The US is pressing for the sacking of Bayan Jabr, Iraq's Shia interior minister, whose staff have been discovered to be torturing Sunni prisoners.
With a strong Sunni role in Iraq's next government apparently secure after their high turnout in Thurs-day's election, US officials want to ensure that Cabinet posts are no longer exploited for sectarian or partisan ends. Sunnis have long complained that the interior ministry is one of the worst offenders.
Inspections of two detention centers on the eve of this week's poll found around 800 inmates, many of them teenagers, living in cramped conditions under interior-ministry guard. Dozens had to be sent to hospital for injuries administered by guards.
The scandal appeared to confirm Sunni claims that the Baghdad police have become little more than an arm of the Supreme Council for the Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI). Jabr, a SCIRI official, has been accused of hiring staff mainly from the SCIRI militia called the Badr brigade.
A desire to stop abuses by what Sunnis see as a biased government was a factor in persuading many Sunnis to take part in this week's poll.
Since the first torture center was revealed the US ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad, has taken steps to prevent further abuse.
US officers are being "embedded" with interior ministry forces, commandos and police when they raid houses. Along with officials from Iraq's human-rights ministry, they are also making surprise inspections of prisons and detention centers.
Jabr sought to make light of the abuse, saying only seven people had been tortured out of more than 170 found in the first inspection in a secret underground bunker run by his staff in the suburb of Jadriyah. But Khalilzad told a press conference this week that more than 100 were abused. He described the ill treatment as "far worse than slapping around."
On polling day he made it clear in an article in the Washington Post that he wanted Jabr dismissed or moved to a different job.
"It will be important that the head of security ministries be trusted by all communities and not come from elements of the population that have militias. Equally important is that key ministers be selected not just for political considerations but also for competence," he wrote. "The next government must put more emphasis on human rights."
The second detention center uncovered was bigger than Jadriyah. Housed in old stables once used by Saddam Hussein's younger son, Uday, it contained more than 600 men and boys. Between 20 and 25 showed signs of abuse, the US ambassador said this week.
The center was run by the Wolf Brigade, a police commando unit, which -- Sunnis say -- has set up death squads that target Sunni clerics and politicians. Jabr denies this.
A DVD made available to the Guardian newspaper by Saleh al Mutlaq, a leading Sunni politician, appears to show interviews with the prisoners recorded during the surprise inspection of the stables. Hundreds are standing or sitting in a large hall, packed so closely that there is not enough sleeping room for everyone.
One by one detainees come forward, showing welts across their backs, fingers with nails pulled out, cigarette burns on their shoulders and severe head wounds, in one case with a bloodstained section of brain exposed.
‘GREAT OPPRTUNITY’: The Paraguayan president made the remarks following Donald Trump’s tapping of several figures with deep Latin America expertise for his Cabinet Paraguay President Santiago Pena called US president-elect Donald Trump’s incoming foreign policy team a “dream come true” as his nation stands to become more relevant in the next US administration. “It’s a great opportunity for us to advance very, very fast in the bilateral agenda on trade, security, rule of law and make Paraguay a much closer ally” to the US, Pena said in an interview in Washington ahead of Trump’s inauguration today. “One of the biggest challenges for Paraguay was that image of an island surrounded by land, a country that was isolated and not many people know about it,”
‘DISCRIMINATION’: The US Office of Personnel Management ordered that public DEI-focused Web pages be taken down, while training and contracts were canceled US President Donald Trump’s administration on Tuesday moved to end affirmative action in federal contracting and directed that all federal diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) staff be put on paid leave and eventually be laid off. The moves follow an executive order Trump signed on his first day ordering a sweeping dismantling of the federal government’s diversity and inclusion programs. Trump has called the programs “discrimination” and called to restore “merit-based” hiring. The executive order on affirmative action revokes an order issued by former US president Lyndon Johnson, and curtails DEI programs by federal contractors and grant recipients. It is using one of the
‘FIGHT TO THE END’: Attacking a court is ‘unprecedented’ in South Korea and those involved would likely face jail time, a South Korean political pundit said Supporters of impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol yesterday stormed a Seoul court after a judge extended the impeached leader’s detention over his ill-fated attempt to impose martial law. Tens of thousands of people had gathered outside the Seoul Western District Court on Saturday in a show of support for Yoon, who became South Korea’s first sitting head of state to be arrested in a dawn raid last week. After the court extended his detention on Saturday, the president’s supporters smashed windows and doors as they rushed inside the building. Hundreds of police officers charged into the court, arresting dozens and denouncing an
One of Japan’s biggest pop stars and best-known TV hosts, Masahiro Nakai, yesterday announced his retirement over sexual misconduct allegations, reports said, in the latest scandal to rock Japan’s entertainment industry. Nakai’s announcement came after now-defunct boy band empire Johnny & Associates admitted in 2023 that its late founder, Johnny Kitagawa, for decades sexually assaulted teenage boys and young men. Nakai was a member of the now-disbanded SMAP — part of Johnny & Associates’s lucrative stable — that swept the charts in Japan and across Asia during the band’s nearly 30 years of fame. Reports emerged last month that Nakai, 52, who since