They just got a different tool to use than we do: They kill innocent lives to achieve objectives. That's what they do. And they're good. They get on the TV screens and they get people to ask questions about, well, you know, this, that or the other. I mean, they're able to kind of say to people: Don't come and bother us, because we will kill you. Bush - Joint News Conference with Blair - 28 July '06

Friday, November 18, 2005

Iraqi says he was held with hundreds in secret jail

thestar/reuters: An Iraqi man told on Thursday how he was tortured along with hundreds of other detainees in an Interior Ministry building similar to a secret bunker at the centre of a prisoner abuse scandal.

"There was an average of 800 prisoners at any one time in a building controlled by the Wolf Brigades (Interior Ministry special forces)," the man, who asked that he only be identified by his initials H.H., told Reuters.

"They had lists of people and lists of charges and they tortured people to get confessions."

The man, a 43-year-old contractor who was introduced to Reuters by a Sunni politician, said he was held in two run-down buildings from late May to early November.

One was near the Baghdad police academy and the other close to the commercial district of Bab al-Sharjee.

There was no way to independently verify the man's account.

Iraq's interior minister on Thursday sought to dismiss the scandal over a secret prison bunker, saying only very few of the 170 people said to have been held there were abused and denying he had condoned torture.

"I don't accept for any officer to even slap a prisoner," Interior Minister Bayan Jabor told a packed news conference, his first public appearance since U.S. forces found the bunker and scores of malnourished and badly beaten men on Sunday.

"The talk about this has been inaccurate," he said, adding that he was only commenting on the issue because his aides had put pressure on him to do so.

Political leaders from Iraq's once-dominant Sunni Arab minority have demanded an international investigation into allegations that Shi'ite militias linked to the Interior Ministry were responsible for the torture and abuse.

H.H., a Sunni, said he was seized at his home near Baghdad on the morning of May 22. He said his weight dropped from 95 kg (209 lb) to 65 kg (143 lb) in prison due to lack of food.

"I was not tortured as badly as others. I was hung by a ceiling hook by my hands which were tied behind my back during three days and they told me to confess to killing Shi'ites," he said, adding he and hundreds of other detainees were held in a room 160 metres long (525 feet) and 40 meters (131 feet) wide.

"The others had it much worse. They were whipped with cables and had their arms broken," he said.

H.H. said 150 prisoners confessed under torture during his detention. He named one as Muhammed Abdel-Razzak and said an entire family from the Baghdad district of Doura also confessed under duress.

"They gave us awful pieces of bread and a little bit of cheese and 30 grams of rice every day. Those places were not fit for animals," he said.

Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari said earlier this week that 173 men and teenage boys were discovered at the prison, near the Interior Ministry, and said there was evidence many of them had been tortured. He has ordered an investigation.

Jabor, raising his voice in anger as he rejected several of the allegations being made, said only a handful of people showed any sign of being beaten, and said they were all detained for suspected militant activity after arrest warrants were issued. Link