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Iraqi POWs talked about electric
shocks and all-night beating by the U.S.-British forces, Amnesty said
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LONDON,
May 16 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - At least 20 Iraqi
prisoners of war, including civilians, complained they had been
tortured by British and U.S. occupation forces in central and southern
Iraq, a spokesman for human rights group Amnesty International
confirmed Friday, Friday, May 16.
"As
of Wednesday we had interviewed 20 people," Amnesty researcher
Said Boumedouha said, referring to Iraq prisoners of war who said they
had been tortured by Anglo-American troops in An-Nasiriyah and around
Basra.
When
asked, the researcher insisted that torture was the correct word to
use for the handling of the prisoners, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported.
After
returning from Amnesty's first fact-finding mission in Iraq since
1993, Boumedouha stressed the mistreatment included "beatings
with fists, with feet, also with weapons."
"In
one case we are talking about electric shocks being used against a man
and in others people are being beaten for the whole night and are
still being kicked and their teeth broken, I think you would call that
torture," he said.
Boumedouha
acknowledged that Amnesty International had not presented any of the
claims to British or U.S. forces for any response.
"We
still have people on the ground in Iraq and we will continue to gain
testimonies," he said.
"Once
that is complete we hope to provide a full dossier to present to the
British and American authorities as well as publishing
ourselves," stressed the Amnesty researcher.
The
international human rights watch-dog estimated up to half of the 20
people interviewed were civilians and the rest military.
Boumedouha
said all the people he interviewed were free at the time he met them
and most had been detained in and around Basra.
The
Pentagon announced on April 19, that American military
tribunals were set up in Iraq to try Iraqi PoWs, while the Central
Command said at the time that 3600 Iraqis were taken as POWs.
But
the step was criticized by legalists as being a violation of the
Geneva Convention on the treatment of PoWs.
"The
1949 Third Geneva Convention states PoWs should not be put on trial
unless they had committed a war crime," said Ahmed Abu el-Wafa,
an Egyptian Professor of International Law.
"Instead,
the convention stipulates that PoWs should be treated humanly and
should be freed once military operations are over," he stressed.
The
expert underlined that Iraqis did not commit any war crimes as they
were simply defending their country and themselves against occupation
forces.
‘Security’
Needed
Boumedouha
said that everywhere he had gone in central and southern Iraq the
Iraqis had given him the same message: "The people do not need
food or water, what they need is security."
"Everyone
is wondering why they (Anglo-American forces) haven't done enough.
They haven't done anything in fact," he charged.
"The
looting in Basra for example is still unbelievable and now there are
other problems, including car-jacking and revenge killings against
former police and Baath party members," he said.
Iraqi
areas descended into chaos and lawlessness after the U.S. forces
rolled into the capital Baghdad on April 9 and declared the fall of
the Saddam regime.