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War on Iraq

Brits Launch Inquiry Into Torture, Executions of 20 Iraqis

Middle East Online. Posted February 25, 2008.


The UK's Ministry of Defence denies the charges.

LONDON - British troops may have killed up to 20 Iraqis in their custody in 2004, lawyers acting for the victims' families and others who are bringing a damages claim against the government said Friday.

The claims, strongly denied by the Ministry of Defence, are based on witness statements from five men who described what they heard happening to other people captured after a gun battle near the southern Iraqi town of Majar al-Kabir.

The witnesses had been forced to wear blacked-out goggles at the time but their statements describe how they heard other men screaming, moaning and choking as well as the sound of gunfire.

"I believed people were being killed. I have never heard anything like that sound ever before in my life," said one of those detained, Atiyah Sayid Abdelreza.

Speaking at a press conference, lawyer Phil Shiner, who is leading the damages lawsuit, said: "We would be very surprised if it (the claims) did not shock the nation."

He added: "It may be that none of this happened ... we need a public inquiry to establish the facts."

No post-mortem examinations took place on the 20 bodies, but Shiner's colleague Martyn Day said that the nature of their injuries seemed "highly unusual in a battlefield".

He questioned "how so many of the Iraqis sustained single gunshots to the head and from seemingly at close quarter, how did two of them end with their eyes gouged out, how did one have his penis cut off, some have torture wounds?"

The lawyers are seeking damages for five Iraqis -- Hussein Jabbari Ali, Hussain Fadhil Abass, Abdelreza, Madhi Jassim Abdullah and Ahmad Jabber Ahmood -- and the families of the dead.

The Ministry of Defence said that a 10 month investigation by the Royal Military Police into the incident, known as the Battle of Danny Boy, had found "no evidence" to support allegations of unlawful killing or mistreatment.

The BBC has made a television program examining the claims which is due to be broadcast Monday.

A spokesman said it had found "no proof" that prisoners died at the hands of their captors but added "the evidence is strongest that prisoners were mistreated."

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PROJECT FOR A NEW CORPRATE CENTURY(PNCC)
Posted by: srob on Feb 27, 2008 3:48 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
one party + two names= fascism

go back to sleep america, its to late to do anything. while you listen to the pundits yammer on, the plan has already been implemented. the corporations are running the show. americans are more worried about the three "G's" (guns,god and gays) than they are about the constitution. go back to sleep and when you wake up, go shopping at walmart

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Whitewash
Posted by: Ipsi Dixit on Mar 1, 2008 2:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And of course, absolutely nothing will come of it; it will be a whitewash.

Even the BBC reporter used the word 'mistreatment' - note: not torture, or even abuse, just mistreatment. Totrure and extra-judicial killings are what others do not us is the basic premise here.

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