Private First Class Matt Maupin assigned to the
U.S. Army Reserve's 724th Transportation Company based at Bartonville, Illinois,
became the first prisoner taken by Iraqi insurgents since the fall of Saddam
Hussein.
The U.S. military is currently holding more than 20,000 Iraqis behind bars
– most of them taken during house to house searches by the U.S. military.
Take the village of Abu Siffa, an hour's drive north of Baghdad. Cattle graze
on the side of the road and date palms sway in the wind. The mighty Tigris flows
nearby.
Rejan Mohammed Hassen stands in front of the rubble that was her house and
recalls the night last summer when the U.S. Army took her sons and destroyed
her house.
"Early in the morning they took us from the home and asked us to stand
around," she recalls. "When we questioned them, the Americans started
to beat the women. After that, two tanks came to our house and started to shoot
using the machine-gun on top of the tank and then two missiles from the head
of the tank."
By the time the U.S. Army left Abu Siffa an hour later, 73 men from the village
had been rounded up, including all four of Rejan Mohammed Hassen's sons. Villagers
say the U.S. troops did not find the arms caches they were looking for, but
the soldiers did confiscate several trucks and large sums of cash.
Nine months later, 15-year-old Ahmed Itar Hassen is one of only two villagers
to have emerged from custody. He was finally released without being charged
with any offence.
"For the first six days we were all staying in an open field surrounded
by razor wire," he says. "There was no tent and no mat under us and
we were exposed to the sun and the rain."
He says the soldiers provided no toilet facilities, leaving the men to relieve
themselves in the open. "It was impossible to sleep," he recalls.
"The American soldiers threw pebbles at us all night long."
Eventually, Ahmed says he was transferred to Baghdad's Abu Grahb prison. There
he was held in solitary confinement – in a 3-foot by 4-foot cell used to keep
political prisoners during the reign of Saddam Hussein. He says he was not allowed
outside to exercise, to see his family or a lawyer.
"At night they threw a dog in the cell to frighten me," he says.
"We call it a wolf- dog, the big police dog. A soldier just put it in my
cell every night."
Ahmed says the dog was taken away after he complained to a Red Cross observer
who came to his cell.
Human rights groups say incidents like those at Abu Siffa happen far too often
during the occupation.
A report released by Amnesty International catalogues 15 confirmed incidents
of house demolition and notes regular reports of torture and beatings perpetrated
against prisoners in U.S. custody. The report also alleges that prisoners are
subjected to sleep deprivation, hooding, and bright lights.
Sa'ad Sultan Hussein, lawyer with the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Ministry for Human
Rights says the occupation force has promised to allow his agency to open an
office at Abu Grahb, but so far they have only given his teams guided tours
of the prisons.
"I have only seen what they wanted me to see," he admits. "We
didn't enter the interrogation room. We were not allowed to witness any interrogations."
Sa'ad Sultan Hussein says the occupying forces are currently holding about
15,000 prisoners at Abu Grahb, the vast majority for supposed political crimes.
An additional 7,500 prisoners are being held at a joint Anglo-American prison
in the southern port city Um Qasr. That prison was built to hold prisoners of
war (POW) last year.
It has been a year since 70-year-old Boyadin Sayid Jassem last saw his son
Riyad, who was conscripted into the Iraqi army to fight the U.S.-led invasion.
He says Riyad was last seen at a battle in al-Yusufia, 15 miles south of Baghdad.
"A friend of my son told me that my son was wounded and that the Americans
picked him up and took him," he says. "But to where nobody knows."
Boyadin Sayid Jassem quakes as he speaks. He says he visited every U.S. prison
in the Baghdad area before hearing about the POW prison at Um Qasr.
"I went to Um Qasr," he says. "I described the situation, and
when they checked in their computer they told me my son's name is in their record.
So I asked them 'where is he?' and they told me 'we can't tell you now because
of the security situation'."
Among those believed to be in the custody of the U.S. military is the eldest
son of Hussein Salem Khleff. On April 6 last year during the middle of the war
Hussein's entire family was fleeing the front in their mini-bus down a main
road south of Baghdad.
"We were surprised by the American forces," he relates. "They
just started shooting. My brother was on top of the trailer carrying a while
flag of peace. A bullet hit his leg. The American forces came towards us and
then the Americans climbed on the trailer. When they saw that a bullet hit his
leg they called for a medic."
After half an hour a U.S. medical helicopter came and took his son away. It
was the last time Hussein saw him.
"They told me we are heading for Baghdad, but when he gets well we will
bring him to the same place he was wounded," Khleff says. "I have
searched for him at every American base. Nobody can tell me where he is."
A year after his son disappeared, Khleff has given up on formal processes.
He has taken to posting photos of his missing son on lamp posts around Baghdad.
He has asked Arab satellite TV stations like al-Jazeera to show the photo on
a regular basis. So far, nothing has worked.
"The major problem that Iraqi people suffer from is random capture by
the U.S. military," says Sa'ad Sultan Hussein. "They are disappeared
and no one can tell where they are or the reason for their capture. They even
don't allow the families to visit them, and the Geneva Convention says they
must allow the families to visit."
U.S. soldiers serving as prison guards at Abu Grahib refused to comment. They
said the only officers authorised to comment were at the U.S. military base
Camp Victory, formerly Saddam Hussein International Airport. Senior officers
there were unavailable.