From The Idiot Factor:
The newly
liberated land in Iraq is
turning out to be a hell hole for all those who did ANYTHING to cooperate with
the ISIS (Islamic State) government before it fell. People have been given
ridiculously long prison terms and they are being executed for simply having
had a job that in any way helped the ISIS officials who ruled over that part of Iraq for
the last few years.
There has been a report from a Human Rights Watch (HRW) that criticized
Iraq and the autonomous
Kurdish authorities over mass trials of suspected ISIS
group militants. According to The Times of Oman:
"In "Flawed Justice: Accountability for ISIS
Crimes in Iraq ",
HRW said Baghdad and the
Kurdish authorities in the north were holding "thousands of trials of IS
suspects without a strategy to prioritise the worst abuses under Iraqi and
international law". "The
broad prosecution under terrorism law of all those affiliated with ISIS (IS) in any way, no matter how minimal, could impede future community reconciliation and reintegration, and clog up Iraqi courts and prisons for decades," the New York-based group said.
broad prosecution under terrorism law of all those affiliated with ISIS (IS) in any way, no matter how minimal, could impede future community reconciliation and reintegration, and clog up Iraqi courts and prisons for decades," the New York-based group said.
Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW's Middle East director, said
that in acting this way, "Iraqi justice is failing to distinguish between
the culpability of doctors who protected lives under ISIS rule and those responsible for
crimes against humanity".
The report goes
on to say that Iraqi justice is failing to distinguish between culpability of
doctors who protected lives under ISIS rule
and those responsible of actual crimes against humanity. Even lawyers who have
represented accused ISIS collaborators have been targeted as criminals just for doing their jobs. It is getting harder
now for those accused of ISIS crimes
to get legal representation during these trials. HRW identified 7,374 cases of
suspects charged since 2014, of whom 92 have been executed. The Times article
continues:
"Its (HRW) researchers estimate the total number
of people imprisoned for suspected IS membership at 20,000. Anti-terrorism laws
allow judges to charge a large number of people, even those not involved in
violence but who are suspected of having helped IS, such as doctors who worked
in hospitals or cooks who fed fighters."
These courts are including life in prison or the death
penalty, even for belonging to the jihadist group.
Sarah Leah Whitson, writing for Human Rights Watch and Reuters:
Sarah Leah Whitson, writing for Human Rights Watch and Reuters:
"At the
height of its power in Iraq ,
Islamic State (also known as ISIS) controlled 40 percent of
the country’s territory and the daily lives of millions of Iraqis. Tens of
thousands of Iraqis came to serve the ISIS administration,
including as doctors, teachers, judges, cooks, and lawyers, arguably
contributing to the group’s control of the cities it occupied.
Just as Iraqis
were forced to join the Baath party under Saddam Hussein, many in
ISIS-controlled areas say they were forced to join the group to keep their jobs
– though no doubt some also supported ISIS ’s extremism."
It would be
easy to just claim that this is Iraq and
this is what passes, in that culture, for normal behaviour. But the truth is
that it was the US army
that went in and trained the Iraqi troops and led their armies to remove ISIS
from all Iraq territory.
The Iraq Army is a part of the Iraq government that
the US built
from the ground floor up. In other words this is an extension of the US government
and the US Army. All of this is a product of the US .
The responsibility for these human rights abuses fall squarely on the US government
and its policies in this part of the world. On top of all of these unnecessary
and repressive trials, are other human rights abuses, such as a policy of
executing all captured soldiers. There are no prisoners of war being kept in Iraq because all capture soldiers are executed shortly
after they surrender.
This is the
results of a policy of US imperialism where Iraq was already an
occupied country by the US .
It is a part of what are leaders call "nation building." The idea is
to recreate so called "democracies" that fully support the US Empire
and its goals and objectives. There is no effort to further develop the
economies of these puppet states nor is there any real effort to create a
system of justice. The US has
created an ugly repressive state to serve its own interest and not the interest
of the people who live under these repressive so called "democracies."
During this war
the US mainstream
press did a good job of letting us know how repressive life was under ISIS occupation. Now that the battles
are over there seems to be little interest in letting Americans know what kind
of repression the US has replaced ISIS with.
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