PATTERN EMERGES OF SEXUAL
ASSAULT AGAINST WOMEN HELD BY U.S. FORCES
by Chris Shumway
June 6th, 2004 (The New Standard
News) Well publicized images of US soldiers torturing and humiliating
male Iraqi prisoners may be overshadowing evidence gathered by
several human rights groups and Pentagon investigators indicating
US military personnel have raped and sexually abused Iraqi women
held at Abu Ghraib prison and other detention facilities.
Amal Kadham
Swadi, an Iraqi attorney representing women detainees, told The
Guardian she believes that sexualized violence and abuse committed
by US soldiers against female prisoners goes far beyond a few
isolated cases. It's "happening all across Iraq," she
said.
Women make up a small minority of
the total number of Iraqis held by Coalition forces. The US military
says 78 women are currently detained by occupation militaries
throughout Iraq.
It is not clear, however, exactly
how many women the US and its allies have detained since the invasion
last year. According to the International Committee of the Red
Cross, 30 Iraqi women were housed in Abu Ghraib last October.
That number was reduced to five last month, and finally to zero
as of May 29, according to the military.
Like the majority of male prisoners,
many of the women detained by Coalition forces have not been charged
with any crime. Iraqi human rights groups say they are likely
being used as "bargaining chips" against family members
wanted by Coalition forces, Newsday reports.
Swadi and six other female Iraqi
lawyers began investigating claims of sexual assault late last
year after a note reportedly written by a prisoner named Noor
was smuggled out of Abu Ghraib. The note claimed that US soldiers
were raping female detainees, and in some cases, such as that
of Noor herself, getting them pregnant. Swadi then began interviewing
detainees who said they too had been assaulted or had witnessed
assaults, The Guardian reports.
During a visit to Abu Ghraib in March,
Swadi said, one of the prisoners told her US soldiers had forced
her to undress in front of them, an act that would be seen as
particularly demeaning in conservative Muslim culture. At another
detention facility in Baghdad, Swadi encountered a woman who said
soldiers raped her. "She was the only woman who would talk
about her case," Swadi told The Guardian. "She was crying.
She told us she had been raped," Swadi said. "Several
American soldiers had raped her. She had tried to fight them off
and they had hurt her arm. She showed us the stitches."
Iman Khamas, head of the International
Occupation Watch Center, an organization investigating human rights
abuses under the US-led occupation, said a former detainee told
her about the rape of a cellmate at Abu Ghraib, according to Middle
East Online. On another occasion, a woman whispered cautiously
to Khamas -- even though no one else was in the room -- intimating
that soldiers had raped her at Abu Ghraib. A day later, Khamas
said, the woman returned and asked her to tear up the statement.
According to Khamas, Swadi and others
who are investigating assault cases, few women in Muslim cultures
will come forward since they know rape survivors are often treated
with shame and are sometimes killed as a means of preserving family
honor.
Khamas and two other human rights
workers have all said separately that three young rural women
from the Sunni Muslim region of Al-Anbar, west of Baghdad, had
been killed by their families after coming out of Abu Ghraib pregnant,
Middle East Online reported.
The Pentagon has acknowledged, in
an internal report by Army Major General Antonio Taguba, that
US soldiers videotaped and photographed naked female detainees
at Abu Ghraib.
Photographs taken by US soldiers
and shown to members of Congress, but not yet made public, reportedly
depict at least one Iraqi woman being forced at gunpoint to show
her breasts.
The Taguba report also cites a case
of rape at Abu Ghraib, although Taguba described the incident
as a male prison guard "having sex" with a female detainee.
Referring to rapes at that very prison,
the military's chief spokesperson in Iraq, Brigadier General Mark
Kimmitt, told Agence France Presse that the department running
prisons was "unaware of any such reports at Abu Ghraib."
The military has not yet charged
any soldiers for a specific case of assault or abuse involving
a female detainee.
Another Pentagon report indicates
that three soldiers from military intelligence were alleged to
have sexually assaulted a female detainee at Abu Ghraib last October.
Army investigators did not confirm the assault. The three soldiers
were reportedly fined several hundred dollars each and demoted
for having been in the prison's female wing without permission,
according to the Washington Post.
From: http://www.occupationwatch.org/article.php?id=5222