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Iraqi Government Militiamen Forcibly Transfer
Whole Sunni Villages, Abduct Men Fleeing Mosul, Abuse and Torture
them, Steal their Money
By
Human Rights Watch
Al-Jazeerah,
CCUN, February 3, 2017 |
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A member of the Iraqi security forces stands at a checkpoint
near Hammam al-Alil, south of Mosul, Iraq, December 2016 |
Mosul residents back
hand-cuffed for interrogation by Iraqi government militiamen in a
Mosul outskirt mosque, November 20, 2016.
http://www.jadidpresse.com/%D9%87%D9%8A%D9%88%D9%85%D9%86-% |
Video:
825624365236490242
http://heavy.com/news/2017/01/isis-islamic-state-popular-mobilization-forces-pmu-al-hashd-al-shaabi-shia-sunni-executions-torture-allegations-sectarian-violence-abuse-twitter-video/
Iraq: Men Fleeing Mosul Held in Secret Incommunicado Screening
Puts Detainees at Risk
Groups within the
Iraqi military are screening and detaining men fleeing Mosul in
unidentified detention centers where they are cut off from contact with the
outside world, Human Rights Watch said today.
The groups, the Popular
Mobilization Forces (known as the PMF or Hashd al-Sha'abi - Iraqi government
militia), are apparently screening the men for suspected involvement with
the Islamic State (also known as ISIS). Given these groups’ lack of training
in screening, the irregular nature of these screenings and detentions, and
the detainees’ lack of contact with the outside world, the detained men are
at heightened risk of abuse, including
arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance.
“In
case after case, relatives are telling us that their male family members are
being stopped by PMF fighters and disappearing,” said
Lama Fakih, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “While we
cannot know exactly what has happened to the men detained, the lack of
transparency, particularly for their families as to their whereabouts, is
cause for real concern.”
Iraqi authorities should only allow bodies
with a screening mandate to screen people and ensure that anyone detained is
held in a recognized detention center accessible to independent monitors and
granted their due process rights enshrined in international and Iraqi law.
All detention should be based on clear domestic law, and every detainee
should be brought promptly before a judge to review the legality of their
detention. Iraqi law requires that authorities bring detainees before an
investigative judge within 48 hours of their detention.
The
authorities should ensure that detainees’ families know where they are and
publicly issue information about the number of people detained as part of
the operation to retake Mosul from ISIS.
Human Rights Watch
interviewed families from one village, Nzara, who said that PMF fighters had
taken all the villagers to another town for 15 days in November 2016, then
to refugee camps. But five men who had left the village to sell their sheep
never returned and later were seen on a television broadcast identified as
captured ISIS fighters. Another man who had left to sell his sheep described
being attacked and detained by PMF fighters and eventually reunited with his
family, but three men who had been with him in the car have yet to reappear.
Human Rights Watch also interviewed members of four displaced families
who traveled between December 26 and January 15, 2017, through a screening
site about two kilometers south of eastern Mosul that was under the control
of the Iraq Security Forces’ ninth division. The families each said they
arrived with large numbers of civilians fleeing, between 1,500 and 4,000
people. They said they also saw between 7 and 20 local PMF fighters there,
distinguishable by their badges, accents local to the area, and by their
civilian dress. One heard the local fighters being called Abu al-Hashad,
signifying their PMF affiliations.
The families who passed through
the site all described the same screening process, which was carried out
overnight. When they arrived, usually in the evening or at night, men and
boys aged 15 and above were separated from women and other children, who
went into one of four tents. The military checked each of the men and boys’
IDs against lists of people wanted by various Iraqi authorities for
suspected ISIS-affiliation.
This is the common procedure facing all
men and boys fleeing the current conflict, usually at the first screening
site they reach, and sometimes
repeated at multiple other sites, dozens of men and boys who fled have
told Human Rights Watch. The men from two of the families said that at least
eight men screened with them were detained after the ID check.
After
that, the men said, they were separated into groups by their Mosul
neighborhoods, and four masked men came and pointed at a few men, whom they
took away. The men said that as many as seven other men also were taken
away, with no explanation from the military and PMF officers. The seven
detained men did not reappear before the rest of the group left on buses
with their families for the camps the next morning. They did not personally
know any of these men, so did not know if they had been with their families
or alone.
On January 10, one soldier from the ninth division working
at the screening site told Human Rights Watch that he had been stationed
there for several weeks and that every night, PMF fighters from the area,
known as Tashkeelat Nawadar, led by Abdulrahim al-Shammiri, would come and
detain groups of men who were not included on the authorities’ “wanted
lists.” A fighter with the Nawadar Hashad, based at the site, confirmed that
his forces were detaining men on a nightly basis, because they were sure
these men were ISIS-affiliated. He would not divulge what happened to the
detained men. One man who passed through the screening site referred to the
PMF there as Hashad Nimrud, and another as the Hashad Nineveh, two different
local Hashad groups.
A nongovernmental organization working in the
area confirmed to Human Rights Watch that the screening site is under Iraqi
military control, but the road and area are under PMF control. Human Rights
Watch has been unable to locate the detained men or any families of men
detained at the site.
The PMF do not have an official mandate to
carry out screenings, and as far as Human Rights Watch has been able to
determine, have not been trained to carry out screening, raising concerns
about possible ill-treatment.
The authorities should ensure that no
groups are carrying out screening without legal authority. They should
inform family members of the location of anyone detained, allow family
members to contact them, and ensure that anyone detained is brought before a
judge within 48 hours to comply with Iraqi law. The authorities should
publicly issue and update numbers on how many people are being held, where
they are from, and where they are being held.
“Some men appear to be
vanishing into the night even after official screenings by Iraqi security
forces confirmed they were not on their wanted lists” Fakih said. “It is
crucial for the authorities to take all measures to ensure that their
whereabouts are known and the scale of detention is documented.”
========================================================
For
details about the men from Nzara, please see below.
For more Human
Rights Watch reporting on Iraq, please visit:
https://www.hrw.org/middle-east/n-africa/iraq
For more
information, please contact: In Baghdad, Belkis Wille (English, Arabic,
French, German): +964-751-139-4857 (mobile); or
willeb@hrw.org. Twitter: @belkiswille
In Beirut, Lama Fakih (English, Arabic): +9613900105 (mobile); or
fakihl@hrw.org. Twitter: @lamamfakih
In Washington, DC, Ahmed Benchemsi (English, French, Arabic):
+1-929-343-7973 (mobile); or
benchea@hrw.org. Twitter: @AhmedBenchemsi
The Men from Nzara
Human Rights Watch interviewed three men from the village of
Nzara, which residents call Nzaza, 40 kilometers west of Mosul. They all
said that on the morning of November 4, at about 7 a.m., five other men from
the village, which was under ISIS control at the time, left to sell sheep at
a market in
Tal Abtah, 30 kilometers south and also under ISIS control. One of those
interviewed said that two of the five were his brothers, and that he saw
them set out that morning.
Two of the men interviewed said that a few
hours later, over 100 fighters from Badr,
one of the most prominent groups within the PMF, took control of Nzara and
forcibly bused all the residents, about
260 families, to the village of Jurn, 25 kilometers east.
The Badr fighters were recognizable from their badges and banners. Once in
Jurn, the PMF checked the men’s identity cards and cleared everyone for
release. They kept the residents in Jurn for 15 days, providing food,
drinks, and shelter, then bused them to refugee camps.
The five men
who had gone to Tal Abtah did not join their relatives in Jurn, the men
interviewed said. Instead, about 10 days later, they saw the men on film on
al-Walaa TV, a channel affiliated with Badr. A banner under the footage said
they were ISIS fighters in the custody of Badr’s third brigade in the
village of
Um Hijarah al’Ulya, six kilometers south. The men said the families have
tried to locate the detained men through negotiations led by tribal leaders
but have found out nothing more about them.
Another Nzara villager,
“Ahmad,” 44, said that he and three other men had left the village at 6:30
a.m. that morning for Tal Abtah to sell some of their sheep and that PMF,
also recognizable by badges and banners, attacked them on their way home. He
was wounded and detained, along with the villager who had driven the truck
with the sheep to market, and did not know what happened to the other two
men in the car. He said the fighters helped stabilize his condition,
blindfolded them, and drove them somewhere about 30 minutes away.
There, he said, he was moved into a room, where he was held
blindfolded for the next seven days.
On the first day, the fighters took his documents, including his identity
card and about US$660 from selling the
sheep. He did not know what happened to the driver. Someone
else was in the room with him, but he did not know who, and was afraid to
ask. People there treated his wounds. No one interrogated him or raised any
specific allegations against him, he said, but he was not allowed to contact
a lawyer or his family. On the eighth day, they put him in an ambulance and
took off his blindfold. The ambulance drove him to Jurn, where he found his
family.
Ahmad said that the brother of the driver who was with him
the day of the arrest told him that he called a friend in the Iraqi Security
Forces who said that he had located his brother, who was
getting medical treatment for injuries at
Tal Afar airport, 60 kilometers west of Mosul, which the PMF was using as a
base. A PMF fighter told Human Rights Watch that the forces
have a detention center in the area, but would not divulge where. Ahmed said
he has not received any news about the other two men he was with.
https://www.hrw.org/news/2017/02/02/iraq-men-fleeing-mosul-held-secret
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