Human rights watchdog predicts more torture in Iraq’s prisons

Torture and grim conditions will continue in Iraqi prisons despite the election of a new government, says human rights watchdog Amnesty International.

Its report described state-run detention cells as breeding grounds for systematic torture and sickness.

Torture and abuse has long been a part of Iraq’s prisons system, going back to Saddam Hussein’s regime before he was overthrown in 2003 by the invasion.

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It continued, even in American-run prisons, most notably at the Abu Ghraib detention centre outside Baghdad, but United States forces turned over full control of prisoners to Iraq’s government last year, “without any guarantees that they will be protected,” the Amnesty report states.

“There is every likelihood that torture and ill-treatment will remain widespread,” it concluded.

An estimated 30,000 men and women are currently in Iraqi custody, including about 1,300 on death row.

In 2008 Iraq’s parliament voted to join most of the rest of the world in banning cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of prisoners by signing onto the United Nations Convention Against Torture. But Iraq has still not filed its paperwork with the UN, and “there is no indication that the government intends to,” the report said.

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Kurdish MP Mahmoud Othman said parliament intended to ratify the UN treaty, but had been too busy trying to stabilise Iraq to address it yet.

“The convention enjoys the support of all political blocks and nobody rejected it in the previous parliament,” he said.

The report follows a similar charge last week by Human Rights Watch that accused elite Iraqi troops controlled by the office of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s of holding prisoners at a secret jail and torturing inmates elsewhere.

Mr Al-Maliki denied the allegations but they raised fresh concern about the government’s treatment of detainees.

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