Thousands held without trial in Iraq, says Amnesty
By Steve Negus, Iraq Correspondent
Published: March 6 2006 02:00 | Last updated: March 6 2006 02:00
Tens of thousands of Iraqis have been detained for months if not years without trial by US-led multinational forces since the 2003 invasion, Amnesty International said in a report on Monday.
The London-based rights group called for an end to the indefinite internment of thousands of detainees in Iraq by the multinational forces, as it launched a report titled "Beyond Abu Ghraib: Detention and Torture in Iraq".
Approximately 14,000 prisoners were being held without charge in breach of international law, the organisation said, while others had been released "without explanation or apology or reparation after months of detention, victims of a system that is arbitrary and a recipe for abuse."
Iraqis, particularly Sunni Arabs, frequently complain that they are arrested in cases of mistaken identity or for comparatively minor reasons such as weapons possession, only to become lost in the system for months.
One Iraqi national cited in the report, Jawad M, says that he was detained in August 2004 while working on a US military base. In October he received a document informing him that his case was coming under review that included the accusation: "Gathering of information on interpreters and employees with theMultinational Force."
"Until now I don't know why they sent me to the prison and why I was released and whose decision that was," he told Amnesty after his release in early 2005.
Between August 2004 and November 2005 alone, the report said, a joint multinational-Iraqi board reviewed the files of some 22,000 detainees, recommending 12,000 for release and 10,000 for further detention.
However, by the end of November 2005, the Central Criminal Court of Iraq - the body in charge of trying those accused of security-related crimes - had tried only 1,301 alleged insurgents. Nearly 4,000 detainees had been held for more than a year without charge or trial, and more than 200 for more than two years, Amnesty said.
The report also cited cases of alleged torture and ill-treatment at the hands of the Iraqi security forces.
It called on countries contributing to the US- and UK-led multinational forces to end indefinite internment, to ensure detainees knew the reasons for their detention and to be sure they were promptly released or charged with a criminal offence.
By Steve Negus, Iraq Correspondent
Published: March 6 2006 02:00 | Last updated: March 6 2006 02:00
Tens of thousands of Iraqis have been detained for months if not years without trial by US-led multinational forces since the 2003 invasion, Amnesty International said in a report on Monday.
The London-based rights group called for an end to the indefinite internment of thousands of detainees in Iraq by the multinational forces, as it launched a report titled "Beyond Abu Ghraib: Detention and Torture in Iraq".
Approximately 14,000 prisoners were being held without charge in breach of international law, the organisation said, while others had been released "without explanation or apology or reparation after months of detention, victims of a system that is arbitrary and a recipe for abuse."
Iraqis, particularly Sunni Arabs, frequently complain that they are arrested in cases of mistaken identity or for comparatively minor reasons such as weapons possession, only to become lost in the system for months.
One Iraqi national cited in the report, Jawad M, says that he was detained in August 2004 while working on a US military base. In October he received a document informing him that his case was coming under review that included the accusation: "Gathering of information on interpreters and employees with theMultinational Force."
"Until now I don't know why they sent me to the prison and why I was released and whose decision that was," he told Amnesty after his release in early 2005.
Between August 2004 and November 2005 alone, the report said, a joint multinational-Iraqi board reviewed the files of some 22,000 detainees, recommending 12,000 for release and 10,000 for further detention.
However, by the end of November 2005, the Central Criminal Court of Iraq - the body in charge of trying those accused of security-related crimes - had tried only 1,301 alleged insurgents. Nearly 4,000 detainees had been held for more than a year without charge or trial, and more than 200 for more than two years, Amnesty said.
The report also cited cases of alleged torture and ill-treatment at the hands of the Iraqi security forces.
It called on countries contributing to the US- and UK-led multinational forces to end indefinite internment, to ensure detainees knew the reasons for their detention and to be sure they were promptly released or charged with a criminal offence.
Comment