Lissynote~ I remember Charles Graner being quoted as saying "the Christtian in me knows it's wrong, but the corrections officer in me just loves to make a grown man piss himself"
Torture
accusations against UK troops in Iraq echo the scandal of Abu
Ghraib
Ed
Vulliamy
|
A naked, hooded Iraqi detainee handcuffed to cell doors by
US troops at Abu Ghraib prison in 2003. Photograph: EPA
Pictures
of American troops mistreating detainees in prison shocked the
world
January 20, 2013
Allegations of a policy of
systemic torture by the British in Iraq uncomfortably echo the infamous scandal
at Abu Ghraib, the American facility at a prison in Baghdad, from which
appalling pictures emerged in 2004.
US soldiers at Abu Ghraib were shown
to have part in acts of sexual depravity, other deliberate humiliations and
illegal interrogations. In all, 17 soldiers and officers were suspended from
duty in the wake of the scandal, and 11 were charged with maltreatment and other
offences, court-martialled, sentenced to military prison, and dishonourably
discharged. Two soldiers who appeared in the photos, Lynndie England and Charles
Graner, were sentenced to three and 10 years respectively.
In the main,
senior ranks were untouched: the highest-ranking soldier to be charged, Lt Col
Steven Jordan, was acquitted on all charges, while full colonel Thomas Pappas
received a "non-judicial" fine of $8,000 (£5,000).
Brigadier-General
Janis Karpinski, who was in command of detention facilities, was reprimanded for
dereliction of duty and demoted to the rank of colonel. In 2006, she told a
Spanish newspaper she had seen a letter from then secretary of defence Donald
Rumsfeld authorising the use of sensory deprivation and other illegal methods,
but there were no ramifications.
The US supreme court declined to hear
claims of abuse by 250 Iraqis at various facilities. The following year,
insistence by the US government that the abuses were isolated instances was
tested by similar pictures from Afghanistan.
For her part, England became
something of a heroine on American patriotic websites; she emerged from prison
and proceeded to give an interview to the New York Daily News last year saying
of the prisoners: "Their lives are better. They got the better end of the deal.
They weren't innocent. They're trying to kill us, and you want me to apologise
to them? It's like saying sorry to the enemy."
|
original article here
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