.
Translated from Libération (Paris), July 30, 2003:
Arrests And Abuse By American Troops
On The Rise In Iraq
"They're treating us like
cattle"
By Marc Semo
Libération: July 30, 2003: The curfew had just begun,
at 11 p.m., as it has for the past three months in the Iraqi capital,
and Nudir was late, but he was only a few hundred meters from his villa
in the Zeyouna district when an American patrol blocked the BMW where he
and two friends happened to be. Polite, but firm,
the GIs stretched them out on the hood. They searched the vehicle.
In the glove compartment they had a revolver for self-defense, as many
Iraqis do. The Americans handcuffed them at once. "They
made us get into an armored troop transport, and there they began to
beat us up," said the young engineer, who, after spending the night
at a collection center stuffed into a wire-mesh cage with 350
other suspects, finally ended up at the airport prison, "Camp
Cropper," which consists of tarps surrounded by barbed wire under a
blistering sun. There he spent sixteen days. That was at the end
of May. He was registered as "enemy prisoner of war"
number 8,122.
NUMBER 16,481
As for Tony, he was arrested ten days later, on June 3, at his home in
the Al-Mansour district. "Some thieves had started pillaging the
house next door. Along with the other neighbors, we had started
shooting in the air to make them go away, and the Americans arrived a
few minutes later. They weren't interested in the thieves. They
asked who had fired and where the guns were. I showed them the
Kalashnikov I was keeping to protect my family. They confiscated
it, and then they bound my hands and took me away," says the young
Christian economist. It would be thirty-seven days before he came
home again, after spending time in the prison camps that have been built
in the southern part of the country, near Um Qasr. During his time
in Camp Cropper, he received the number 16,481.
Statistics are lacking, but these registration numbers give an idea of
the number of persons arrested in Baghdad during the round-ups and
searches conducted by American troops. "An enormous numbers of
detainees are coming and going, making any precise accounting
impossible," says a representative of the International Committee
of the Red Cross. While acknowledging that he "now has access
to all detention centers," he complains about "the major
problems, namely the slowness of procedures and the absence of lawyers
and judges."
The misadventures of Nudir and Tony are two stories among many others
testifying to the daily repression enforced by American troops, who are
feeling increasingly nervous. In his report to the Security
Council, the UN representative in Baghdad, Sergio Viera De Mello,
expressed his concerns about the status of human rights in Iraq.
Amnesty International, in a [July 23] "Memorandum on concerns
relating to law and order" (http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE141572003),
denounced "reports of torture or ill treatment by Coalition
Forces." There are also "abuses," more and more
frequent, during violent operations, for the GIs are still behaving as
if they were at war. Shots at civilian cars that have the
misfortune to pass by at the wrong moment. Shots at occupants of a
commandeered house who start to react defensively because they think
they're being robbed. From a legal point of view, everything
remains in a state of utter vagueness.
INHUMANE CONDITIONS
To all this must be added the poor hygiene, the heat, and the crowding
in the detention centers improvised by the Americans, who, in addition
to the tarpaulin camps, have put back into service the immense Abu
Ghraib prison, the symbol of the thirty years of repression by the
defunct regime. "It is shameful to see people detained in inhumane
conditions without their families being informed, often for
weeks," said Mahmoud Ben Romdhane, the head of Amnesty's delegation
to Iraq, indignantly.
There is certainly no comparison between the life of a detainee today
and what that was during Saddam's time, but those who have been
incarcerated by the Americans remain profoundly shocked, even if they
acknowledge that in general the GI guards "behaved
appropriately." General Ricardo
Sanchez, the commander of coalition forces in Iraq, explained the
difficulties in publishing lists of prisoners to inform families
"because of problems in spelling names, which are often
imprecise."
ON THE GROUND
When he arrived at Camp Cropper, near the airport, Nudir broke down.
"Under nothing but a tarp, there were 200 of us, and we didn't have
the right to leave the barbed-wire enclosure that surrounded each tent.
There were a dozen of them, and we couldn't talk back and forth, except
by making distant gestures," said the engineer. In the
neighboring tent, he saw some "VIPs" - former officials of the
regime on the list of wanted persons, including the former president of
Parliament, Sadoun Hammadi - who "was being treated like everybody
else." "We slept on the ground, on newspapers or, for
those who were lucky, on gunnysacks. The food was meager, army
rations once a day, and water was even scarcer, scarcely three liters a
day despite the extreme heat It was always hot, brought in metal
containers. The latrines were just holes dug inside the enclosure
giving off a pestilential stench," recalled Nudir, for whom the
worst was going without cigarettes. Smoking was strictly
prohibited. At the slightest infraction, the detainees were punished by
making them stand for hours in the sun, arms and legs outstretched.
"When a prisoner collapsed, they brought him to with a little
water, and then he had to resume his standing position," said the
ex-detainee, who also saw some of his companions punished for more
serious misconduct by being thrown into the dirt on their stomach with
their hands tied under the hot sun. "They didn't beat us, but
they treated us like cattle," exclaimed Tony, who, after two days,
was transferred to the south, to Um Qasr, to a prisoner-of-war camp,
"where at least there was soap to wash with."
INDIGNATION
During his detention, Nudir was interrogated only once, for five
minutes. "I didn't know how long I would be there. Then one
day they called my number. I learned I was free," he said.
His family had only been informed of his detention fourteen days later.
"They thought I had been killed by robbers, and for days they made
the rounds of police stations, the Red Crescent, the International Red
Cross, the American authorities, all to no avail," the engineer
complained.
When Tony was finally interrogated, after ten days in the Um Qasr camp,
and was able to tell his story, the officer suddenly stood up.
"I thought he was going to hit me, but he shook my hand, saying he
was truly sorry for what had happened to me," said the economist,
who nonetheless had to wait seventeen more days to be freed, after two
other lengthy interrogations by intelligence officers who asked him if
he belonged to the Baath Party, whether he knew any Baathists, what he
had done during the Kuwait war, and why he didn't support the Iraqi
National Congress of Ahmed Chalabi, the Americans' protégé. He
was able to prove his good faith. They walked him to the camp's
gate, in the middle of the desert, 430 miles from Baghdad. They
gave him $5 and it was up to him from there. He sighed:
"I hold it against the Americans. Like a lot of other Iraqis,
I blessed them for having freed us from Saddam Hussein. From now
on, I have no more illusions."
http://www.libe.com/page.php?Article=127826
--
Translated by Mark K. Jensen
Associate Professor of French
Chair, Department of Languages and Literatures
Webpage: http://www.plu.edu/~jensenmk/
E-mail: jensenmk@plu.edu
Join our Daily News Headlines
Email Digest
|
|
Information
Clearing House
Daily News Headlines
Digest
|
HOME
COPYRIGHT NOTICE
|