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Human rights in Ba'athist Iraq

Iraq under the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party saw severe violations of human rights. Secret police, state terrorism, torture, mass murder, genocide, ethnic cleansing, rape, deportations, extrajudicial killings, forced disappearances, assassinations, chemical warfare, and the destruction of the Mesopotamian marshes were some of the methods Saddam Hussein and the country's Ba'athist government used to maintain control. Saddam committed crimes of aggression during the Iran–Iraq War and the Gulf War, which violated the Charter of the United Nations. The total number of deaths and disappearances related to repression during this period is unknown, but is estimated to be at least 250,000 to 290,000 according to Human Rights Watch,[1] with the great majority of those occurring as a result of the Anfal genocide in 1988 and the suppression of the uprisings in Iraq in 1991. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International issued regular reports of widespread imprisonment and torture.

Hangings in Saddam-era Iraq

Documented human rights violations 1979–2003 edit

Human rights organizations have documented government-approved executions, acts of torture and rape for decades since Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979 until his fall in 2003.

 
Mass grave.
  • In 2002, a resolution sponsored by the European Union was adopted by the Commission for Human Rights, which stated that there had been no improvement in the human rights crisis in Iraq. The statement condemned President Saddam Hussein's government for its "systematic, widespread and extremely grave violations of human rights and international humanitarian law" and called on Iraq to cease "summary and arbitrary executions ... the use of rape as a political tool and all enforced and involuntary disappearances".[2]
  • Full political participation at the national level was restricted only to members of the Ba'ath Party, which constituted only 8% of the population.
  • Iraqi citizens were not legally allowed to assemble unless it was in express support of the Ba'athist government. The Iraqi government controlled the establishment of political parties, regulated their internal affairs and monitored their activities.
  • Police checkpoints on Iraq's roads and highways prevented ordinary citizens from traveling across country without government permission and expensive exit visas prevented Iraqi citizens from traveling abroad. Before traveling, an Iraqi citizen had to post collateral. Iraqi females could not travel outside of the country without the escort of a male relative.[3]
  • The Persecution of Feyli Kurds under Saddam Hussein,[4] also known as the Feyli Kurdish genocide, was a systematic persecution of Feylis by Saddam Hussein between 1970 and 2003. The persecution campaigns led to the expulsion, flight and effective exile of the Feyli Kurds from their ancestral lands in Iraq. The persecution began when a large number of Feyli Kurds were exposed to a big campaign by the regime that began by the dissolved RCCR issuance for 666 decision, which deprived Feyli Kurds of Iraqi nationality and considered them as Iranians. The systematic executions started in Baghdad and Khanaqin in 1979 and later spread to other Iraqi and Kurdish areas.[5][6] It is estimated that around 25,000 Feyli Kurds died due to captivity and torture.[7][8][clarification needed]
  • Halabja poison gas attack: The Halabja poison gas attack occurred in the period 15–19 March 1988 during the Iran–Iraq War when chemical weapons were used by the Iraqi government forces and thousands of civilians in the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja were killed.[9]
 
Mass grave of Anfal victims
  • Anfal campaign: In 1988, the Hussein regime began a campaign of extermination against the Kurdish people living in Northern Iraq. This is known as the Anfal campaign. A team of Human Rights Watch investigators determined, after analyzing eighteen tons of captured Iraqi documents, testing soil samples and carrying out interviews with more than 350 witnesses, that the attacks on the Kurdish people were characterized by gross violations of human rights. These included the mass execution and forced disappearance of many tens of thousands of noncombatants, widespread use of chemical weapons including Sarin, mustard gas and nerve agents, arbitrary imprisonment - including of women, children and the elderly - in conditions of extreme deprivation, the forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of villagers after the demolition of their homes, and the wholesale destruction of nearly two thousand villages along with their schools, mosques, farms and power stations.[9][10]
  • 50,000 to 70,000 Shia were arrested in the 1980s and never heard from again.[1]
  • 8,000 Kurds from the Barzani clan were disappeared and likely killed.[1]
  • 50,000 dissidents, party members, Kurds, and other minorities were disappeared and presumably killed in the 1980s through 1990s[1]
  • In April 1991, after Saddam lost control of Kuwait in the Persian Gulf War, he cracked down ruthlessly against several uprisings in the Kurdish north and the Shia south. His forces committed full-scale massacres and other gross human rights violations against both groups similar to the violations mentioned before.[11]
  • In June 1994, the Hussein regime in Iraq established severe penalties, including amputation, branding and the death penalty for criminal offenses such as theft, corruption, currency speculation and military desertion, some of which are part of Islamic Sharia law, while government members and members of Saddam's family were immune from punishments for these crimes.[12]
  • In 2001, the Iraqi government amended the Constitution to make sodomy a capital offense.
  • In 1996 more than 40 Iraqi Turkmen were massacred in Erbil.[13]
  • On March 23, 2003, during the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Iraqi television presented and interviewed prisoners of war on TV, violating the Geneva Convention.
  • Also in April 2003, CNN revealed that it had withheld information about Iraq torturing journalists and Iraqi citizens in the 1990s. According to CNN's chief news executive, the channel had been concerned for the safety not only of its own staff, but also of Iraqi sources and informants, who could expect punishment for speaking freely to reporters. Also according to the executive, "other news organizations were in the same bind."[14]
  • After the 2003 invasion of Iraq, several mass graves were found in Iraq containing several thousand bodies total and more are being uncovered to this day.[15] While most of the dead in the graves were believed to have died in the 1991 uprising against Saddam Hussein, some of them appeared to have died due to executions or died at times other than the 1991 rebellion.
  • Also after the invasion, numerous torture centers were found in security offices and police stations throughout Iraq.[16] The equipment found at these centers typically included hooks for hanging people by the hands for beatings, devices for electric shock and other equipment often found in nations with harsh security services and other authoritarian nations.

"Saddam's Dirty Dozen" edit

 
Depiction of torture (falanga) at the Amna Suraka museum in Sulaimaniyya

According to officials of the United States State Department, many human rights abuses in Saddam Hussein's Iraq were largely carried out in person or by the orders of Saddam Hussein and eleven other people. The term "Saddam's Dirty Dozen" was coined in October 2002[17] (from a novel by E.M. Nathanson, later adapted as a film directed by Robert Aldrich) and used by US officials to describe this group.[18] Most members of the group held high positions in the Iraqi government and membership went all the way from Saddam's personal guard to Saddam's sons. The list was used by the Bush Administration to help argue that the 2003 Iraq war was against Saddam Hussein and the Baath Party leadership, rather than against the Iraqi people. The members are:[17]

  • Saddam Hussein (1937–2006), Iraqi President, responsible for many torturings, killings and of ordering the 1988 cleansing of Kurds in Northern Iraq.
  • Qusay Hussein (1966–2003), son of the president, head of the elite Republican Guard, believed to have been chosen by Saddam as his successor.
  • Uday Hussein (1964–2003), son of the president, had a private torture chamber, and was responsible for the rapes and killings of many women. He was partially paralyzed after a 1996 attempt on his life, and was leader of the paramilitary group Fedayeen Saddam and of the Iraqi media.
  • Taha Yassin Ramadan (1938–2007), Vice-President, born in Iraqi Kurdistan. He oversaw the mass killings of a Shi'a revolt in 1991.
  • Tariq Aziz (1936–2015), Foreign Minister of Iraq, backed up the executions by hanging of political opponents after the revolution of 1968.
  • Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti (1951–2007), Hussein's brother, leader of the Iraqi secret service, Mukhabarat. He was Iraq's representative to the United Nations in Geneva.
  • Sabawi Ibrahim al-Tikriti (1947–2013), Saddam's half brother, he was the leader of the Mukhabarat during the 1991 Gulf War. Director of Iraq's general security from 1991 to 1996. He was involved in the 1991 suppression of Kurds.
  • Watban Ibrahim al-Tikriti (1952–2015), Saddam's half brother, former senior Interior Minister who was also Saddam's presidential adviser. Shot in the leg by Uday Hussein in 1995. He has ordered tortures, rapes, murders and deportations.
  • Ali Hassan al-Majid (1941–2010), Chemical Ali, mastermind behind Saddam's lethal gassing of rebel Kurds in 1988; a first cousin of Saddam Hussein.
  • Izzat Ibrahim ad-Douri (1942–2020), military commander, vice-president of the Revolutionary Command Council and deputy commander in chief of the armed forces during various military campaigns.
  • Aziz Saleh Nuhmah (b. ?), appointed governor of Kuwait from November 1990 to February 1991, ordered looting of stores and rapes of Kuwaiti women during his tenure. Also ordered the destruction of Shi'a holy sites during the 1970s and 1980s as governor of two Iraqi provinces.
  • Mohammed Hamza Zubeidi (1938–2005), alias Saddam's thug, Prime Minister of Iraq from 1991 to 1993 – to have ordered many executions.[17]

Other atrocities edit

Fifty-seven boxes were recently returned to the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniya in Zeit trucks—large Russian military vehicles—by the Iraqi government authorities. Each box contained a dead child, eyes gouged out and ashen white, apparently drained of blood. The families were not given their children, were forced to accept a communal grave, and then had to pay 150 dinars for the burial.[19]

The destruction of Shi'ite religious shrines by the former government has been compared "to the leveling of cities in the Second World War, and the damage to the shrines [of Hussein and Abbas] was more serious than that which had been done to many European cathedrals."[20] After the 1983–88 genocide, some 1 million Kurds were allowed to resettle in "model villages". According to a U.S. Senate staff report, these villages "were poorly constructed, had minimal sanitation and water, and provided few employment opportunities for the residents. Some, if not most, were surrounded by barbed wire, and Kurds could enter or leave only with difficulty."[21] After the establishment of republican rule in Iraq, enormous numbers of Iraqis fled the country to escape political repression by Abd al-Karim Qasim and his successors, including Saddam Hussein; by 2001, it was estimated that "Iraqi emigrants number more than 3 million (leaving a population of 23 million inside the country)."[22] Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times commented: "Police in other countries use torture, after all, but there are credible reports that Saddam's police cut out tongues and use electric drills. Other countries gouge out the eyes of dissidents; Saddam's interrogators gouged out the eyes of hundreds of children to get their parents to talk."[23]

Number of victims edit

In November 2004, Human Rights Watch estimated 250,000 to 290,000 Iraqis were killed or disappeared by the regime of Saddam Hussein including:[1]

The estimate of 290,000 "disappeared" and presumed killed includes the following: more than 100,000 Kurds killed during the 1987-88 Anfal campaign and lead-up to it; between 50,000 and 70,000 Shia arrested in the 1980s and held indefinitely without charge, who remain unaccounted for today; an estimated 8,000 males of the Barzani clan removed from resettlement camps in Iraqi Kurdistan in 1983; 10,000 or more males separated from Feyli Kurdish families deported to Iran in the 1980s; an estimated 50,000 opposition activists, including Communists and other leftists, Kurds and other minorities, and out-of-favor Ba'athists, arrested and "disappeared" in the 1980s and 1990s; some 30,000 Iraqi Shia men rounded up after the abortive March 1991 uprising and not heard from since; hundreds of Shia clerics and their students arrested and "disappeared" after 1991; several thousand Marsh Arabs who disappeared after being taken into custody during military operations in the southern marshlands; and those executed in detention-in some years several thousand-in so-called "prison cleansing" campaigns.

There is a feeling that at least three million Iraqis are watching the eleven million others.

— "A European diplomat," quoted in The New York Times, April 3, 1984.[24]

A January 2003 The New York Times article by John Fisher Burns similarly states that "the number of those 'disappeared' into the hands of the secret police, never to be heard from again, could be 200,000" and compared Saddam to Joseph Stalin, while acknowledging that "Even on a proportional basis, [Stalin's] crimes far surpass Mr. Hussein's."[25] The 1988 Al-Anfal campaign resulted in the death of 50,000-100,000 Kurds (although Kurdish sources have cited a higher figure of 182,000), while 25,000-100,000 civilians and rebels were killed during the suppression of the 1991 uprisings.[11][26] In addition, 4,000 prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison were reportedly executed in a particularly large 1984 purge.[27] Far fewer Iraqis are known to have been executed during other years of Saddam's rule. For example, "Amnesty International reported that in 1981 over 350 people were officially executed in Iraq ... the Committee Against Repression in Iraq gives biographic particulars on 798 executions (along with 264 killings of unknown persons, and 428 biographies of unsentenced detainees and disappeared persons)." Kanan Makiya cautions that a focus on the death toll obscures the full extent of "the terror inside Iraq," which was largely the product of the pervasive secret police and systematic use of torture.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e . Human Rights Watch. 3 November 2004. Archived from the original on 2021-05-20.
  2. ^ "UN condemns Iraq on human rights". BBC News. 2002-04-19. Retrieved 2016-12-11.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 June 2010. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  4. ^ (PDF): 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 August 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2017. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ "Iraqi Kurds Seek Recognition of Genocide by Saddam". Al-Monitor (in Hebrew). 8 March 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  6. ^ "جريمة إبادة الكرد الفيليين … والصمت الحكومي والتجاهل الرسمي عن إستذكار هذه الفاجعة الآليمة ! !". Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  7. ^ Jaffar Al-Faylee, Zaki (2010). Tareekh Al-Kurd Al-Faylyoon. Beirut. pp. 485, 499–501.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Al-Hakeem, Dr. Sahib (2003). Untold stories of more than 4000 women raped killed and tortured in Iraq, the country of mass graves. pp. 489–492.
  9. ^ a b "Whatever Happened To The Iraqi Kurds?". Hrw.org. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
  10. ^ . Web.amnesty.org. 2005-07-30. Archived from the original on 2007-10-27. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
  11. ^ a b "ENDLESS TORMENT, The 1991 Uprising in Iraq And Its Aftermath". Hrw.org. Retrieved 2016-08-21. An independent French organization called The Truth About the Gulf War reported in June 1991 after a trip to Iraq that authorities were vague about the toll of the uprising, but 'the figures given for those killed, most of them in southern Iraq and the overwhelming majority of them civilians, ranged from 25,000 to 100,000 dead.' ... The environmental organization Greenpeace estimates that 30,000 Iraqi civilians, including rebels, and 5,000 Iraqi soldiers died during the uprisings as a result of the clashes and killings, while acknowledging that 'little authoritative information is available.' ... A demographer at the U.S. Census Bureau, Beth Osborne Daponte, also arrived at the figure of 30,000 civilian deaths during the uprising.
  12. ^ "Human Rights Watch, Iraq archive". Hrw.org. Retrieved 2009-09-25.
  13. ^ www.qha.com.tr https://www.qha.com.tr/amp/turk-dunyasi/31-agustos-1996-saddam-rejimi-erbil-de-turkmenleri-katletti-477680. Retrieved 2024-03-21. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  14. ^ Jordan, Eason (April 11, 2003). "The News We (CNN) Kept To Ourselves". The New York Times. (requires login)
  15. ^ "Mass Grave Discovery In Iraq Could Fuel Divisions". NPR. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  16. ^ Einolf, Christopher J. (2021). "How torturers are made: Evidence from Saddam Hussein's Iraq". Journal of Human Rights. 20 (4): 381–395. doi:10.1080/14754835.2021.1932442. ISSN 1475-4835. S2CID 237538201.
  17. ^ a b c Harris, Paul; Heslop, Katy (16 March 2003). "Iraq's dirty dozen". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  18. ^ Weber, Bruce (7 April 2016). "E.M. Nathanson, Author of 'The Dirty Dozen,' Dies at 88". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  19. ^ Pryce-Jones, David (1989-01-01). . Commentary. Archived from the original on 2016-09-27. Retrieved 2016-09-27.
  20. ^ Milton Viorst, "Report from Baghdad," The New Yorker, June 24, 1991, p. 72.
  21. ^ "Kurdistan in the Time of Saddam Hussein," p. 15. See also "Civil War in Iraq," Staff Report to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the U.S. Senate, May 1991, pp. 8-9.
  22. ^ Ghabra, Shafeeq N. (Summer 2001). "Iraq's Culture of Violence". Middle East Quarterly. 8 (3): 39–49.
  23. ^ Kristof, Nicholas (2002-03-26). "Try Suing Saddam". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
  24. ^ a b Makiya, Kanan (1998). Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, Updated Edition. University of California Press. pp. 62–65. ISBN 9780520921245.
  25. ^ Noting that the Iran–Iraq War cost approximately 800,000 lives on both sides and that—while "surely a gross exaggeration"—Iraq estimated there were 100,000 deaths resulting from U.S. bombing in the Gulf War, Burns concludes: "A million dead Iraqis, in war and through terror, may not be far from the mark." See Burns, John F. (2003-01-26). "How Many People Has Hussein Killed?". The New York Times. Retrieved 2020-10-05. Also writing in The New York Times, Dexter Filkins appeared to echo but misrepresent Burns's remark in October 2007: "[Saddam] murdered as many as a million of his people, many with poison gas. ... His unprovoked invasion of Iran is estimated to have left another million people dead." See Filkins, Dexter (2007-10-07). "Regrets Only?". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-12-04. In turn, Commentary writer Arthur L. Herman accused Saddam of "kill[ing] as many as two million of his own people" in July 2008. See Herman, Arthur L. (2008-07-01). . Commentary. Archived from the original on 2016-12-20. Retrieved 2016-12-04.
  26. ^ Johns, Dave (2006-01-24). "The Crimes of Saddam Hussein: The Anfal Campaign". PBS. Retrieved 2016-08-21.
  27. ^ Chauhan, Sharad S. (2003). War on Iraq. APH Publishing. p. 65. ISBN 9788176484787.

Further reading edit

  • Kadhim, Abbas. "." () Boston University Institute for Iraqi Studies (IISBU) Occasional Paper. No. 1. June 2013.

External links edit

  • INDICT – campaign to prosecute human rights abusers from the Hussein regime
  • Iraq's dirty dozen
  • The Iraq Foundation
  • UN condemns Iraq on human rights, BBC April 2002
  • Iraq 1984–1992, Human Rights Watch
  • Reports on Human Rights Practices, U.S. Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
  • Human Rights Watch: Background on the Crisis in Iraq (a contents page for the organization's various reports on Iraq, mostly after Saddam's regime fell)
  • Einolf, Christopher J (2022). "How Torture Fails: Evidence of Misinformation from Torture-Induced Confessions in Iraq". Journal of Global Security Studies. 7 (1). doi:10.1093/jogss/ogab019.
  • Einolf, Christopher J. (2021). "How torturers are made: Evidence from Saddam Hussein's Iraq". Journal of Human Rights. 20 (4): 381–395. doi:10.1080/14754835.2021.1932442. S2CID 237538201.

human, rights, athist, iraq, iraq, under, arab, socialist, party, severe, violations, human, rights, secret, police, state, terrorism, torture, mass, murder, genocide, ethnic, cleansing, rape, deportations, extrajudicial, killings, forced, disappearances, assa. Iraq under the Arab Socialist Ba ath Party saw severe violations of human rights Secret police state terrorism torture mass murder genocide ethnic cleansing rape deportations extrajudicial killings forced disappearances assassinations chemical warfare and the destruction of the Mesopotamian marshes were some of the methods Saddam Hussein and the country s Ba athist government used to maintain control Saddam committed crimes of aggression during the Iran Iraq War and the Gulf War which violated the Charter of the United Nations The total number of deaths and disappearances related to repression during this period is unknown but is estimated to be at least 250 000 to 290 000 according to Human Rights Watch 1 with the great majority of those occurring as a result of the Anfal genocide in 1988 and the suppression of the uprisings in Iraq in 1991 Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International issued regular reports of widespread imprisonment and torture Hangings in Saddam era Iraq Contents 1 Documented human rights violations 1979 2003 2 Saddam s Dirty Dozen 3 Other atrocities 3 1 Number of victims 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksDocumented human rights violations 1979 2003 editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message Human rights organizations have documented government approved executions acts of torture and rape for decades since Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979 until his fall in 2003 nbsp Mass grave In 2002 a resolution sponsored by the European Union was adopted by the Commission for Human Rights which stated that there had been no improvement in the human rights crisis in Iraq The statement condemned President Saddam Hussein s government for its systematic widespread and extremely grave violations of human rights and international humanitarian law and called on Iraq to cease summary and arbitrary executions the use of rape as a political tool and all enforced and involuntary disappearances 2 Full political participation at the national level was restricted only to members of the Ba ath Party which constituted only 8 of the population Iraqi citizens were not legally allowed to assemble unless it was in express support of the Ba athist government The Iraqi government controlled the establishment of political parties regulated their internal affairs and monitored their activities Police checkpoints on Iraq s roads and highways prevented ordinary citizens from traveling across country without government permission and expensive exit visas prevented Iraqi citizens from traveling abroad Before traveling an Iraqi citizen had to post collateral Iraqi females could not travel outside of the country without the escort of a male relative 3 The Persecution of Feyli Kurds under Saddam Hussein 4 also known as the Feyli Kurdish genocide was a systematic persecution of Feylis by Saddam Hussein between 1970 and 2003 The persecution campaigns led to the expulsion flight and effective exile of the Feyli Kurds from their ancestral lands in Iraq The persecution began when a large number of Feyli Kurds were exposed to a big campaign by the regime that began by the dissolved RCCR issuance for 666 decision which deprived Feyli Kurds of Iraqi nationality and considered them as Iranians The systematic executions started in Baghdad and Khanaqin in 1979 and later spread to other Iraqi and Kurdish areas 5 6 It is estimated that around 25 000 Feyli Kurds died due to captivity and torture 7 8 clarification needed Halabja poison gas attack The Halabja poison gas attack occurred in the period 15 19 March 1988 during the Iran Iraq War when chemical weapons were used by the Iraqi government forces and thousands of civilians in the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja were killed 9 nbsp Mass grave of Anfal victims Anfal campaign In 1988 the Hussein regime began a campaign of extermination against the Kurdish people living in Northern Iraq This is known as the Anfal campaign A team of Human Rights Watch investigators determined after analyzing eighteen tons of captured Iraqi documents testing soil samples and carrying out interviews with more than 350 witnesses that the attacks on the Kurdish people were characterized by gross violations of human rights These included the mass execution and forced disappearance of many tens of thousands of noncombatants widespread use of chemical weapons including Sarin mustard gas and nerve agents arbitrary imprisonment including of women children and the elderly in conditions of extreme deprivation the forced displacement of hundreds of thousands of villagers after the demolition of their homes and the wholesale destruction of nearly two thousand villages along with their schools mosques farms and power stations 9 10 50 000 to 70 000 Shia were arrested in the 1980s and never heard from again 1 8 000 Kurds from the Barzani clan were disappeared and likely killed 1 50 000 dissidents party members Kurds and other minorities were disappeared and presumably killed in the 1980s through 1990s 1 In April 1991 after Saddam lost control of Kuwait in the Persian Gulf War he cracked down ruthlessly against several uprisings in the Kurdish north and the Shia south His forces committed full scale massacres and other gross human rights violations against both groups similar to the violations mentioned before 11 In June 1994 the Hussein regime in Iraq established severe penalties including amputation branding and the death penalty for criminal offenses such as theft corruption currency speculation and military desertion some of which are part of Islamic Sharia law while government members and members of Saddam s family were immune from punishments for these crimes 12 In 2001 the Iraqi government amended the Constitution to make sodomy a capital offense In 1996 more than 40 Iraqi Turkmen were massacred in Erbil 13 On March 23 2003 during the 2003 invasion of Iraq Iraqi television presented and interviewed prisoners of war on TV violating the Geneva Convention Also in April 2003 CNN revealed that it had withheld information about Iraq torturing journalists and Iraqi citizens in the 1990s According to CNN s chief news executive the channel had been concerned for the safety not only of its own staff but also of Iraqi sources and informants who could expect punishment for speaking freely to reporters Also according to the executive other news organizations were in the same bind 14 After the 2003 invasion of Iraq several mass graves were found in Iraq containing several thousand bodies total and more are being uncovered to this day 15 While most of the dead in the graves were believed to have died in the 1991 uprising against Saddam Hussein some of them appeared to have died due to executions or died at times other than the 1991 rebellion Also after the invasion numerous torture centers were found in security offices and police stations throughout Iraq 16 The equipment found at these centers typically included hooks for hanging people by the hands for beatings devices for electric shock and other equipment often found in nations with harsh security services and other authoritarian nations Saddam s Dirty Dozen edit nbsp Depiction of torture falanga at the Amna Suraka museum in Sulaimaniyya According to officials of the United States State Department many human rights abuses in Saddam Hussein s Iraq were largely carried out in person or by the orders of Saddam Hussein and eleven other people The term Saddam s Dirty Dozen was coined in October 2002 17 from a novel by E M Nathanson later adapted as a film directed by Robert Aldrich and used by US officials to describe this group 18 Most members of the group held high positions in the Iraqi government and membership went all the way from Saddam s personal guard to Saddam s sons The list was used by the Bush Administration to help argue that the 2003 Iraq war was against Saddam Hussein and the Baath Party leadership rather than against the Iraqi people The members are 17 Saddam Hussein 1937 2006 Iraqi President responsible for many torturings killings and of ordering the 1988 cleansing of Kurds in Northern Iraq Qusay Hussein 1966 2003 son of the president head of the elite Republican Guard believed to have been chosen by Saddam as his successor Uday Hussein 1964 2003 son of the president had a private torture chamber and was responsible for the rapes and killings of many women He was partially paralyzed after a 1996 attempt on his life and was leader of the paramilitary group Fedayeen Saddam and of the Iraqi media Taha Yassin Ramadan 1938 2007 Vice President born in Iraqi Kurdistan He oversaw the mass killings of a Shi a revolt in 1991 Tariq Aziz 1936 2015 Foreign Minister of Iraq backed up the executions by hanging of political opponents after the revolution of 1968 Barzan Ibrahim al Tikriti 1951 2007 Hussein s brother leader of the Iraqi secret service Mukhabarat He was Iraq s representative to the United Nations in Geneva Sabawi Ibrahim al Tikriti 1947 2013 Saddam s half brother he was the leader of the Mukhabarat during the 1991 Gulf War Director of Iraq s general security from 1991 to 1996 He was involved in the 1991 suppression of Kurds Watban Ibrahim al Tikriti 1952 2015 Saddam s half brother former senior Interior Minister who was also Saddam s presidential adviser Shot in the leg by Uday Hussein in 1995 He has ordered tortures rapes murders and deportations Ali Hassan al Majid 1941 2010 Chemical Ali mastermind behind Saddam s lethal gassing of rebel Kurds in 1988 a first cousin of Saddam Hussein Izzat Ibrahim ad Douri 1942 2020 military commander vice president of the Revolutionary Command Council and deputy commander in chief of the armed forces during various military campaigns Aziz Saleh Nuhmah b appointed governor of Kuwait from November 1990 to February 1991 ordered looting of stores and rapes of Kuwaiti women during his tenure Also ordered the destruction of Shi a holy sites during the 1970s and 1980s as governor of two Iraqi provinces Mohammed Hamza Zubeidi 1938 2005 alias Saddam s thug Prime Minister of Iraq from 1991 to 1993 to have ordered many executions 17 Other atrocities editFifty seven boxes were recently returned to the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniya in Zeit trucks large Russian military vehicles by the Iraqi government authorities Each box contained a dead child eyes gouged out and ashen white apparently drained of blood The families were not given their children were forced to accept a communal grave and then had to pay 150 dinars for the burial 19 The destruction of Shi ite religious shrines by the former government has been compared to the leveling of cities in the Second World War and the damage to the shrines of Hussein and Abbas was more serious than that which had been done to many European cathedrals 20 After the 1983 88 genocide some 1 million Kurds were allowed to resettle in model villages According to a U S Senate staff report these villages were poorly constructed had minimal sanitation and water and provided few employment opportunities for the residents Some if not most were surrounded by barbed wire and Kurds could enter or leave only with difficulty 21 After the establishment of republican rule in Iraq enormous numbers of Iraqis fled the country to escape political repression by Abd al Karim Qasim and his successors including Saddam Hussein by 2001 it was estimated that Iraqi emigrants number more than 3 million leaving a population of 23 million inside the country 22 Nicholas Kristof of The New York Times commented Police in other countries use torture after all but there are credible reports that Saddam s police cut out tongues and use electric drills Other countries gouge out the eyes of dissidents Saddam s interrogators gouged out the eyes of hundreds of children to get their parents to talk 23 Number of victims edit In November 2004 Human Rights Watch estimated 250 000 to 290 000 Iraqis were killed or disappeared by the regime of Saddam Hussein including 1 The estimate of 290 000 disappeared and presumed killed includes the following more than 100 000 Kurds killed during the 1987 88 Anfal campaign and lead up to it between 50 000 and 70 000 Shia arrested in the 1980s and held indefinitely without charge who remain unaccounted for today an estimated 8 000 males of the Barzani clan removed from resettlement camps in Iraqi Kurdistan in 1983 10 000 or more males separated from Feyli Kurdish families deported to Iran in the 1980s an estimated 50 000 opposition activists including Communists and other leftists Kurds and other minorities and out of favor Ba athists arrested and disappeared in the 1980s and 1990s some 30 000 Iraqi Shia men rounded up after the abortive March 1991 uprising and not heard from since hundreds of Shia clerics and their students arrested and disappeared after 1991 several thousand Marsh Arabs who disappeared after being taken into custody during military operations in the southern marshlands and those executed in detention in some years several thousand in so called prison cleansing campaigns There is a feeling that at least three million Iraqis are watching the eleven million others A European diplomat quoted in The New York Times April 3 1984 24 A January 2003 The New York Times article by John Fisher Burns similarly states that the number of those disappeared into the hands of the secret police never to be heard from again could be 200 000 and compared Saddam to Joseph Stalin while acknowledging that Even on a proportional basis Stalin s crimes far surpass Mr Hussein s 25 The 1988 Al Anfal campaign resulted in the death of 50 000 100 000 Kurds although Kurdish sources have cited a higher figure of 182 000 while 25 000 100 000 civilians and rebels were killed during the suppression of the 1991 uprisings 11 26 In addition 4 000 prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison were reportedly executed in a particularly large 1984 purge 27 Far fewer Iraqis are known to have been executed during other years of Saddam s rule For example Amnesty International reported that in 1981 over 350 people were officially executed in Iraq the Committee Against Repression in Iraq gives biographic particulars on 798 executions along with 264 killings of unknown persons and 428 biographies of unsentenced detainees and disappeared persons Kanan Makiya cautions that a focus on the death toll obscures the full extent of the terror inside Iraq which was largely the product of the pervasive secret police and systematic use of torture 24 See also edit nbsp Iraq portal 1969 Baghdad hangings Human rights Human rights in pre Saddam Iraq Human rights in post Saddam Hussein Iraq Iraq sanctions Mass graves in Iraq Remembering Saddam State Terrorism Trial of Saddam HusseinReferences edit a b c d e Iraq State of the Evidence Human Rights Watch 3 November 2004 Archived from the original on 2021 05 20 UN condemns Iraq on human rights BBC News 2002 04 19 Retrieved 2016 12 11 JURIST Dateline Archived from the original on 25 June 2010 Retrieved 30 October 2017 From Crisis to Catastrophe the situation of minorities in Iraq PDF 5 Archived from the original PDF on 30 August 2020 Retrieved 23 May 2017 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Iraqi Kurds Seek Recognition of Genocide by Saddam Al Monitor in Hebrew 8 March 2013 Retrieved 23 May 2017 جريمة إبادة الكرد الفيليين والصمت الحكومي والتجاهل الرسمي عن إستذكار هذه الفاجعة الآليمة Retrieved 23 May 2017 Jaffar Al Faylee Zaki 2010 Tareekh Al Kurd Al Faylyoon Beirut pp 485 499 501 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Al Hakeem Dr Sahib 2003 Untold stories of more than 4000 women raped killed and tortured in Iraq the country of mass graves pp 489 492 a b Whatever Happened To The Iraqi Kurds Hrw org Retrieved 2009 09 25 Iraq Disappearances the agony continues Web amnesty org 2005 07 30 Archived from the original on 2007 10 27 Retrieved 2009 09 25 a b ENDLESS TORMENT The 1991 Uprising in Iraq And Its Aftermath Hrw org Retrieved 2016 08 21 An independent French organization called The Truth About the Gulf War reported in June 1991 after a trip to Iraq that authorities were vague about the toll of the uprising but the figures given for those killed most of them in southern Iraq and the overwhelming majority of them civilians ranged from 25 000 to 100 000 dead The environmental organization Greenpeace estimates that 30 000 Iraqi civilians including rebels and 5 000 Iraqi soldiers died during the uprisings as a result of the clashes and killings while acknowledging that little authoritative information is available A demographer at the U S Census Bureau Beth Osborne Daponte also arrived at the figure of 30 000 civilian deaths during the uprising Human Rights Watch Iraq archive Hrw org Retrieved 2009 09 25 www qha com tr https www qha com tr amp turk dunyasi 31 agustos 1996 saddam rejimi erbil de turkmenleri katletti 477680 Retrieved 2024 03 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Jordan Eason April 11 2003 The News We CNN Kept To Ourselves The New York Times requires login Mass Grave Discovery In Iraq Could Fuel Divisions NPR Retrieved 6 July 2016 Einolf Christopher J 2021 How torturers are made Evidence from Saddam Hussein s Iraq Journal of Human Rights 20 4 381 395 doi 10 1080 14754835 2021 1932442 ISSN 1475 4835 S2CID 237538201 a b c Harris Paul Heslop Katy 16 March 2003 Iraq s dirty dozen The Guardian Retrieved 30 October 2017 Weber Bruce 7 April 2016 E M Nathanson Author of The Dirty Dozen Dies at 88 The New York Times Retrieved 30 October 2017 Pryce Jones David 1989 01 01 Self Determination Arab Style Commentary Archived from the original on 2016 09 27 Retrieved 2016 09 27 Milton Viorst Report from Baghdad The New Yorker June 24 1991 p 72 Kurdistan in the Time of Saddam Hussein p 15 See also Civil War in Iraq Staff Report to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the U S Senate May 1991 pp 8 9 Ghabra Shafeeq N Summer 2001 Iraq s Culture of Violence Middle East Quarterly 8 3 39 49 Kristof Nicholas 2002 03 26 Try Suing Saddam The New York Times Retrieved 2017 02 15 a b Makiya Kanan 1998 Republic of Fear The Politics of Modern Iraq Updated Edition University of California Press pp 62 65 ISBN 9780520921245 Noting that the Iran Iraq War cost approximately 800 000 lives on both sides and that while surely a gross exaggeration Iraq estimated there were 100 000 deaths resulting from U S bombing in the Gulf War Burns concludes A million dead Iraqis in war and through terror may not be far from the mark See Burns John F 2003 01 26 How Many People Has Hussein Killed The New York Times Retrieved 2020 10 05 Also writing in The New York Times Dexter Filkins appeared to echo but misrepresent Burns s remark in October 2007 Saddam murdered as many as a million of his people many with poison gas His unprovoked invasion of Iran is estimated to have left another million people dead See Filkins Dexter 2007 10 07 Regrets Only The New York Times Retrieved 2016 12 04 In turn Commentary writer Arthur L Herman accused Saddam of kill ing as many as two million of his own people in July 2008 See Herman Arthur L 2008 07 01 Why Iraq Was Inevitable Commentary Archived from the original on 2016 12 20 Retrieved 2016 12 04 Johns Dave 2006 01 24 The Crimes of Saddam Hussein The Anfal Campaign PBS Retrieved 2016 08 21 Chauhan Sharad S 2003 War on Iraq APH Publishing p 65 ISBN 9788176484787 Further reading editKadhim Abbas The Hawza Under Siege A Study in the Ba th Party Archive Archive Boston University Institute for Iraqi Studies IISBU Occasional Paper No 1 June 2013 External links editAmnesty International report on torture in Iraq 2001 INDICT campaign to prosecute human rights abusers from the Hussein regime Iraq s dirty dozen Human Rights Archive 1999 2001 The Iraq Foundation UN condemns Iraq on human rights BBC April 2002 Iraq 1984 1992 Human Rights Watch Reports on Human Rights Practices U S Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor Human Rights Watch Background on the Crisis in Iraq a contents page for the organization s various reports on Iraq mostly after Saddam s regime fell Einolf Christopher J 2022 How Torture Fails Evidence of Misinformation from Torture Induced Confessions in Iraq Journal of Global Security Studies 7 1 doi 10 1093 jogss ogab019 Einolf Christopher J 2021 How torturers are made Evidence from Saddam Hussein s Iraq Journal of Human Rights 20 4 381 395 doi 10 1080 14754835 2021 1932442 S2CID 237538201 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Human rights in Ba 27athist Iraq amp oldid 1216627224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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