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Iraqi Death Sentences for Political Rivals:
High-Profile Cases Highlight Need for Judicial Reform
By
Human Rights Watch
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 15, 201
Iraq’s prime minister should order stays of execution for one rival of
former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and an associate of another, Human
Rights Watch said today. The death sentences were handed down after trials
in which both defendants alleged they had been subjected to torture and
denied access to lawyers during interrogation, highlighting Iraq’s urgent
need for judicial reform.
On October 22, 2014, Baghdad’s Central
Criminal Court sentenced Rasha al-Husseini, a secretary to former Vice
President Tariq al-Hashimi, to death on terrorism charges. The court’s
judgment appears to be based entirely on al-Husseini’s confession. Her
lawyers allege that security forces psychologically and physically tortured
her. On November 23, the same court sentenced Ahmed al-Alwani, a former
parliament member, to death on murder charges. Family members told Human
Rights Watch they saw torture marks on him before his trial.
“Iraq’s
judiciary is still handing down convictions in politicized trials, fraught
with legal irregularities,” said
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights
Watch. “Despite promises of reform, the government is sitting idly by while
Iraq’s terribly flawed justice system sentences people to death on little or
no evidence.”
Security forces arrested al-Husseini and about a dozen
other Hashimi staff members in late December 2011. In March 2012, Human
Rights Watch
reported evidence that several of them had been tortured. One, a
bodyguard named Amir Sarbut Zaidan al-Batawi, died about three months after
his arrest. His body displayed signs of torture, including in several
sensitive areas. The government denied the torture allegations and did not
investigate.
Al-Husseini’s family told Human Rights Watch that they
had complained to the office of Iraq’s president and prime minister about
irregularities in her case, including allegations that to force her
confession, security forces at the Intelligence Directorate in the Baladiyat
neighborhood of Baghdad tortured her with electric shocks, beat her,
suspended her from the ceiling, and threatened to rape her, her sisters, and
her mother. Rather than investigate the allegations, both offices told the
family that the legal system would take care of the case, the family members
said. Al-Husseini is in the Kadhimiyya detention facility, awaiting transfer
to death row.
Family members said they were only able to visit
al-Husseini in detention after paying US$500 to security officers at each
visit. Lawyers representing al-Husseini told Human Rights Watch that she
told them security officers promised her that if she fabricated information
about the former vice president’s alleged terrorist activities, they would
release her.
The Iraqi government should investigate the allegations
that security forces tortured al-Husseini to coerce her confession, hold
accountable security forces suspected of torture, and order a retrial for
al-Husseini if such abuses are found, Human Rights Watch said.
On
November 25, 2014, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), the international
organization of parliaments, released a
report calling on Iraqi authorities to provide information on the
al-Alwani case and on al-Alwani’s current whereabouts, which the government
has not revealed. The report expressed doubt about whether his trial
complied with basic due process requirements and fair trial guarantees given
the lack of available information on the proceedings. A lawyer for al-Alwani
told Human Rights Watch that he was not permitted to see al-Alwani until
after security forces had already interrogated him, but would not provide
any other details on his detention, interrogation, or trial.
Al-Alwani was charged with murder after security forces stormed his Ramadi
compound on December 28, 2013, and fired on him and his family. Security
forces alleged that al-Alwani forfeited his parliamentary immunity by firing
back at them, killing two soldiers. Al-Alwani denied the charges.
Relatives told Human Rights Watch that security forces required bribes to
allow them to visit al-Alwani at the Muthanna Airport Prison by the
Counter-Terrorism Service, where he was held. During their visit they saw
torture marks on his body, they said. Security forces killed al-Alwani’s
brother and five of his bodyguards during the raid. There has been no
investigation into the killings or into allegations that security forces
tortured al-Alwani, relatives said.
Iraq’s new prime minister, Hayder
al-Abadi, has announced reforms aimed at curbing security force abuses and
promised to incorporate the Sunni minority into the fight against the
Islamic State (also known as ISIS). Sunnis have long complained that
security forces and the judiciary unfairly target them for abuse.
In
a December 9, 2014
interview, Human Rights Minister Mohamed al-Bayati defended Iraq’s use
of the death penalty in alleged terrorism cases despite the serious fair
trial deficiencies Human Rights Watch
documented. They include death penalty cases in which the conviction was
based on confessions obtained through torture and secret informant
testimony.
International human rights law requires that where the
death penalty has not been abolished, it should be imposed only for the most
serious crimes and after scrupulous adherence to international fair trial
standards. Trials in Iraq often violate these minimum guarantees, Human
Rights Watch said.
Human Rights Watch opposes capital punishment in
all circumstances because of its cruelty and finality, and the fact that
trials resulting in death sentences are plagued with arbitrariness,
prejudice, and error.
The Iraqi government should order a stay on the
executions of al-Husseini and al-Alwani until their allegations of abuse
during interrogations have been fully investigated.
“Prime Minister
Abadi has promised reform, a positive move,” Stork said. “But he needs to
address the widespread abuses and irregularities in a judicial system that
routinely fails to address allegations of torture and fair trial
violations.”
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Iraq, please
visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/iraq
For more information,
please contact:
In New York, Erin Evers (Arabic, English): +1-917-362-0103 (mobile); or everse@hrw.org.
Follow on Twitter @ErinHRW In Washington, DC, Joe Stork (English):
+1-202-299-4925 (mobile); or storkj@hrw.org
In Amman, Fadi Al-Qadi (English, Arabic): +962-7-9699-2396 (mobile); or
qadif@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @fqadi
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