Iraq jails ‘rape and torture thousands of women’

Iraq authorities are illegally detaining thousands of women, many of whom are subjected to torture and ill-treatment including the threat of sexual abuse, Human Rights Watch has reported.

The 105-page report contained the testimony of dozens of women. They included one who said officers obtained a confession from her by threatening to rape her teenage daughter. Seven months after speaking to HRW, the woman was executed.

Allegations of abuse are not new, but the findings by the New York-based rights group – which come despite government pledges of reform – raise concerns about Iraq’s ability to handle those detained in massive security sweeps targeting militants.

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International rights groups are worried about the weakness of the Iraqi judicial system, accusing it of being plagued with corruption and falling short of international standards.

Human Rights Watch said that women have been held for months or even years without charge before seeing a judge. Many were rounded up for alleged terrorist activities by male family members. Interviewed detainees described being kicked, slapped, raped or threatened with sexual assault by security forces.

“Iraqi security forces and officials act as if brutally abusing women will make the country safer,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch.

“In fact, these women and their relatives have told us that as long as security forces abuse people with impunity, we can only expect security conditions to worsen,” Mr Stork said.

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Militants have frequently cited the mistreatment of women as a justification for their attacks.

The group also called on the Iraqis to acknowledge the prevalence of abuse, promptly investigate allegations of torture and ill-treatment and to urgently make judicial and security sector reforms.

One detainee entered her interview with the group in Iraq’s death row facility at Baghdad’s Kazmiyah prison on crutches. She said nine days of beatings, shocks, and being hung upside down had left her permanently disabled.

Israa Salah, not her real name, said she had been arrested by US and Iraqi forces in January 2010 when she was in a cousin’s home. She was taken to the Interior Ministry’s Criminal Investigations Department where she tortured until she confessed to terrorism charges against her will.

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She said Iraqi security forces repeatedly called her bitch, slut, and daughter of a dog. She described how they handcuffed her, forced her to kneel and beat her on her face, breaking her jaw. When she refused to sign confessions, they attached wires to her handcuffs and fingers.

“When they first put the electricity on me, I gasped; my body went rigid and the bag came off my head,” she was quoted by the report as saying. “I saw a green machine, the size of a car battery, with wires attached to it,” she added.

She then signed and fingerprinted a blank piece of paper after officers told her that they had detained her teenage daughter and would rape her. She says her lawyer later told her she was accused of blowing up a house and other attacks.

Salah was executed in September 2013 despite a lower court ruling that dismissed some of the charges because a medical report showed she was tortured into confessing to a crime.

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Iraqi officials dismiss reports of abuse of women in detention as exceptional cases.

The report entitled No One Is Safe: Abuses Of Women In Iraq’s Criminal Justice System, was based on interviews with 27 women and seven girls in custody.

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