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       Maliki Still Preserving Abu Ghraib Culture:
	 The Harrowing Abuse of Iraqi Women 
  By Ramzy Baroud
  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 14, 2014
	   “When they first put the electricity on me, I gasped; my body went 
	rigid and the bag came off my head,” Israa Salah, a detained Iraqi woman 
	told Human Rights Watch (HRW) in her heartrending testimony.    Israa 
	(not her real name) was arrested by US and Iraqi forces in 2010. She was 
	tortured to the point of confessing to terrorist charges she didn’t commit. 
	According to HRW’s “No One is Safe” - a 105-page report released on Feb 06 – 
	there are thousands of Iraqi women in jail being subjected to similar 
	practices, held with no charges, beaten and raped.   In Israa’s case, 
	she received most degrading, but typical treatment. She was handcuffed, 
	pushed down on her knees, and kicked in the face until her jaw broke. And 
	when she refused to sign the confession, it was then that electric wires 
	were attached to her handcuffs.    Welcome to the ‘liberated’ Iraq, a 
	budding ‘democracy’ which American officials rarely cease celebrating. There 
	is no denial that the brutal policies of the Iraqi government under Nouri 
	al-Maliki is a continuation of the same policies of the US military 
	administration, which ruled over Iraq from 2003 until the departure of US 
	troops in Dec. 2011.    It is as if the torturers have read from the 
	same handbook. In fact, they did.    The torture and degrading 
	treatment of Iraqi prisoners – men and women – in Abu Ghraib prison was not 
	an isolated incident carried out by a few ‘bad apples.’ Only the naïve would 
	buy into the ‘bad apples’ theory, and not because of the sheer 
	horrendousness and frequency of the abuse. Since the Abu Ghraib revelations 
	early in 2004, many such stories emerged, backed by damning evidence, not 
	only throughout Iraq, but in Afghanistan as well. The crimes were not only 
	committed by the Americans, but the British as well, followed by the Iraqis, 
	who were chosen to continue with the mission of ‘democratization.’    
	“No One is Safe” presented some of the most harrowing evidence of the abuse 
	of women by Iraq’s criminal ‘justice system’. The phenomenon of kidnapping, 
	torturing, raping and executing women is so widespread that it seems 
	shocking even by the standards of the country’s poor human rights record of 
	the past. If such a reality were to exist in a different political context, 
	the global outrage would have been so profound. Some in the ‘liberal’ 
	western media, supposedly compelled by women’s rights would have called for 
	some measure of humanitarian intervention, war even. But in the case of 
	today’s Iraq, the HRW report is likely to receive bits of coverage where the 
	issue is significantly deluded, and eventually forgotten.    In fact, 
	the discussion of the abuse of thousands of women – let alone tens of 
	thousands of men – has already been discussed in a political vacuum. A 
	buzzword that seems to emerge since the publication of the report is that 
	the abuse confirms the ‘weaknesses’ of the Iraqi judicial system. The 
	challenge then becomes the matter of strengthening a weak system, perhaps 
	through channeling more money, constructing larger facilities, and providing 
	better monitoring and training, likely carried out by US-led training of 
	staff.    Mostly absent are the voices of women’s groups, 
	intellectuals and feminists who seem to be constantly distressed by the 
	traditional marriage practices in Yemen, for example, or the covering up of 
	women’s faces in Afghanistan. There is little, if any, uproar and outrage, 
	when brown women suffer at the hands of western men and women, or their 
	cronies, as is the situation in Iraq.    If the HRW report remerged in 
	complete isolation from an equally harrowing political context created by 
	the US invasion of Iraq, one could grudgingly excuse the relative silence. 
	But it isn’t the case. The Abu Ghraib culture continues to be the very 
	tactic by which Iraqis have been governed since March 2003.    Years 
	after the investigation of the Abu Ghraib abuses had begun, Major General 
	Antonio Taguba, who had conducted the inquiry, revealed that there were more 
	than 2,000 unpublished photos documenting further abuse. “One picture shows 
	an American soldier apparently raping a female prisoner while another is 
	said to show a male translator raping a male detainee,” reported the 
	Telegraph newspaper on May 2009.    Maj Gen Taguba had then supported 
	Obama’s decision not to publish the photos, not out of any moralistic 
	reasoning, but simply because  “the consequence would be to imperil our 
	troops, the only protectors of our foreign policy, when we most need them, 
	and British troops who are trying to build security in Afghanistan.” Of 
	course, the British, the builders of security in Afghanistan, wrote their 
	own history of infamy through an abuse campaign that never ceased since they 
	had set foot in Afghanistan.    Considering the charged political 
	atmosphere in Iraq, the latest reported abuses are of course placed in their 
	own unique context. Most of the abused women are Sunni, and their freedom 
	has been a major rallying cry for rebelling Sunni provinces in central and 
	western Iraq. In Arab culture, dishonoring one through occupation and the 
	robbing of one’s land comes second to dishonoring women. The humiliation 
	that millions of Iraqi Sunni feel cannot be explained by words, and 
	militancy is an unsurprising response to the government’s unrelenting 
	policies of dehumanization, discrimination and violence.    While 
	post-US invasion Iraq was not a heaven for democracy and human rights, the 
	‘new Iraq’ has solidified a culture of impunity that holds nothing sacred. 
	In fact, dishonoring entire societies has been a tactic in al-Maliki’s dirty 
	war. Many women were “rounded up for alleged terrorist activities by male 
	family members,” reported the Associated Press, citing the HRW report.    
	“Iraqi security forces and officials act as if brutally abusing women will 
	make the country safer,” said Joe Stork, deputy MENA director at HRW. It was 
	the same logic that determined that through ‘shock and awe’ Iraqis could be 
	forced into submission.    Neither theory proved accurate. The war and 
	rebellion in Iraq will continue as long as those holding the key to that 
	massive Iraqi prison understand that human rights must be respected as a 
	precondition to a lasting peace.    - Ramzy Baroud is an 
	internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is “My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza’s Untold Story” (Pluto Press, London).   
	 
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