'bout
fucking
missiles.'
Then it
turned out
he had a
different
name from
the man we'd
asked for,
he'd been
picked up on
the road by
the
Americans
four months
earlier, he
didn't know
why. So we
said to the
Americans:
'Wrong
gentleman!'
So they put
the shackles
on him and
took him
back to his
cell and
after 20 or
30 minutes,
they'd bring
someone
else. We'd
ask him
where he
went to
school and
he told us
he had never
been to
school.
"Wrong
person
again. It
was a
complete
farce. The
incompetence
of the US
military was
astounding,
criminal.
Eventually,
of course,
they found
the right
guy and
brought him
in and took
his hood
off. He was
breathing
heavily,
overweight,
pudgy,
disoriented,
a little bit
scared."
On this
occasion,
the
Americans
had found
the right
man. The
British and
American
investigators
asked the
guards to
remove the
man's
shackles,
which they
did – but
then they
tied one of
the man's
legs to the
floor. Yes,
he had a
PhD.
Again, the
official's
testimony:
"We went
through his
history,
what he'd
worked on –
he was
obviously
just a minor
functionary
in one of
Saddam's
missile
programmes.
Iraqi
scientists
didn't have
the
knowledge
how to make
nuclear
missiles nor
did they
have the
financial
support
necessary.
It just
remained in
the dreams
of Saddam."
The
scientist-prisoner
in Abu
Ghraib
miserably
told his
captors that
he'd been
arrested by
the
Americans
after they'd
knocked on
his front
door in
Baghdad and
found two
Kalashnikov
rifles a
woman's
hijab,
verses from
the Koran
and,
obviously of
interest to
his captors,
"physics and
missile
textbooks on
his
bookshelves."
But this
supposedly
valuable
prisoner was
never
charged or
previously
interviewed
even though
he admitted
he was a
rocket
scientist.
"I don't
know what
happened to
him," the
former
official
told me. "I
tried to
tell the UK
and the US
military
that we've
arrested
this man but
that he's
got a wife,
children, a
family. I
said that by
locking up
this one
innocent
person,
you've got
50 men
radicalised
overnight.
No, I don't
know what
happened to
him."
For many of
the
investigators
working for
the
Anglo-American
authorities
in Baghdad,
the trial
for the
crime for
which the
Iraqi
dictator was
himself
subsequently
hanged was a
fearful
experience
that
ultimately
ended in
disgust.
Through
captured
documents,
they could
see the
dark, inner
workings of
Saddam's
secret
police. The
idea of the
Saddam trial
was less to
bring
members of
the former
regime to
justice than
to show
Iraqis how
justice and
the rule of
law should
operate.
"It was
exhilarating
to see
Saddam being
cross-examined,"
one of the
court
investigators
said. "The
low point
was when he
was
executed.
What drove
me on was
seeing how
Saddam dealt
with his
victims – I
was looking
at a
microcosm of
all the
deaths that
had taken
place in
Iraq. But
when he was
executed, it
was done in
such a
savage way."
Saddam
Hussein was
hanged in
the same
"secure"
unit at
Kazimiyah
where Mr
al-Maliki's
people, in
an echo of
Saddamite
Baathist
terror, now
hang their
victims.
Iraq The
death
penalty
*The death
penalty in
Iraq was
suspended
after Saddam
Hussein was
deposed in
2003. It was
reinstated
by the
interim
government
in August
2004.
*The United
Nations, the
European
Union and
international
human rights
organisations
all spoke
out against
the
reintroduction.
*At the
time, the
government
claimed the
death
penalty was
a necessary
measure
until the
country had
stabilised.
Amnesty
International
claims that
"the extent
of violence
in Iraq has
increased
rather than
diminished,
clearly
indicating
that the
death
penalty has
not proved
to be an
effective
deterrent."
*Saddam,
left, his
half-brother
Barzan
al-Tikriti
and Iraq's
former chief
judge Awad
Hamed
al-Bandar
were hanged
at the end
of 2006 for
their part
in the
killings of
148 people
in the
mainly Shia
town of
Dujail in
1982.
Illicit
videos of
all three
executions
later became
public.
Saddam's
body could
be seen on a
hospital
trolley, his
head twisted
at 90
degrees.
Barzan –
Iraq's
former
intelligence
chief –was
decapitated
by the
noose.
Officials
said it was
an accident.
*According
to Amnesty,
there were
at least 33
executions
reported in
Iraq last
year. About
200 people
were
estimated to
have been
sentenced to
death.
