Iraqi Premier Decries Torture of Detainees

Jafari Reacts to Discovery of Abuses

By Ellen Knickmeyer
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, December 13, 2005; Page A18

BAGHDAD, Dec. 12 -- Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari on Monday said he would not tolerate torture by the Shiite-dominated government police forces, renewing his condemnation of the practice after U.S. and Iraqi forces found abused, starved detainees at a Interior Ministry detention center.

U.S. and Iraqi officials on Sunday said they had discovered at least 12 cases of what an Iraq official called "severe torture" at a prison run by the Interior Ministry's special police commandos.


Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari talks during a press conference in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday, Dec. 12, 2005.
Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari talks during a press conference in Baghdad, Iraq, Monday Dec. 12, 2005. In a development that could impact the elections, 13 prisoners who were apparent victims of abuse were discovered at an overcrowded detention center run by the Interior Ministry, Iraqi and U.S. military officials said. Al-Jaafari said "There is a committee following the case. My military adviser is touring all of Iraq's jails to know if there are such cases". (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban) (Hadi Mizban - AP)

Prisoners had their bones broken and their fingernails pulled out, were subjected to electric shocks and had burning cigarettes crushed into their necks and backs, said the Iraqi official, who U.S. officials said had first-hand knowledge of the torture. The Iraqi official spoke on condition he not be named, fearing retribution.

The cases appeared more severe than those of beaten, emaciated prisoners found in the basement of another Baghdad Interior Ministry facility last month.

At a news conference on Monday, Jafari called the evidence of torture an "unhealthy phenomenon."

"There is a committee following the case. My military adviser is touring all of Iraq's jails to know if there are such cases," Jafari said. "I will not allow such dealing with any prisoner."

Interior Minister Bayan Jabr made similar pledges when the first cases were discovered in mid-November, although Jabr said then that the torture allegations were exaggerated and that the victims were implicated in bombing attacks.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have declined to say whether the tortured inmates at the second prison, like those at the first, were Sunni Arabs, saying they feared political fallout in Thursday's national elections.

In Philadelphia on Monday, President Bush spoke forcefully against cases of "prisons in Iraq where mostly Sunni men were held, some of whom have appeared to have been beaten and tortured."

"This conduct is unacceptable," Bush said. "The prime minister and other Iraqi officials have condemned these abuses, an investigation has been launched, and we support these efforts. Those who committed these crimes must be held to account."

The prison inspected on Thursday was the first of what U.S. and Iraqi officials had promised would be a national investigation of Iraq's 1,000-plus detention centers. The inspections were announced after the first case was uncovered last month. U.S. military spokesman Lt. Col. Barry Johnson said the unannounced inspections would continue.

The prison-torture cases have drawn unusual public rebukes by U.S. officials against the U.S.-supported interim Iraqi government.


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