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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

31 March 2003

Text: State Dept. Report Outlines Human Rights Abuses in Iraq

(Powell cites Saddam's regime as great threat to global peace,
stability) (16430)
Coalition forces in Iraq are fighting to protect the world from "the
potentially catastrophic combination of an outlaw state, weapons of
mass destruction, and terrorism," and in the process are "liberating
the Iraqi people from a brutal tyranny that has showed utter contempt
for human life," Secretary of State Colin Powell said as he presented
the State Department's annual human rights report March 31 in
Washington.
He noted that the report, which is mandated by the U.S. Congress,
reflects America's "steadfast commitment" to advancing internationally
agreed human rights principles across the globe.
Powell singled out the government of Saddam Hussein as "a classic
illustration of the fact that regimes which ruthlessly violate the
rights of their citizens tend to pose the greatest threats to
international peace and stability," and he said the report would be
used to help shape Bush administration policy "as we work to build a
world where tyrants and terrorists cannot live."
Joining Powell at the press conference was Lorne Craner, assistant
secretary of State for democracy, human rights and labor, who said
that while the latest report cites human rights abuses in many
countries in the Middle East, Iraq was the "primary offender" in 2002.
According to the report, Iraq's record "remained extremely poor, and
it continued to commit numerous, serious human rights abuses"
throughout 2002. The document describes how Saddam Hussein and his
extended family wield "absolute decisive power" through "a harshly
repressive one-party apparatus" and "total effective control of the
security forces and the military."
Among the report's findings, the regime:
- "severely restricted freedoms of speech, the press, assembly,
association, religion, and movement";
- "routinely tortured, beat, raped, and otherwise abused detainees";
- "continued summarily to execute alleged political opponents";
- "neglected the health and nutritional needs of children"; and
- "discriminated against religious minorities and ethnic groups."
The State Department notes that the United Nations Special Rapporteur
for Iraq has cited "ongoing, grievous violations of human rights," the
UN Commission on Human Rights and the UN General Assembly have passed
a resolution criticizing Iraq for suppressing basic freedoms, and the
European Parliament has published its own report condemning the
regime's human rights abuses.
Documenting human rights violations under Saddam Hussein remains
difficult, the State Department report says, "because of the regime's
concealment of facts, including its prohibition on the establishment
of independent human rights organizations, its persistent refusal to
allow visits of human rights monitors, and its continued restrictions
designed to prevent dissent."
Following is the section on Iraq from the 2002 Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices:
(begin text)
IRAQ
[ The United States does not have diplomatic representation in Iraq.
This report draws to a large extent on non-U.S. Government sources.]
Under the provisional Constitution of 1968, Iraq claims to be a
democratic republic. However, political power has rested exclusively
in a harshly repressive oneparty apparatus dominated by Saddam Hussein
al-Tikriti and members of his extended family. According to the
Constitution, the Arab Ba'th Socialist Party governs Iraq through the
Revolutionary Command Council (RCC), which exercised both executive
and legislative authority. President Saddam Hussein, who was also
Prime Minister, Chairman of the RCC, and Secretary General of the
Regional Command of the Ba'th Party, therefore wielded absolute
decisive power. Hussein and his regime obtained 100 percent of the
votes cast in a nondemocratic "referendum" on his presidency held in
October that did not include secret ballots, and many credible reports
indicated that voters feared possible reprisal for a dissenting vote.
The judiciary was not independent, and the President had the ability
to override any ruling or refer any case to a secret system of special
courts outside the normal judiciary.
Under the RCC and Ba'ath party structure, the Tikriti family
maintained total effective control of the security forces and the
military. The regime's security apparatus included militias attached
to the President, the Ba'th Party, and the Interior Ministry. The
military and these paramilitary forces often played an internal
security role and were central to maintaining the environment of
intimidation and fear on which regime power depended. The regime
historically made little attempt to acknowledge, investigate, or
punish officials or members of the military or security forces accused
of human rights abuses; however, in February it admitted that state
police were commonly accused of human rights violations. Members of
the military and security forces committed widespread, serious, and
systematic human rights abuses. In the Kurdish North, party militias
under civilian control provided regional security and have committed
human rights abuses.
The country has an estimated population of 24 million people. The
regime owned all major industries and controlled most of the highly
centralized economy, which is based largely on oil production. The
Iran-Iraq and Gulf Wars damaged the economy, and the country has been
subject to U.N. sanctions since its 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Sanctions
ban all exports, except oil sales, under U.N. Security Council
Resolution 986 and subsequent resolutions--the "oil-for-food" program.
Under the program, the country also was permitted, under U.N. control,
to import food, medicine, supplies for water, sanitation, electricity,
agriculture, and education projects, and spare parts for the oil
sector. The regime routinely circumvented U.N. sanctions. Under a
Memorandum of Understanding with the U.N., the regime shares
administration of 13 percent of "oil for food" revenues with Kurdish
parties in areas under their control.
Ethnically and linguistically the Iraqi population includes Arabs,
Kurds, Turkmen, Chaldeans, Assyrians, and Armenians. The religious mix
likewise is varied and consists of Shi'a and Sunni Muslims (both Arab
and Kurdish), Christians (including Chaldeans and Assyrians), Kurdish
Yazidis, and a small number of Jews and Sabean Mandaeans. Civil
uprisings occurred in previous years, especially in Kurdish areas in
the north and Shi'a areas in the south. The minority Arab Sunni regime
reacted with extreme repression against those who oppose or even
question it. The regime also systematically forced the removal of
ethnic minorities under its policy of "Arabizing" arable land.
The regime's human rights record remained extremely poor, and it
continued to commit numerous, serious human rights abuses. Citizens
did not have the right to change the regime. The regime continued
summarily to execute alleged political opponents and leaders of the
Shi'a religious community. Reports suggested that persons were
executed merely because of their association with an opposition group.
The regime continued to be responsible for disappearances and to kill
and torture persons suspected of or related to persons suspected of
oppositionist politics, economic crimes, military desertion, and a
variety of other activities.
Security forces routinely tortured, beat, raped, and otherwise abused
detainees. Prison conditions were extremely poor and frequently life
threatening. The regime reportedly conducted "prison cleansing"
campaigns to kill inmates in order to relieve overcrowding in the
prisons. The authorities routinely used arbitrary arrest and
detention, prolonged detention, and incommunicado detention, and
continued to deny citizens the basic right to due process. The regime
granted a muchpublicized amnesty in October to all prisoners except
those accused of spying for the United States or Israel, but by all
accounts prisoner release was not as universal as claimed. This public
relations event served mainly to corroborate previous reporting of
summary executions, disappearances, torture, and inhuman living
conditions within the regime's prison system. Many prisoners remained
unaccounted for after the amnesty.
Saddam Hussein and his inner circle of supporters continued to impose
arbitrary rule. The regime continued to infringe on citizens' privacy
rights. The regime severely restricted freedoms of speech, the press,
assembly, association, religion, and movement. The U.N. Special
Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the country issued a
report in March detailing ongoing, grievous violations of human rights
by the regime. The U.N. Commission on Human Rights and the U.N.
General Assembly passed a resolution in November criticizing the
regime's suppression of these freedoms. In April the European
Parliament published a report condemning the regime's human rights
abuses. Nevertheless, human rights abuses remained difficult to
document because of the regime's concealment of facts, including its
prohibition on the establishment of independent human rights
organizations, its persistent refusal to allow visits of human rights
monitors, and its continued restrictions designed to prevent dissent.
Although in February, the Special Rapporteur was allowed a single,
4-day visit to research abuses in the country for the first time since
1992, time and access were severely limited and strongly controlled by
the regime. It has refused to allow a followup visit. Past U.N.
reporting on the regime's human rights abuses was based almost
entirely on interviews with recent emigrants, opposition groups and
others that had contacts inside the country, and on published reports
from outside the country. Violence and discrimination against women
occurred.
The regime has enacted laws affording a variety of protections to
women; however, it has been difficult to determine the practical
effects of such protections. The regime neglected the health and
nutritional needs of children and discriminated against religious
minorities and ethnic groups. The regime restricted severely trade
union rights, and there were instances of forced labor.
The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK) have controlled most areas in the three northern
provinces of Erbil, Duhok, and Sulaymaniah since the regime withdrew
its military forces and civilian administrative personnel from the
area after the 1991 Kurdish uprising. The KDP and the PUK fought one
another from 1994 through 1997. In September 1998, they agreed to
unify their separate administrations and to hold new elections in July
1999. The ceasefire has held, although reunification measures were
long delayed. The unified Assembly was convened for the first time in
October. The PUK held municipal elections in February 2000 and the KDP
held municipal elections in May 2001, the first elections held in the
Kurdish-controlled areas since 1992. Foreign and local election
observers reported that the elections generally were fair.
The KDP, PUK, and other opposition groups committed human rights
abuses. However, the PUK and KDP have enacted laws establishing an
independent judiciary, providing for freedom of religion, freedom of
the press, freedom of assembly, the right to form political parties,
and women's and workers' rights. According to press reporting and
independent observers, both groups generally observed such laws in
practice. In addition, both the PUK and KDP have established human
rights ministries to monitor human rights conditions, to submit
reports to relevant international bodies, including the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), and to recommend ways to end
abuses.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 - Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom
From:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
In keeping with its long and established record of executing perceived
or alleged political opponents, the regime committed numerous
political and other extrajudicial killings throughout the reporting
period. The U.N. Special Rapporteur repeatedly criticized the regime
for the "sheer number of executions" taking place in the country, the
number of "extrajudicial executions on political grounds," and "the
absence of a due process of the law."
The list of offenses legally requiring a mandatory death penalty has
grown substantially in past years and includes anything that could be
characterized as "sabotaging the national economy." This includes
offenses such as forgery, as well as smuggling cars, spare parts,
heavy equipment, and machinery. More significantly, the Special
Rapporteur noted that mere membership in certain political parties was
punishable by death, and that there was a pervasive fear of death for
any act or expression of dissent. There were recurrent reports of the
use of the death penalty for such offenses as "insulting" the
President or the Ba'th Party. The Special Rapporteur also noted that
even the "suggestion that someone is not a supporter of the President
carries the prospect of the death penalty."
As in previous years, there were numerous credible reports that the
regime continued to execute persons thought to be involved in plotting
against Saddam Hussein or the Ba'th Party. These executions included
high-ranking civilian, military, and tribal leaders. In January Iraq
Press (IP) reported that three dissidents--Ali Hassan Abed, Jawad
Kadhem, and Abdujabaleel alUqaili---were executed for allegedly
attacking members of the Ba'th Party. In February IP also reported
that 10 senior army Republican Guard officers, including Lieutenant
General Mohammed al-Dulaimi, were executed for allegedly plotting a
coup. In April the U.K.-based Guardian newspaper reported that
Lieutenant Colonel Mohamad Daham al-Tikriti, a recent defector from
the General Security Service, admitted that in February 150-200
civilians were killed "at random" on suspicion of conspiracy and
buried in a mass grave near Baghdad as part of a larger effort in
which 1,500 civilians were summarily executed in the first 2 months of
the year. According to Human Rights Watch (HRW) World Report for 2003,
civilians detained in Abu Ghurayb prison were apparently executed in
March and others in June. A number of military personnel were
reportedly also executed in March in Baghdad, Mosul, and other cities.
HRW also documented that 11 military officers, including an Army Major
General, were executed between March and July 2001; and other
executions of mid-level to senior officers occurred in August and
October 2001, all on the charge of involvement in suspected coup
attempts. In June the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP) reported that eight
citizens from Basra were executed in November 2001 on suspicion of
contacting the opposition.
The regime reportedly continued to pursue a policy of eliminating
prominent Shi'a clerics and their followers suspected of disloyalty to
the regime. For instance, the Sunday Times reported in May that regime
security forces attacked Shi'a worshippers in Karbala on a religious
pilgrimage to the shrine of Imam Hussein, killing at least 40 of them.
This continued an alleged pattern of repression against Shi'a. For
example, according to HRW, five Shi'a from al-Najaf province were
among those apparently executed in March in Abu Ghurayb prison. In
2001 the regime reportedly executed two Shi'a clerics for claiming
that the regime was involved in the killing of a Shi'a cleric in 1999
and killed another Shi'a cleric, Hussein Bahr alUloom, for refusing to
appear on television to congratulate Qusay Saddam Hussein on his
election to a Ba'th Party position. In 1998 and 1999, the regime
killed a number of leading Shi'a clerics, prompting the former Special
Rapporteur in 1999 to express his concern to the regime that the
killings might be part of a systematic attack by regime officials on
the independent leadership of the Shi'a community (see Section 2.c.).
The regime did not respond to the Special Rapporteur's letter.
Regime agents publicly targeted family members of defectors and
dissidents for torture and killing (see Section 1.f.). This continued
an alleged pattern of torture of relatives of dissidents. For example,
in 2001 the regime reportedly tortured to death the mother of three
Iraqi defectors for her children's opposition activities. In 2000
regime agents reportedly killed Safiyah Hassan, who allegedly publicly
criticized the regime for killing her husband and two sons, Hussein
and Saddam Kamal. Her husband and sons had been senior regime
officials; however, the brothers defected to Jordan in 1996. The
regime offered the men immunity if they returned to the country;
however, upon their return, regime agents killed them and their
father.
Regime security forces conducted numerous killings of political
prisoners, minority group members, criminal suspects, and others
during attempted apprehension or while in custody. Opposition groups
and defectors continued to provide detailed accounts, including the
names of hundreds of persons killed, of summary prison executions
carried out for the apparent purpose of reducing prison overcrowding.
In September 2001, the regime executed 28 political prisoners in Abu
Ghurayb prison as a part of its prison cleansing campaign. During 2000
the Special Rapporteur received reports referring to a prison
cleansing execution campaign taking place in Abu Ghurayb, Radwaniyah,
and other prisons. A former officer from the Mukhabarat (Intelligence
Service) reported that he participated in a 1998 mass murder at Abu
Ghurayb prison following a Revolutionary Command Council directive to
"clean out" the country's prisons. The regime's motive for such high
numbers of summary executions, estimated at more than 4,000 since
1997, may also be linked to reported efforts to intimidate the
population.
In a much-publicized move, the regime announced 48 hours in advance a
surprise amnesty, which included political prisoners and army
deserters in October. Those released were mainly held in Abu Ghurayb
prison. Press reports reflected evidence that some prisoners were
summarily executed in anticipation of the release. Also, many families
expecting the release of relatives in this amnesty reportedly
discovered that they had been executed in captivity without trial. The
regime made no effort to investigate current or past cases, answer
accusations about summary executions, or identify and punish
perpetrators during the year.
Among many other examples of killings in custody, HRW reported that
the regime hanged 'Abd al-Waheed al-Rifa'i in March 2001 after 2 years
in detention without trial. Relatives reported his body bore marks of
torture when they collected it from the General Security Directorate
in Baghdad. Reports of deaths in custody due to poor prison conditions
and official negligence continued (see Section 1.c.). In addition,
many people who were displaced forcibly still lived in tent camps
under harsh conditions, which also resulted in many deaths (see
Sections 2.d. and 5).
Reports of deaths of civilians caused by landmines continued.
Approximately 7 million landmines left over from the Iran-Iraq war
remain in place in northern Iraq. PUK representatives reported that
the population living in the region under its control suffered
approximately 250 casualties per month from exploded mines. Many of
these victims died. Despite repeated requests, the regime refused to
provide maps of known mine fields to facilitate their removal (see
Section 1.g.).
There were many notable cases of regime extrajudicial killings that
remained outstanding. As in previous years, the regime continued to
deny the widespread killings of Kurds in the north of the country
during the "Anfal" campaign of 1988 (see Sections 1.b. and 1.g.). Both
the Special Rapporteur and HRW concluded that the regime's policies
against the Kurds raised questions of crimes against humanity and
violations of the 1948 Genocide Convention.
In February the Minister of Justice specifically informed the Special
Rapporteur that prostitution is not punishable by death under the law
and claimed that no one had been sentenced to death for prostitution
in many years. However, security forces allegedly beheaded a number of
women suspected of prostitution and some men suspected of facilitating
or covering up such activities in October 2001. Security agents
reportedly decapitated numerous women and men in front of their family
members. According to Amnesty International (AI), the victim's heads
were displayed in front of their homes for several days. Thirty of the
victims' names reportedly were published, which included three doctors
and one medical assistant.
Politically motivated killings by opposition groups and
rebel/insurgent/terrorist groups continued. Political killings and
terrorist actions continued in the Kurdcontrolled north of the
country. For example, numerous press reports in November and December
outlined several battles in the northeast between PUK forces and
fighters of Ansar al-Islam (AAI), an Islamic extremist group. Such
fighting continued a pattern of violence in that area. In 2001
assailants assassinated the governor of Irbil, Fransu Hariri. PUK and
KDP investigators blamed Islamic groups such as AAI for the killing.
In 2000 unknown persons killed the leader of the Democratic
Nationalist Union of Kurdistan, Sirbit Mahmud. In July 2000, unknown
assailants killed parliamentary deputy Osman Hassan. Also in July
2000, PUK forces reportedly killed a number of members of the Iraqi
Communist Workers Party (ICWP), and KDP forces killed several members
of the Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF). Neither the PUK nor the KDP released
information regarding investigations into the killings. Political
killings and terrorist actions continued in ethnically Shi'a southern
provinces. In January IP reported three assailants attacked Major
Kadhem al-Zaidi, a senior Mukhabarat officer notorious for his use of
torture, near Basra. This continued a pattern of retaliatory violence
in the south of the country. For example, in 2001 the Supreme Council
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) reported that its members
killed Raed Khidir, a Ba'th Party official in the south.
Killings due to societal violence were also reported. For example,
Assyrian and Chaldean press reported in August that a Catholic nun was
slain in Baghdad by alleged Muslim extremists (see Section 2.c.).
b. Disappearance
There continued to be widespread reports of disappearances throughout
the year. The regime did nothing to address accusations regarding
previously reported disappearances. A large number of presumed
disappeared citizens remained unaccounted for.
Hundreds were still missing in the aftermath of the brief military
occupation of Erbil in August 1996. Many of these persons may have
been killed surreptitiously late in 1997 and throughout 1998, in the
reported prison cleansing campaign (see Section 1.a.). The missing
were primarily from the Kurd minority but included members of the
Assyrian, Turkmen, and Yazidi communities.
The regime continued to ignore the more than 16,000 documented
disappearance cases conveyed to it in 1994 and 1995 by the U.N.
Special Rapporteur. Despite several well-publicized exchanges with
Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Iran, the regime effectively ignored
requests from those Governments to account for those who disappeared
during Iraq's 1990-91 occupation of Kuwait, and regarding prisoners of
war captured in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war. The regime failed to
return, and did little to account for, a large number of Kuwaiti
citizens and citizens of other countries who were detained during the
Iraqi occupation of Kuwait. Of 609 cases of missing Kuwaiti citizens
under review by the Tripartite Commission on Gulf War Missing, only 3
have been resolved. The regime denied having any knowledge of the
others and claimed that any relevant records were lost in the
aftermath of the Gulf War, although it subsequently claimed to have
provided such records to Kuwait in October. Iran reported that the
regime still had not accounted for 5,000 Iranian prisoners of war
(POWs) missing since the IranIraq War. The Governments of Kuwait,
Saudi Arabia, and Iran repeated calls for more dialog on this subject.
The majority of the 16,496 cases known to the Special Rapporteur were
persons of Kurdish origin who disappeared during the 1988 Anfal
campaign. In February the International Alliance for Justice/Coalition
for Justice in Iraq (AIJ/CJI) and the British Broadcasting Company
(BBC) reported the discovery of a fourth mass grave holding the
executed bodies of six ethnic Kurds believed killed during the Anfal
campaign, providing further evidence of the fate of the disappeared
Kurds. The Special Rapporteur estimated that the total number of Kurds
who disappeared during that period could reach several tens of
thousands. Human Rights Watch estimated the total at between 70,000
and 150,000, and AI at more than 100,000. The second largest group of
disappearance cases known to the Special Rapporteur consisted of Shi'a
who were reported to have disappeared in the late 1970s and early
1980s as their families were expelled to Iran due to their alleged
Persian ancestry.
In 2001 AI reported that the regime has the world's worst record for
numbers of persons who disappeared and remained unaccounted for.
Numerous credible reports alleged the existence of special prison
wards that held individuals whose whereabouts, status, and fate was
not disclosed (see Section 1.c.).
In 1997 and 1999, AI documented the repeated failure by the regime to
respond to requests for information about persons who disappeared. The
report detailed numerous unresolved cases dating from the early 1980s
through the mid1990s. The report concluded that few victims became
targets of the regime because of any crime they had committed; rather,
they were arrested and held as hostages in order to force a relative,
who may have escaped abroad, to surrender. Others were arrested
because of their family's link to a political opponent or simply
because of their ethnic origin (see Sections 1.d. and 1.f.).
The Special Rapporteur and several human rights groups continued to
request that the regime provide information about the 1991 arrest of
the late Grand Ayatollah Abdullah Quasi Al-Koei and 108 of his
associates. The Ayatollah died while under house arrest in Al-Najaf.
Other individuals who were arrested with him have not been accounted
for, and the regime refused to respond to queries regarding their
status. Similarly, AI identified a number of Ayatollah Sadden
al-Sadr's aides who were arrested in the weeks prior to his killing in
February 1999 (see Sections 1.a., 1.d., and 1.g.). Their whereabouts
remained unknown. In its November 1999 report, AI identified eight
aides of al-Sadr who disappeared.
In addition to the tens of thousands of reported disappearances, human
rights groups reported during the year that the regime continued to
hold thousands of other citizens in incommunicado detention (see
Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 1.e.).
In October press reports indicated that prisoners released in the
prisoner amnesty, and families of prisoners that failed to appear
after the release, alleged that numerous political prisoners remained
incarcerated or had been secretly executed in prison. This event
appeared to confirm the reported pattern of disappearances and secret
executions alleged by human rights groups. The regime did not
acknowledge conducting abductions, and has not iniated any
investigations into alleged disappearances, nor attempted to bring
perpetrators to justice.
c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment
The Constitution expressly prohibits torture; however, the security
services routinely and systematically tortured detainees throughout
the year. According to former prisoners, torture techniques included
branding, electric shock administered to the genitals and other areas,
beating, removal of fingernails, amputation without anesthesia,
burning with hot irons and blowtorches, suspension from rotating
ceiling fans, dripping of acid on the skin, rape, breaking of limbs,
denial of food and water, extended solitary confinement in dark and
extremely small compartments, and threats to rape or otherwise harm
family members and relatives. Evidence of such torture was often
apparent when security forces returned the mutilated bodies of torture
victims to their families. There were persistent reports that families
were made to pay for the cost of executions of loved ones. Refugees
who arrived in Europe often reported instances of torture to receiving
governments and displayed scars and mutilations to substantiate their
claims. In August 2001, AI released a report entitled "Iraq:
Systematic Torture of Political Prisoners," which detailed the
systematic and routine use of torture against suspected political
opponents and, occasionally, other prisoners.
The Special Rapporteur continued to receive reports that arrested
persons routinely were subjected to mistreatment, including prolonged
interrogations accompanied by torture, beatings, and various
deprivations. For some years, the Special Rapporteur expressed concern
about cruel and unusual punishments prescribed by the law, including
amputations and branding. In 2000 the authorities reportedly
introduced tongue amputation as a punishment for persons who
criticized Saddam Hussein or his family. In February regime
authorities reportedly amputated the tongue of a person who allegedly
criticized Saddam Hussein in the city of Diwaniya. As on previous
occasions, authorities reportedly performed the amputation in front of
a large crowd. Similar tongue amputations reportedly occurred in the
city of Hilla during 2001. The regime never acknowledged such reports,
conducted any investigation, nor took action against those who
amputated prisoners' tongues. The Special Rapporteur received numerous
reports of soldiers having their ears cut off as punishment for
desertion. The Minister of the Interior admitted the existence of this
practice, but claimed, in February, that "it had now definitively
ceased."
There were numerous allegations of politically motivated torture and
reports of torture against family members, including the children, of
suspected critics of the regime. For instance, a Health Coordinator
for the refugee health program in Yemen alleged in January that an
Iraqi child under her care, bearing the marks of needle scars on its
wrists and forearms, had reportedly been injected with an agent that
caused severe mental retardation in retaliation for the father's
suspected opposition to the regime. The U.K.-based Independent
newspaper reported in March that the regime had begun publicly to
threaten torture against family members of prominent exiled
oppositionists and dissidents in an effort to curtail their political
activities (see Section 1.f.). These reports continued a pattern of
alleged systematic use of torture by the regime for political or other
nationalist reasons. For example, the regime routinely tortured
national soccer team players for poor performance. In May 2001, Saad
Keis Naoman, a soccer player who defected to Europe, alleged that he
and his teammates were beaten and humiliated at the order of Uday
Saddam Hussein. In 2000 three soccer players, who played for a team
that lost an October game in the Asian Cup quarterfinals, reportedly
were whipped and detained for 3 days. Sharar Haydar Mohamad alHadithi,
a former soccer player, stated in August 1999 that he and his
teammates were tortured on Uday Hussein's orders for not winning
matches. In 1997 members of the national soccer team reportedly were
beaten and tortured on Uday's orders because of poor play in a World
Cup qualifying match.
Beyond the use of torture, the regime systematically employed cruel,
inhuman, and degrading treatment of people for political purposes. For
example, the BBC reported in June that the regime forbids parents from
burying the bodies of deceased children for an extended period of time
(reportedly up to 3 or 4 months) so that they can be amassed for
burial after propaganda parades and nationalist ceremonies.
Human rights organizations and opposition groups continued to receive
reports of women who suffered from severe psychological trauma after
being raped while in custody. Security forces also reportedly sexually
assaulted and threatened sexual assault against officials, opposition
members, and their families, in order to blackmail them into
compliance (see Section 1.f.). This continued an alleged pattern of
the regime's systematic use of rape for political purposes. Former
Mukhabarat member Khalid Al-Janabi reported in 2001 that a Mukhabarat
unit, the Technical Operations Directorate, used rape and sexual
assault in a systematic and institutionalized manner for political
purposes. The unit reportedly also videotaped the rape of female
relatives of suspected oppositionists and used the videotapes for
blackmail purposes and to ensure future cooperation (see Section
1.f.). The security forces allegedly also raped women who were
captured during the Anfal campaign in the 1980s and during the 1990
occupation of Kuwait. The regime never acknowledged these reports,
conducted any investigation, nor took action against those who
committed the rapes.
Prison conditions were extremely poor and life threatening. There
reportedly were numerous official, semi-official, and private prisons
throughout the country. Overcrowding was a serious problem. In May
1998, Labor and Social Affairs Minister Abdul Hamid Aziz Sabah stated
in an interview that "the prisons are filled to five times their
capacity and the situation is serious." Sabah was dismissed from his
post at that time, and the regime-owned daily newspaper Babel
reiterated the regime's longstanding claim that it held virtually no
prisoners. However, in February the Minister of Labor and Social
Affairs admitted to the Special Rapporteur that the prison system was
overcrowded. It remained unclear to what extent the mass executions
committed pursuant to the prison cleansing campaign reduced
overcrowding prior to the October prisoner amnesty (see Section 1.a.).
It also remained unclear how many prisoners were actually released in
the amnesty. Press reports indicated that the chief focus of the
prison amnesty was Abu Ghurayb prison, and that other facilities held
many political prisoners. Many families of prisoners who did not
appear in the amnesty alleged that their relatives were either killed
in custody or remained secreted in other facilities.
Certain prisons were infamous for routine mistreatment of detainees
and prisoners. Abu Ghurayb, Baladiat, Makasib, Rashidiya, Radwaniyah,
and other prisons reportedly had torture chambers. Hundreds of Fayli
(Shi'a) Kurds and other citizens of Iranian origin, who had
disappeared in the early 1980s during the IranIraq war, reportedly
were being held incommunicado at the Abu Ghurayb prison. There were
numerous mentally ill prisoners at AlShamma'iya prison in Baghdad,
which reportedly was the site of torture and a number of
disappearances. The AlRadwaniyah detention center was a former POW
facility near Baghdad and reportedly the site of torture as well as
mass executions (see Section 1.a.).
In March the regime released the body of a prominent executed
dissident. The family alleged that the body bore obvious marks of
torture from his incarceration (see Section 1.a.). This continued an
alleged pattern of systematic abuse of prisoners by the regime. For
example, in 2000 the Special Rapporteur reported receiving information
about two detention facilities in which prisoners were locked in metal
boxes the size of coffins that reportedly were opened for only 30
minutes each day. A multistory underground detention and torture
center reportedly was built under the general military hospital
building close to the Al-Rashid military camp on the outskirts of
Baghdad. The Center for Human Rights of the Iraqi Communist Party
(CHR/ICP) stated that the complex included torture and execution
chambers. A section reportedly was reserved for prisoners in a
"frozen" state--whose status, fate, or whereabouts were not disclosed
(see Section 1.b.). In 2000 the Iraqi Communist Party reported that 13
prisoners died at Makaseb detention center in December 1999 and
January 2000 as a result of torture and poor prison conditions. ICP
reported that three prisoners were killed in a prison in Ashar in the
southern province of Basra in March when a guard who was in the
process of beating a number of prisoners fired a gun at prisoners who
tried to defend themselves. Another prisoner injured in the incident
reportedly later died of his wounds (see Section 1.g.).
In the past, the regime had not permitted visits by human rights
observers, but did allow the Special Rapporteur to inspect briefly
several prisons during his February visit. The Special Rapporteur
observed that sections of the Abu Ghurayb facility that he visited
kept prisoners in "conditions that were almost appalling." The regime
claimed that prisons were open to inspections from the ICRC in
accordance with standard modalities, but the ICRC had stated that it
had only been given intermittent access to facilities such as Abu
Ghurayb prison, and that access was only to well-known, better-kept
facilities for foreign nationals.
Iraqi Kurdish regional officials reported in 2000 that prisons in the
three northern provinces were open to the ICRC and other international
observers. According to the ICRC, regular and consistent improvement
in conditions was observed on its weekly prison visits to declared
prisons. However, both the PUK and the KDP reportedly maintained
private, undeclared prisons, and both groups reportedly denied access
to ICRC officials to those facilities. There were reports that
authorities of both the PUK and KDP tortured detainees and prisoners.
d. Arbitrary Arrest, Detention, or Exile
The Constitution and the legal code explicitly prohibit arbitrary
arrest and detention; however, the authorities routinely engaged in
these practices. The Special Rapporteur continued to receive reports
of widespread arbitrary arrest and detention, often for long periods
of time, without access to a lawyer or the courts. As indicated in the
November 1999 AI report, "Iraq: Victims of Systematic Repression,"
many thousands of persons have been arrested arbitrarily in the last
few years because of suspected opposition activities or because they
were related to persons sought by the authorities. Those arrested
often were taken away by plainclothes security agents, who offered no
explanation and produced no warrant to the person or family members
(see Section 1.f.). The authorities frequently denied detainees legal
representation and visits by family members. In most cases, family
members did not know the whereabouts of detainees and did not make
inquiries for fear of reprisal. Many persons were taken away in front
of family members, who heard nothing further until days, months, or
years later, when they were told to retrieve the often-mutilated
corpse of their relative. There also were reports of the widespread
practice of holding family members and close associates responsible
for the alleged actions of others (see Section 1.f.).
IP reported in March that the regime had arbitrarily arrested 50 Kurds
in a new mass detention in Khanaqin as part of its ethnic cleansing
campaign in Kurdish areas under its control. The report alleged that
Ba'thist agents subsequently confiscated 40 private residences as part
of this effort. This continued an alleged pattern of arbitrary arrest
for political aims. For example, in 2001 the regime initiated an
arrest and detention campaign involving thousands of individuals who
initially had volunteered to serve in the newly formed AlQuds militia
force, but who had not shown up for training.
Mass arbitrary arrests and detentions often occurred in areas in which
antiregime leaflets were distributed. In June 2001, the CJI reported
that the regime arrested dozens of lawyers and jurists for
distributing oppositionist leaflets that reportedly indicated the
authors' intent to expose the regime's violations of human rights.
Security forces arrested hundreds of persons in alNajaf, Karbala, and
in the Shi'a section of Baghdad following an anonymous distribution of
antiregime leaflets in 2000. Many other arrests had no apparent basis.
In September 2001, the regime arrested and expelled six U.N.
humanitarian workers and refused to provide any evidence as a basis
for its actions (see Section 1.g.).
According to international human rights groups, numerous foreigners
arrested arbitrarily in previous years also remained in detention.
The regime reportedly targeted the Shi'a community for arbitrary
arrest and other abuses. In February IP reported that security
authorities detained and questioned Grand Ayatollah Ali alSisstani in
the city of Najaf without a warrant on several occasions. This
continued an alleged pattern of the regime's use of arbitrary arrest
and detention to persecute the Shi'a population. For example, in May
2001, the regime reportedly executed two Shi'a clerics, Abdulsattar
Abed-Ibrahim al-Mausawi and Ahmad al-Hashemi, for claiming that the
regime was involved in the killing of a Shi'a cleric in 1999 and the
killings of four engineers from the Electricity Board. In the weeks
preceding the February 1999 killing of Ayatollah Sadeq al-Sadr and two
of his sons, many of al-Sadr's aides were arrested, and their
whereabouts still were unknown at year's end (see Sections 1.a., 1.b.,
and 1.g.). Hundreds more reportedly were arrested and the houses of
many demolished in the weeks following Sadr's killing (see Section
1.g.).
Hundreds of Fayli (Shi'a) Kurds and other citizens of Iranian origin,
who disappeared in the early 1980s during the IranIraq war, reportedly
were being held incommunicado at the Abu Ghurayb prison (see Section
1.c.). According to a report received by the Special Rapporteur in
1998, such persons had been detained without charge for close to 2
decades in extremely harsh conditions. The report stated that many of
the detainees were used as subjects in the country's secret, outlawed
experimental chemical and biological weapons programs.
Although no statistics were available, observers estimated the number
of political detainees to be in the tens of thousands, some of whom
have been held for decades.
In recent years the regime made several efforts to improve its
standing with human rights groups and the U.N. Special Rapporteur by
declaring prisoner, deserter, and exilee amnesties, most recently in
October (see Section 1.c.). In June 1999, in another example, the
regime announced a general amnesty for citizens who had left the
country illegally or were exiled officially for a specified period of
time but failed to return after the period of exile expired (see
Section 2.d.). No citizens were known to have returned to the country
based upon this amnesty, and an estimated 2 to 3 million self-exiled
citizens reportedly remained fearful of returning to the country. For
the most part, these declared amnesties have been dismissed as public
relations gestures and merely corroborated allegations that the regime
arbitrarily arrested and detained many citizens. Past reporting also
indicated that it was very difficult or expensive for prisoners to
obtain release once incarcerated. In May 2001, the press reported that
the authorities released 3,000 prisoners who paid bribes to prison
officials to have their prison terms cut. One former prisoner said his
family paid approximately $3,125 (5 million Iraqi dinars) for him to
be released after serving 7 years of his original 15-year sentence.
The PUK and the KDP reportedly held some political prisoners and
detainees in the north of the country. The KDP and PUK reached
agreement for the mutual release of political prisoners in 1999. In
March 2000, the KDP released 10 PUK prisoners and the PUK released 5
KDP prisoners (see Section 1.g.). In 2001 PUK and KDP officials
reported that all remaining PUK and KDP political prisoners and
detainees had been exchanged per the agreement.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
The judiciary was not independent, and there was no check on the
President's power to override any court decision. In 1999 the Special
Rapporteur and international human rights groups observed that the
repressive nature of the political and legal systems precludes the
rule of law. Numerous laws facilitate continued repression, and the
regime used extrajudicial methods to extract confessions or coerce
cooperation.
There are parallel judicial systems: The regular courts, which try
common criminal offenses; and the special security courts, which
generally try national security cases but also may try criminal cases.
In addition to the Court of Appeal, there is the Court of Cassation,
which is the highest court. Special security courts reportedly have
jurisdiction in all cases involving espionage and treason, peaceful
political dissent, smuggling, currency exchange violations, and drug
trafficking. According to the Special Rapporteur and other sources,
military officers or civil servants with no legal training head these
tribunals, which hear cases in secret. Authorities often held
defendants incommunicado and did not permit contact with lawyers (see
Section 1.d.). The courts admitted confessions extracted by torture,
which often served as the basis for conviction (see Section 1.c.).
Many cases appeared to end in summary execution, although defendants
may appeal to the President for clemency. Saddam Hussein may grant
clemency in any case that suits his political goals or predilections.
The Minister of Justice admitted the existence of the special security
courts in February but claimed that they were staffed with judges from
the regular judiciary, and that trials in such courts were conducted
with all the rights and procedures of the normal civil courts. This
prompted the Special Rapporteur to conclude that if this were true,
such courts were unnecessary. There were no Shari'a (Islamic law)
courts; however, regular courts were empowered to administer Shari'a
in cases involving personal status, such as divorce and inheritance.
Procedures in the regular courts in theory provide for many
protections; however, the regime often assigned to the security courts
cases that, on their legal merits, would appear to fall under the
jurisdiction of the regular courts. Trials in the regular courts are
public, and defendants are entitled to counsel, at regime expense in
the case of indigents. Defense lawyers have the right to review the
charges and evidence brought against their clients. There is no jury
system; panels of three judges try cases. Defendants have the right to
appeal to the Court of Appeal and then to the Court of Cassation.
The regime shielded certain groups from prosecution for alleged
crimes. For example, a 1990 decree granted immunity to men who
committed "honor crimes," a violent assault with intent to commit
murder against a woman by a relative for her perceived immodest
behavior or alleged sexual misconduct (see Section 5). A 1992 decree
granted immunity from prosecution to members of the Ba'th Party and
security forces who killed anyone while in pursuit of army deserters.
Unconfirmed but widespread reports indicated that this decree had been
applied to prevent trials or punishment of regime officials.
It was difficult to estimate the number of political prisoners,
because the regime rarely acknowledged arrests or imprisonments, and
families were afraid to talk about arrests. Many of the tens of
thousands of persons who disappeared or were killed in the past few
years originally were held as political prisoners.
Both the PUK- and the KDP-controlled local administrations maintained
separate judicial systems. They used the Iraqi legal code. Both come
under a separate Supreme Court of Cassation. During the year, PUK and
KDP officials reported that the PUK and KDP had exchanged all
political prisoners and detainees in accordance with a 1999 agreement.
However, the PUK and the KDP reportedly continued to hold some
political prisoners and detainees (see Section 1.d.).
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or
Correspondence
The regime frequently infringed on citizens' constitutional right to
privacy, particularly in cases allegedly involving national security.
The law defined security offenses so broadly that authorities
effectively were exempt from the legal requirement to obtain search
warrants, and searches without warrants were commonplace. The regime
routinely ignored constitutional provisions designed to protect the
confidentiality of mail, telegraphic correspondence, and telephone
conversations. The regime periodically jammed news broadcasts from
outside the country, including those of opposition groups (see Section
2.a.). The security services and the Ba'th Party maintained pervasive
networks of informers to deter dissident activity and instill fear in
the public.
The authorities continued systematically to detain, abuse, and kill
family members and close associates of alleged regime opponents (see
Sections 1.a., 1.b., 1.d., and 1.g.). In January for example, AIJ/CJI
reported that the regime publicly threatened on Iraqi satellite TV to
systematically rape the female relatives of Faiq Sheikh Ali, a
prominent dissident and journalist residing abroad, in retaliation for
his criticism of the regime on a political talk show. This continued
an alleged pattern of the regime's systematic interference with
privacy for political reasons. For example, in May 2001, the
authorities reportedly tortured to death the mother of three defectors
because of her children's opposition activities. In June 2000, a
former general reportedly received a videotape of security forces
raping a female family member. He subsequently received a telephone
call from an intelligence agent who stated that another female
relative was being held and warned him to stop speaking out against
the regime. In November 1999, the regime expelled more than 4,000
families that had sought refuge in Baghdad after the 1991 Gulf War.
The regime continued its Arabization campaign of ethnic cleansing
designed to harass and expel ethnic Kurds and Turkmen from
regime-controlled areas. According to press reports and opposition
sources, the regime forcibly displaced hundreds of families. In March
the Los Angeles Times reported that the regime extended its
Arabization efforts to include the placement of Arab names on
headstones in cemeteries in non-Arab communities. In April the regime
issued a new decree to all hospitals and bureaus registering births
and deaths prohibiting the registration of Christian names. As in
previous years, the regime periodically sealed off entire districts in
Kirkuk and conducted day-long, housetohouse searches (see Sections
2.d. and 5). Regime officials also took hostage members of minority
groups to intimidate their families into leaving their home regions
(see Sections 1.d., 2.d., and 5). Authorities demolished the houses
and detained and executed family members of Shi'a who protested regime
actions (see Sections 1.d. and 1.g.).
The Special Rapporteur noted that guilt by association was facilitated
by administrative requirements imposed on relatives of deserters or
other perceived opponents of the regime. For example, conscripts were
required to secure a guarantor to sign a document stating that the
named conscript would not desert military service and that the
guarantor would accept personal responsibility if the conscript
deserted. Relatives who did not report deserters could lose their
ration cards for purchasing regime-controlled food supplies, be
evicted from their residences, or face the arrest of other family
members. The Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq
reported in October and December 1999 that authorities denied food
ration cards to families that failed to send their young sons to the
"Lion Cubs of Saddam" compulsory weapons training camps (see Section
5).
The Special Security Office reportedly continued efforts to intimidate
the relatives of opposition members. Relatives of citizens outside the
country who were suspected of sympathizing with the opposition were
forced to call the suspected opposition members to warn them against
participating in opposition conferences or activities. Others were
publicly threatened on satellite television with rape or torture if
their relatives failed to cease political activities (see Section
2.a.).
g. Use of Excessive Force and Violations of Humanitarian Law in
Internal Conflicts
The authorities continued to detain, abuse, and kill family members
and close associates of alleged regime opponents (see Sections 1.a.,
1.b., and 1.f.). The regime had continued a campaign of intimidation
directed at U.N. and nongovernmental organization (NGO) relief
workers. In February 2001, the Foreign Minister threatened to cut
official ties to U.N. workers supervising oil-for-food program
distribution in northern Iraq, and to revoke their visas and deport
them. In September 2001, the regime expelled six U.N. humanitarian
relief workers without providing any explanation.
The regime continued to Arabize certain Kurdish areas, such as the
urban centers of Kirkuk and Mosul, through the forced movement of
local residents from their homes and villages and their replacement by
Arabs from outside the area (see Sections 1.d., 1.f., 2.d., and 5).
Landmines in the north, mostly planted by the regime before 1991,
continued to kill and maim civilians. Many of the mines were laid
during the Iran-Iraq and Gulf Wars; however, the army failed to clear
them before it abandoned the area. Kurdish officials estimated that at
least 7 million landmines remained in place in Kurdish-controlled
areas. Landmines also were a problem along the Iraq-Iran border
throughout the central and southern areas in the country. There was no
information regarding civilian casualties or the regime's efforts, if
any, to clear old mine fields in areas under the central regime's
control. According to reports by the U.N. Office of Project Services,
the Mines Advisory Group, and Norwegian Peoples' Aid, landmines killed
more than 3,000 persons in the three northern provinces since the 1991
uprising. PUK officials estimated that mine casualties in its area of
control occurred at a rate of approximately 250 per month. The Special
Rapporteur repeatedly reminded the regime of its obligation under the
Landmines Protocol to protect civilians from the effects of mines.
Various NGOs continued efforts to remove landmines from the area and
increase awareness of mines among local residents. PUK officials
stated that the regime repeatedly rebuffed requests to provide maps of
known minefields. In December 1998, the regime declared that
mine-clearing activity was subversive and ordered NGO workers
performing such activity to leave the country. In April 2001, Kurdish
sources accused the regime of exploding a bomb near an NGO working on
mine clearing in the north. In April 1999, a New Zealander working for
the U.N. mine-clearing program in the north was shot and killed at
close range by an unknown assailant. The KDP arrested a person who
claimed to have killed the U.N. worker on behalf of Saddam Hussein's
Fedayeen.
Regime attacks on Shi'a worshippers continued an alleged pattern of
the use of excessive force for internal political reasons. For
example, following the February 1999 killing of Ayatollah Mohammad
Sadeq al-Sadr and his sons (see Section 1.a.), hundreds of persons
were reportedly killed in military assaults on protesters in Shi'a
areas of Baghdad, and in cities with a Shi'a majority such as Karbala,
Nasiriyah, Najaf, and Basra. While a funeral for al-Sadr was
prohibited, spontaneous gatherings of mourners took place in the days
after his death. Regime security forces used excessive force in
breaking up these illegal gatherings, killing hundreds of persons. In
2000 authorities continued to target alleged supporters of al-Sadr.
Security officials reportedly executed 36 religious students who had
been arrested after alSadr's killing. In 1999 and 2000, as a reprisal
for the disturbances following al-Sadr's killing, the regime expelled
approximately 4,000 Shi'a families from Baghdad. Numerous Shi'a who
fled the country in 1999 and 2000 told HRW that security forces
interrogated, detained, and tortured them.
After the 1991 Gulf War, victims and eyewitnesses described war crimes
perpetrated by the regime, including deliberate killing, torture,
rape, pillage, and hostage-taking. HRW and other organizations worked
with various agencies to bring a genocide case at the International
Court of Justice against the regime for its conduct of the Anfal
campaign against the Kurds in 1988.
During the year, no hostilities were reported between the two major
Iraqi Kurdish parties in de facto control of northern Iraq. The KDP
and the PUK agreed in September 1998 to unify their administrations;
however, little progress has been made toward implementing the
agreement. In October 1999, senior officials from the two parties
agreed on a series of measures, including prisoner exchanges, the
return of internally displaced persons (IDPs) to their homes, and
arrangements for freedom of movement between their respective areas.
Most of the measures were not implemented (see Section 1.d.). However,
in 2001 the two main Kurdish parties reported some progress toward
full implementation of the Washington Agreement, including the return
of 3,000 IDPs displaced since the 1995-96 fighting, improved movement
between the Kurdish-controlled areas, and the exchange of all
prisoners. The unified Assembly was convened for the first time in
October.
Press reports indicated that the PUK and AAI fought several minor
battles resulting in a few deaths during the reporting period.
Although minor compared to past events, this continued a pattern of
violence in the Kurdish North. For example, in 2001 armed hostilities
that resulted in deaths were reported between the PUK and Islamic
groups, the PUK and the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and the KDP and
the PKK. In July 2000, the PUK reportedly ordered all opposition
groups to move their offices out of Sulaymaniah's city center
following a number of bombings; the ICWP reportedly refused to move.
PUK security forces subsequently killed at least six ICWP members and
arrested several others at an ICWP office in Sulaymaniah. PUK forces
also killed several ICWP members who were inside a car. In connection
with this dispute, the PUK closed the ICWPaffiliated Independent
Women's Organization and the Women's Protection Center in July 2000
and detained temporarily 12 women who had been staying at an abused
women's shelter within the Center. The PUK announced that it would
investigate the security forces' actions; however, no information was
available by year's end.
Section 2 - Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and the Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech and of the press "in
compliance with the revolutionary, national, and progressive trend;"
however, in practice the regime did not permit freedom of speech or of
the press and did not tolerate political dissent in areas under its
control. In November 2000, the U.N. General Assembly again criticized
the regime's "suppression of freedom of thought, expression,
information, association, and assembly." The Special Rapporteur stated
in October 1999 that citizens lived "in a climate of fear," in which
whatever they said or did, particularly in the area of politics,
involved "the risk of arrest and interrogation by the police or
military intelligence." He noted that "the mere suggestion that
someone is not a supporter of the President carries the prospect of
the death penalty."
There were numerous reports throughout the year of regime interference
in the freedom of speech. For example, in February the World
Association of Newspapers (WAN) condemned the regime's attempt to
muzzle prominent dissident journalist Faiq Sheikh Ali (see Section
1.f.) and expressed concern that another prominent journalist received
death threats during the year for his contact with members of the
opposition. This continued a pattern of alleged regime interference in
the freedom of speech. In June 2001, the Human Rights Alliance
reported that the regime had killed more than 500 journalists and
intellectuals over the previous decade.
The regime, the Ba'th Party, or persons close to Saddam Hussein owned
all print and broadcast media and operated them as propaganda outlets.
They generally did not report opposing points of view that were
expressed either domestically or abroad. A 2002 Freedom House report
rated press freedom in the country at 96 out of a possible 100 points,
with
The Ministry of Culture and Information periodically held meetings at
which it issued general guidelines for the press. Foreign journalists
must work from offices located within the ministry building and were
accompanied everywhere they go by ministry officers, who reportedly
restricted their movements and made it impossible for them to interact
freely with citizens.
According to the Special Rapporteur, journalists were under continuous
pressure to join the Ba'th Party and must follow the mandates of the
Iraqi Union of Journalists, headed by Uday Hussein. According to local
sources, in 1999 Uday Hussein dismissed hundreds of union members who
had not praised Saddam Hussein and the regime sufficiently or often
enough (see Section 6.a.). Each reporter must inform a security
officer regarding the nature of news intended for the foreign media,
and intelligence officers screen broadcasts before airing. In October
the regime attempted to expel foreign journalists who reported on the
spontaneous demonstrations of family members of disappeared prisoners
that erupted after they failed to appear in the prison amnesty. This
continued a pattern of interference in the freedom of the press. For
example, in September 1999, Hashem Hasan, a journalist and Baghdad
University professor, was arrested after declining an appointment as
editor of one of Uday Hussein's publications. The Paris-based
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) sent a letter of appeal to Uday
Hussein; however, Hassan's fate and whereabouts still remained unknown
at year's end (see Section 1.b.).
The regime regularly jammed foreign news broadcasts (see Section
1.f.). Satellite dishes, modems, and fax machines were banned,
although some restrictions reportedly were lifted in 1999.
Regime-controlled areas had only two land-based television channels,
the official Iraq Television, and Youth TV, owned by Uday Saddam
Hussein. In 2001 Uday Hussein reportedly assumed control of the
satellite television service. According to press reports, Internet
service was available but highly restricted by the regime. Reportedly
only 500 computers had links to the web within regime-controlled
areas, and these access points were subject to close oversight from
regime censors. Books may be published only with the authorization of
the Ministry of Culture and Information. The Ministry of Education
often sent textbooks with proregime propaganda to Kurdish regions;
however, Kurds routinely removed propaganda items from such textbooks.
The regime did not respect academic freedom and exercised strict
control over academic publications and foreign travel by academics.
University employees were hired and fired depending on their support
for the regime.
In the north, many independent newspapers appeared over the past 8
years, as did opposition radio and television broadcasts. The absence
of central authority permitted significant freedom of expression,
including criticism of the regional Kurdish authorities; however, most
journalists were influenced or controlled by various political
organizations. Satellite services and related equipment for telephone,
fax, Internet, and television services were available. Although the
rival Kurdish parties in the north, the PUK and KDP, stated that full
press freedom was allowed in areas under their respective control, in
practice neither effectively permitted distribution of the opposing
group's newspapers and other literature.
The Internet was available widely through Internet cafes in major
urban centers in Kurdish-controlled areas. In regimeoperated Internet
cafes, users only were permitted to view Web sites provided by the
Ministry of Culture and Information. The regional authorities did not
try to limit access to preapproved web sites; however, they often
monitored web usage by individuals.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of assembly; however, the regime
restricted this right in practice. Citizens may not assemble legally
other than to express support for the regime, which regularly
orchestrated crowds to demonstrate support for it and its policies
through financial incentives for those who participated and threats of
violence against those who did not. According to press reports,
several spontaneous demonstrations arising in the wake of the October
prison amnesty were forcibly dispersed (see Sections 1.a. and 1.b.).
The Constitution provides for freedom of association; however, the
regime restricted this right in practice. The regime controlled the
establishment of political parties, regulated their internal affairs,
and monitored their activities. New political parties must be based in
Baghdad and were prohibited from having any ethnic or religious
character. The political magazine AlefBe, which is published by the
Ministry of Culture and Information, reported in December 1999 that
two political groups would not be permitted to form parties because
they had an insufficient number of members. The magazine reprinted the
conditions necessary to establish political parties, which included
the requirement that a political group must have at least 150 members
over the age of 25. A 1999 law also stipulates that new parties must
"take pride" in the 1958 and 1968 revolutions, which created the
republic and brought the Ba'th Party to power. Several parties were
outlawed specifically, and membership in them was a capital offense
(see Section 3). The law prescribes the death penalty for anyone
"infiltrating" the Ba'th Party.
In the Kurdish-controlled north, numerous political parties and social
and cultural organizations existed. The KDP- and PUKcontrolled
administrations imposed restrictions on some political parties and
groups they considered security risks, or that refused to register as
political parties or to participate in local elections. The PUK and
KDP have forced political parties that violate these rules to shut
down. Neither the KDP nor PUK allowed the other group to open party
offices in territory under its control; however, they did allow other
political parties to operate in those territories and included them in
their administrations.
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion provided that it
does not violate "morality and public order"; however, the regime
severely limited freedom of religion in practice. Islam is the
official state religion. The Ministry of Endowments and Religious
Affairs monitored places of worship, appointed the clergy, approved
the building and repair of all places of worship, and approved the
publication of all religious literature.
More than 95 percent of the population is Muslim. The (predominantly
Arab) Shi'a constitute a 60 to 65 percent majority, while Sunni make
up 32 to 37 percent (approximately 18 to 20 percent are Sunni Kurds,
13 to 16 percent are Sunni Arabs, and the rest are Sunni Turkmen). The
remaining approximately 5 percent consist of Christians--Chaldeans
(Roman Catholic), Assyrians (Church of the East), Syriac (Eastern
Orthodox), and Yazidis (Armenian Orthodox), and a small number of Jews
and Sabean Mandaeans.
The regime does not recognize political organizations that have been
formed by Shi'a Muslims or Assyrian Christians. These groups continued
to attract support despite their illegal status. There are religious
qualifications for government office; candidates for the National
Assembly, for example, "must believe in God" (see Section 3).
Various segments of the Sunni Arab community, which itself constitutes
a minority of the population, effectively have controlled the regime
since independence in 1932. Sunni Arabs are at a distinct advantage in
all areas of secular life, including civil, political, military, and
economic. Shi'a and Sunni Arabs are not distinct ethnically. Shi'a
Arabs have supported an independent country alongside Sunni Arabs
since the 1920 Revolt, many joined the Ba'th Party, and Shi'a formed
the core of the army in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. Shi'a Arabs, the
religious majority of the population, have long been economically,
politically, and socially disadvantaged. Like the Sunni Kurds and
other ethnic and religious groups in the north, the Shi'a Arabs of the
south have been targeted for particular discrimination and abuse.
The regime has for decades conducted a brutal campaign of murder,
summary execution, and protracted arbitrary arrest against the
religious leaders and followers of the majority Shi'a population (see
Sections 1.a., 1.d., and 1.g.). Despite nominal legal protection of
religious equality, the regime severely repressed the Shi'a clergy and
those who follow the Shi'a faith. Forces from the Mukhabarat, General
Security (Amin Al-Amm), the Military Bureau, Saddam's Commandos
(Fedayeen Saddam), and the Ba'th Party killed senior Shi'a clerics,
desecrated Shi'a mosques and holy sites, and interfered with Shi'a
religious education. Security agents reportedly were stationed at all
major Shi'a mosques and shrines and searched, harassed, and
arbitrarily arrested worshipers.
The following regime restrictions on religious rights remained in
effect during the year: Restrictions and outright bans on communal
Friday prayer by Shi'a; restrictions on the loaning of books by Shi'a
mosque libraries; a ban on the broadcast of Shi'a programs on
regime-controlled radio or television; a ban on the publication of
Shi'a books, including prayer books and guides; a ban on funeral
processions other than those organized by the regime; a ban on other
Shi'a funeral observances such as gatherings for Koran reading; and
the prohibition of certain processions and public meetings that
commemorate Shi'a holy days. Shi'a groups report that they captured
documents from the security services during the 1991 uprising that
listed thousands of forbidden Shi'a religious writings.
In June 1999, several Shi'a opposition groups reported that the regime
instituted a program in the predominantly Shi'a districts of Baghdad
that used food ration cards to restrict where individuals could pray.
The ration cards, part of the U.N. oil-for-food program, reportedly
were checked on entry to a mosque and were printed with a notice of
severe penalties for those who attempt to pray at an unauthorized
location.
Shi'a groups reported numerous instances of religious scholars being
subjected to arrest, assault, and harassment in the past several
years, particularly in the internationally renowned Shi'a academic
center of Najaf. In 2000 AI reported that the regime deported
systematically tens of thousands of Shi'a (both Arabs and Kurds) to
Iran in the late 1970s and early 1980s, on the basis that they were of
Persian descent. According to Shi'a sources, religious scholars and
Shi'a merchants who supported the schools financially were the
principal targets for deportation. After the 1991 popular uprising,
the regime relaxed some restrictions on Shi'a attending the schools.
However, the revival of the schools appeared to have exceeded greatly
the regime's expectations and led to an intensified crackdown on the
Shi'a religious establishment, including the requirement that speeches
by imams in mosques be based upon regime-provided material that
attacked fundamentalist trends.
The regime consistently politicized and interfered with religious
pilgrimages, both of Muslims who wished to make the Hajj to Mecca and
Medina and of both Iraqi and non-Iraqi Muslim pilgrims who traveled to
holy sites within the country (see Section 2.d.). For example, in 1998
the U.N. Sanctions Committee offered to disburse vouchers for travel
and expenses to pilgrims making the Hajj; however, the regime rejected
this offer. In 1999 the Sanctions Committee offered to disburse funds
to cover Hajj-related expenses via a neutral third party; the regime
again rejected the offer. Following the December 1999 passage of U.N.
Security Council Resolution 1284, the Sanctions Committee again sought
to devise a protocol to facilitate payment to individuals making the
journey. The Sanctions Committee proposed to issue $250 in cash and
$1,750 in traveler's checks to each individual pilgrim to be
distributed at the U.N. office in Baghdad in the presence of both U.N.
and Iraqi officials. The regime again declined and, consequently, no
Iraqi pilgrims were able to take advantage of the available funds or,
in 2000, of the permitted flights. The regime continued to insist that
these funds would be accepted only if they were paid in cash to the
regimecontrolled central bank, not to the Hajj pilgrims.
Twice each year--on the 10th day of the Muslim month of Muharram and
40 days later in the month of Safar--Shi'a pilgrims from throughout
the country and around the world travel to the Iraqi city of Karbala
to commemorate the death there centuries ago of the Imam Hussein. The
regime for several decades interfered with these Ashura commemorations
by preventing processions on foot into the city. In 1998 and 1999,
violent incidents were reported between pilgrims on one side and Ba'th
Party members and security forces enforcing the ban on the other. In
2000 security forces opened fire on persons who attempted to walk from
Al-Najaf to Karbala (see Section 1.g.). During the year, there were no
reports of violence during the pilgrimage; however, the regime
reportedly imposed travel restrictions.
The regime also sought to undermine the identity of minority Christian
(Assyrian and Chaldean) and Yazidi groups.
The Special Rapporteur and others reported that the regime engaged in
various abuses against the country's estimated 350,000 Assyrian and
Chaldean Christians, especially in terms of forced movements from
northern areas and repression of political rights (see Section 2.d.).
Most Assyrians lived in the northern provinces, and the regime often
accused them of collaborating with Iraqi Kurds. Military forces
destroyed numerous Assyrian churches during the 1988 Anfal campaign
and reportedly tortured and executed many Assyrians.
Assyrian groups reported several instances of mob violence by Muslims
against Christians in the north in the past few years. Kurdish groups
often referred to Assyrians as Kurdish Christians. Christians reported
several ritual killings of Christian clergy by unknown assailants,
which they claimed were perpetrated by Muslim extremists. Press and
Christian opposition groups reported that an Assyrian nun was killed
in an apparent emulation of Muslim ritual slaughter in July (see
Section 1.a.). These reports continued an alleged pattern of violence
and persecution directed against Christian and other religious
minorities throughout the country.
The regime imposed repressive measures on Yazidis (see Section 5).
Although few Jews remained in the country, regime officials frequently
made anti-Semitic statements.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration,
and Repatriation
The regime restricted movement within the country of citizens and
foreigners. Police checkpoints were common on major roads and
highways. Persons who entered sensitive border areas and numerous
designated security zones were subject to arrest.
The regime required citizens to obtain specific regime authorization
and expensive exit visas for foreign travel. Citizens may not make
more than two trips abroad annually. Before traveling abroad, citizens
were required to post collateral, which was refundable upon their
return. There were restrictions on the amount of currency that may be
taken out of the country. Women were not permitted to travel outside
the country alone; male relatives must escort them (see Section 5).
Prior to December 1999, every student who wished to travel abroad was
required to provide a guarantor who would be liable if the student
failed to return. In December 1999, authorities banned all travel for
students (including those in grade school), canceled spring and summer
holidays, and enrolled students in compulsory military training and
weapons-use courses.
In an apparent effort to convince citizens living abroad to return to
the country, the regime radio announced in June 1999 an amnesty for
teachers who left the country illegally after the Gulf War. Shortly
thereafter the Revolutionary Command Council decreed a general amnesty
for all citizens who either had left the country illegally or who had
failed to return after the period of exile had expired (see Section
1.d.). In October 1999, Justice Minster Shabib al-Maliki announced
that authorities might seize assets belonging to citizens living
outside the country who did not return in response to the amnesty
decree. A special ministerial committee was formed to track and
monitor citizens inside the country who received money from relatives
living abroad.
A November 1999 law provides for additional penalties for citizens who
attempt to leave the country illegally. Under the law, a prison term
of up to 10 years and "confiscation of movable and immovable property"
is to be imposed on anyone who attempts to leave illegally. Similar
penalties face anyone found to encourage or assist persons banned from
travel, including health care professionals, engineers, and university
professors. In 2000 the director of the Real Estate Registration
Department stated that pursuant to the decree, the regime confiscated
the property of a number of persons.
The regime restricted foreign travel by journalists, authors,
university professors, doctors, scientists, and all employees of the
Ministry of Information. Security authorities interrogated all media
employees, journalists, and writers upon their return from foreign
travel.
The regime consistently politicized and interfered with religious
pilgrimages, both of Muslim citizens who wished to make the Hajj to
Mecca and Medina and of citizen and noncitizen Muslim pilgrims to holy
sites in the country (see Section 2.c.).
Foreign spouses of citizens who have resided in the country for 5
years (1 year for spouses of government employees) were required to
apply for naturalization as citizens. Many foreigners thus become
subject to travel restrictions. The penalties for noncompliance
included, but were not limited to, loss of the spouse's job, a
substantial financial penalty, and repayment of any governmental
educational expenses. The regime prevented many citizens who also held
citizenship in another country, especially the children of Iraqi
fathers and foreignborn mothers, from visiting the country of their
other nationality.
The U.N. Secretary General estimated that there were more than 500,000
IDPs remaining in the 3 northern provinces (Erbil, Dohuk, and
Sulaymaniah), most of whom fled regimecontrolled areas in early 1991
during the uprising that followed the Gulf War. Yazidi Kurds reported
in November that they were subjected to forced concentration in the
vicinity of Dohuk over the last few years. The regime continued its
Arabization policy by discriminating against and forcibly relocating
the non-Arab population, including Kurds, Turkmen, and Assyrians
living in Kirkuk, Khanaqin, Sinjar, Makhmour, Tuz, Khoramatu, and
other districts. Most observers viewed the policy as an attempt to
decrease the proportion of non-Arab citizens in the oil-rich Kirkuk
region, and thereby secure Arab demographic control of the area.
Non-Arab citizens were forced either to change their ethnicity on
their identity documents and adopt Arabic names or be expelled to the
Kurd-controlled northern provinces. Persons may avoid expulsion if
they relinquish their Kurdish, Turkmen, Chaldean, or Assyrian identity
and register as Arabs. Persons who refused to relinquish their
identity may have their assets expropriated and their ration cards
withdrawn prior to being deported.
The Revolutionary Command Council mandated that new housing and
employment be created for Arab residents who had been resettled in
Kirkuk, while new construction or renovation of Kurd-owned property
reportedly was prohibited. Non-Arabs may not sell their homes, except
to Arabs, nor register or inherit property. Authorities estimated that
since 1991, more than 100,000 persons were displaced as part of the
Arabization program.
According to numerous deportees in the north, the regime generally
used a systematic procedure to evict and deport nonArab citizens.
Frequently, a security force official demanded that a family change
its ethnicity from Kurdish or Turkmen to Arab. Subsequently, security
officials frequently arrested the head of household and informed the
other family members that the person would be imprisoned until they
agreed to settle elsewhere in the country. Such families frequently
chose to move to the north; family members must sign a form that
states that the departure was voluntary and they were not allowed to
take any property or their food ration cards issued under the U.N.
oil-for-food program. The regime frequently transferred the families'
houses to Arab Ba'th Party members.
Those expelled were not permitted to return. The Special Rapporteur
reported in 1999 that citizens who provided employment, food, or
shelter to returning or newly arriving Kurds were subject to arrest.
The regime denied that it expelled nonArab families.
According to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), hundreds
of thousands of Iraqi refugees remained abroad. Apart from those
suspected of sympathizing with Iran, most fled after the regime's
suppression of the civil uprising of 1991; others were Kurds who fled
during the Anfal campaign of 1988. Of the 1.5 million refugees who
fled following the 1991 uprisings, the great majority, particularly
Kurds, repatriated themselves in northern areas outside regime
control.
The regime did not cooperate with the UNHCR, did not provide first
asylum, and did not respect the rights of refugees.
Approximately 12,000 Turkish Kurds who fled civil strife in
southeastern Turkey remained in northern areas controlled by the
regime in Baghdad. The UNHCR was treating such displaced persons as
refugees until it reached an official determination of their status.
During the year, the KDP and PUK reiterated their September 1998
agreement to begin returning to their rightful homes the many
thousands of persons each side had expelled as a result of
intra-Kurdish fighting in the three northern provinces. In June the
first 70 families were returned. In April 2000, the UNHCR noted that
displaced persons still were living in tents or in open, unheated
buildings (see Section 1.g.).
In August 1999, the KDP reportedly imposed a blockade on eight
Assyrian villages near Aqra. Some sources indicated that KDP forces
reportedly reentered one of the villages a couple of days later,
rounded up the villagers, and publicly beat two of them. The KDP
denied that the blockade or village raids occurred.
Section 3 - Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to
Change Their Government
Citizens did not have the right to change their government. The
President wielded power over all instruments of control. Most
important officials either were members of Saddam Hussein's family or
were family allies from his hometown of Tikrit. Although the regime
took steps to look more like a democracy, the political process still
was controlled firmly by the regime. The October so-called referendum
on Saddam Hussein's presidency was not free and was dismissed as a
sham by most international observers. It did not include voter
privacy, and many credible reports indicated that voters feared
reprisal if they cast a dissenting vote. The regime claimed a 100
percent yes vote out of 16 million votes cast. In a similar
"referendum" in 1995, a total of 500 persons reportedly were arrested
in Karbala, Baghdad, and Ramadi provinces for casting negative
ballots, and a member of the intelligence services reportedly was
executed for refusing to vote for the President.
There are strict qualifications for parliamentary candidates; by law
the candidates for the National Assembly must be over 25 years old and
"believe in God, the principles of the July 17-30 revolution, and
socialism." Elections for the National Assembly were held in March
2000; 220 of the 250 parliamentary seats were contested and
presidential appointees filled the 30 remaining seats. Out of the 250
seats, members of the Ba'th Party reportedly won 165 seats,
independents won 55, and 30 were appointed by Saddam Hussein to
represent the northern provinces. According to the Special Rapporteur,
the Ba'th Party allegedly instructed a number of its members to run as
nominally independent candidates. Saddam Hussein's son Uday was
elected to the National Assembly with 99.9 percent of the vote.
Full political participation at the national level is restricted to
members of the Arab Ba'th Socialist Party, who were estimated to
constitute approximately 8 percent of the population. The political
system is dominated by the Party, which governed through the
Revolutionary Command Council. President Saddam Hussein heads the
council. The RCC exercises both executive and legislative authority.
The RCC dominates the National Assembly, which is completely
subordinate to it and the executive branch.
Opposition political organizations were illegal and severely
suppressed. Membership in certain political parties was punishable by
death. In October 2000, security forces reportedly executed eight
persons on charges of forming an opposition organization (see Sections
1.a. and 2.b.). In 1991 the RCC adopted a law that theoretically
authorized the creation of political parties other than the Ba'th
Party. However, in practice the law was used to prohibit parties that
did not support the President and the regime. In 1999 various media
published articles claiming that Saddam Hussein instructed officials
in October 1999 to consider the formation of new political parties, a
state council, and a new Constitution. However, a Ministry of Culture
and Information magazine later reported that the only two groups that
attempted to form a party were refused for having an insufficient
number of members.
The regime did not recognize the various political groupings and
parties that have been formed by Shi'a, Kurds, Assyrians, Turkmen, or
other communities. These political groups continued to attract support
despite their illegal status.
The law provides for the election of women and minorities to the
National Assembly; however, they had only token representation.
In the north, all central regime functions have been performed by
local administrators, mainly Kurds, since the regime withdrew its
military forces and civilian administrative personnel from the area
after the 1991 uprising. A regional parliament and local regime
administrators were elected in 1992. The parliament last met in May
1995. The two major Kurdish parties in de facto control of the north,
the KDP and the PUK, battled one another from 1994 through 1997. In
September 1998, they agreed to unify their separate administrations
and to hold new elections in July 1999. The ceasefire has held;
however, reunification measures have been greatly delayed. The PUK and
KDP convened the united Assembly in October for the first time. The
PUK held municipal elections in February 2000 and the KDP held
municipal elections in May, the first elections held in the
Kurdish-controlled areas since 1992. Foreign and local election
observers reported that the elections generally were fair.
The KDP reportedly required membership lists from ethnic minority
political parties. The regime also imposed additional restrictions on
some political parties (see Section 2.b.).
Section 4 - Governmental Attitude Regarding International and
Nongovernmental Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
The regime did not permit the establishment of independent human
rights organizations. Citizens established several human rights groups
abroad and in northern areas not under regime control. Monitors from
most foreign and international human rights groups were not allowed in
the country. However, the regime allowed several international
humanitarian and aid organizations to operate in the country.
During the year for the first time since 1992, the regime allowed the
U.N. Special Rapporteur to pay a 4-day, strictly controlled visit to
the country, but the regime responded only partially or not at all to
his requests for information.
In November the U.N. Commission on Human Rights and the U.N. General
Assembly issued a report that noted "with dismay" the lack of
improvement in the situation of human rights in the country. The
report strongly condemned the "systematic, widespread, and extremely
grave violations of human rights" and of international humanitarian
law by the regime, which it stated resulted in "allpervasive
repression and oppression sustained by broadbased discrimination and
widespread terror." The report called on the Government to fulfill its
obligations under international human rights treaties.
The regime operated an official human rights group that routinely
denied allegations of abuses.
Section 5 - Discrimination Based on Race, Sex, Disability, Language,
or Social Status
The Constitution and the legal system provide for some rights for
women, children, and minorities; however, in practice the regime
systematically violated these rights.
Women
Domestic violence against women occurred but little was known about
its extent. Such abuse customarily was addressed within the tightly
knit family structure. There was no public discussion of the subject,
and no statistics were published. Spousal violence constitutes grounds
for divorce and may be prosecuted; however, suits brought on such
charges reportedly were rare. Under a 1990 law, men who committed
honor crimes may receive immunity from prosecution (see Section 1.e.).
The law prohibits rape; however, security forces raped family members
of persons in the opposition as a punishment (see Section 1.c). No
information was available regarding the frequency or severity of rape
in society.
Prostitution is illegal. The regime denied claims that it has beheaded
women accused of prostitution (see Section 1.a.).
The regime stated that it was committed to equality for women, who
make up approximately 20 percent of the work force. It enacted laws to
protect women from exploitation in the workplace and from sexual
harassment; to permit women to join the regular army, Popular Army,
and police forces; and to equalize women's rights in divorce, land
ownership, taxation, and suffrage. It was difficult to determine the
extent to which these protections were afforded in practice. Women
were not allowed to travel outside the country alone (see Section
2.d.).
In April 2000, the PUK declared that immunity would not be given for
honor crimes in the area under its control. Several active women's
organizations operated in the Kurd-controlled regions in the north. In
September 2001, the KDP began admitting women into the police academy
in preparation for their integration into the police force.
Children
No information was available regarding whether the regime has enacted
specific legislation to promote the welfare of children. However, the
Special Rapporteur and several human rights groups collected a
substantial body of evidence indicating the regime's continued
disregard for the rights and welfare of children. Education for boys
is compulsory through the sixth grade. Children may continue in public
schools through grade 12, but children often left after grade 6 to
help in family enterprises. The regime claimed that it also has
enacted laws to make education for girls compulsory.
The regime's failure to comply with relevant U.N. Security Council
resolutions has led to a continuation of economic sanctions. There
were widespread reports that food and medicine that could have been
made available to the general public, including children, were
stockpiled in warehouses or diverted for the personal use of some
regime officials. The executive director of the U.N. office in charge
of the oil-forfood program confirmed the insufficient placement of
orders in a January 2000 letter to the regime, in which he expressed
concern about the low rate of submission of applications in the
health, education, water, sanitation, and petroleum sectors. He also
stated that of the $570 million worth of medicines and medical
supplies that had arrived in the country through the oil-for-food
program in 1998 and 1999, only 48 percent had been distributed to
clinics, hospitals, and pharmacies.
The regime's management of the oil-for-food program did not take into
account the special requirements of children between the ages of 1 and
5, despite the U.N. Secretary General's specific injunction that the
regime modify its implementation procedures to address the needs of
this vulnerable group. In 1999 UNICEF issued the results of the first
surveys of child and maternal mortality in the country that have been
conducted since 1991. The surveys were conducted between February and
May 1999, in cooperation with the regime in the southern and central
regions, and in cooperation with the local Kurdish authorities in the
north. The surveys revealed that in the south and central parts of the
country, home to 85 percent of the population, children under 5 years
old were dying at more than twice the rate that they were a decade
before. In contrast mortality rates for children less than 5 years old
in the Kurdishcontrolled north dropped in the period between 1994 and
1999. The Special Rapporteur criticized the regime for "letting
innocent people suffer while it maneuvered to get sanctions lifted."
Had the regime not waited 5 years to adopt the oil-for-food program in
1996, he stated in October 1999, "millions of innocent people would
have avoided serious and prolonged suffering."
During the year, the regime held 3-week training courses in weapons
use, hand-to-hand fighting, rappelling from helicopters, and infantry
tactics for children between 10 and 15 years of age. Camps for these
"Saddam Cubs" operated throughout the country. Senior military
officers who supervised the course noted that the children held up
under the "physical and psychological strain" of training that lasted
for as long as 14 hours each day. Sources in the opposition reported
that the army found it difficult to recruit enough children to fill
all of the vacancies in the program. Families reportedly were
threatened with the loss of their food ration cards if they refused to
enroll their children in the course. The Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq reported in October 1999 that authorities
were denying food ration cards to families that failed to send their
young sons to Saddam Cubs compulsory weapons-training camps (see
Section 1.f.). Similarly, authorities reportedly withheld school
examination results to students unless they registered in the Fedayeen
Saddam organization (see Section 1.f.).
Regime officials allegedly took children from minority groups in order
to intimidate their families to leave cities and regions in which the
regime wishes to create a Sunni Arab majority (see Sections 1.d.,
1.f., and 2.d.).
Persons with Disabilities
No information was available regarding the regime's policy towards
persons with disabilities.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
The country's cultural and linguistic diversity was not reflected in
its political and economic structure. Non-Arabs were denied equal
access to employment, education, and physical security. Non-Arabs were
not permitted to sell their homes except to Arabs, nor to register or
inherit property. As part of its Arabization policy, the regime
continued to relocate forcibly the non-Arab population, including
Kurds, Turkmen, and Assyrians living in Kirkuk, Sinjar, and other
districts (see Sections 1.f. and 2.d.). Similarly, the regime forced
many Arabs to relocate to regions forcibly vacated by other groups.
Both major Kurdish political parties indicated that the regime
occasionally targeted Assyrians, as well as ethnic Kurds and Turkmen,
in expulsions from Kirkuk in order to attempt to "Arabize" the city
(see Section 2.d.).
Assyrians and Chaldeans are considered by many to be a distinct ethnic
group, as well as the descendants of some of the earliest Christian
communities. These communities speak a different language (Syriac),
preserve traditions of Christianity, and have a rich cultural and
historical heritage that they trace back more than 2,000 years.
Although these groups do not define themselves as Arabs, the regime,
without any historical basis, defines Assyrians and Chaldeans as such,
evidently to encourage them to identify with the Sunni-Arab dominated
regime (see Section 2.c.).
The regime did not permit education in languages other than Arabic and
Kurdish. Thus, in areas under regime control, Assyrian and Chaldean
children were not permitted to attend classes in Syriac.
The Constitution does not provide for a Yazidi identity. Many Yazidis
consider themselves to be ethnically Kurdish, although some would
define themselves as both religiously and ethnically distinct from
Muslim Kurds. However, the regime, without any historical basis,
defined the Yazidis as Arabs. There is evidence that the regime
compelled this reidentification to encourage Yazidis to join in
domestic military action against Muslim Kurds. Captured regime
documents included in a 1998 HRW report described special allYazidi
military detachments formed during the 1988-89 Anfal campaign to
"pursue and attack" Muslim Kurds. The regime imposed the same
repressive measures on Yazidis as on other groups (see Section 2.c.).
Citizens considered by the regime to be of Iranian origin must carry
special identification and often were precluded from desirable
employment. Over the years, the regime deported hundreds of thousands
of citizens of Iranian origin.
Ethnic minorities faced some discrimination and harassment by Kurds in
the north. In areas of the north under Kurdish control, classes in
Syriac and Turkish were permitted in primary schools run by Assyrian
or Turkmen parties, since the 1991 uprising against the regime.
However, teaching of Syriac reportedly remained restricted. The
Kurdish administrations also required that all school children begin
learning Arabic in primary school.
Assyrians continued to fear attacks by the PKK, a Turkish-based
terrorist organization that operated against indigenous Kurds in
northern areas. In 2000 Assyrians reported being caught in the middle
of intraKurdish fighting. Some Assyrian villagers reported in 2000
being pressured to leave the countryside for the cities as part of a
campaign by indigenous Kurdish forces to deny the PKK access to
possible food supplies. There were no reports during the year of the
Kurdistan Regional Government's investigation into a series of
bombings in 1998 and 1999 that many Assyrian groups believed were part
of a terror campaign designed to intimidate them into leaving the
north.
Ethnic Turkmen also claimed discrimination by Kurdish groups,
including the required use of the Kurdistan flag in Turkmen schools
and the assignment of Kurdish teachers to Turkmen schools.
Section 6 - Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
There were no trade unions independent of regime control, and workers
rights were highly restricted. The Trade Union Organization Law of
1987 established the Iraqi General Federation of Trade Unions (IGFTU),
a regime-controlled trade union structure, as the sole legal trade
federation. The IGFTU is linked to the Ba'th Party, which used it to
promote party principles and policies among union members.
Workers in private and mixed enterprises, but not public employees or
workers in state enterprises, had the right to join local union
committees. The committees were affiliated with individual trade
unions, which in turn belonged to the IGFTU.
In 1999 Uday Hussein reportedly dismissed hundreds of members of the
Iraqi Union of Journalists for not praising Saddam Hussein and the
regime sufficiently (see Section 2.a.). Also in 1999, Uday Hussein
reportedly jailed at least four leaders of the Iraqi National Students
Union for failing to carry out his orders to take action against
students known for their criticism of the situation in the country. No
significant developments have occurred in these cases.
The IGFTU is affiliated with the International Confederation of Arab
Trade Unions and the formerly Soviet-controlled World Federation of
Trade Unions.
In the Kurd-controlled northern region, the law allows persons to form
and join trade unions and other organizations, and to use such
organizations for political action. Dozens of trade groups have been
formed since 1991.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The right to bargain collectively is not recognized. The regime sets
salaries for public sector workers, the majority of employed persons.
Wages in the much smaller private sector were set by employers or
negotiated individually with workers. Public sector workers frequently
were shifted from one job and work location to another to prevent them
from forming close associations with other workers. The Labor Code
does not protect workers from antiunion discrimination, an omission
that has been criticized repeatedly by the Committee of Experts of the
International Labor Organization (ILO).
The Labor Law restricts the right to strike. According to the
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, such restrictions on
the right to strike include penal sanctions, such as imprisonment or
detention in labor camps. No strike has been reported during the past
2 decades.
There were no export processing zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Bonded Labor
Forced labor is prohibited by law; however, the Penal Code mandates
prison sentences, including compulsory labor, for civil servants and
employees of state enterprises for breaches of labor "discipline,"
including resigning from a job. According to the ILO, foreign workers
in the country have been prevented from terminating their employment
and returning to their native countries because of regime-imposed
penal sanctions on persons who do so. There was no information
available regarding forced and bonded labor by children.
d. Status of Child Labor Practices and Minimum Age for Employment
The employment of children under the age of 14 is prohibited, except
in small-scale family enterprises. However, children reportedly were
encouraged increasingly to work in order to help support their
families because of the country's harsh economic conditions. The law
stipulates that employees between the ages of 14 and 18 work fewer
hours per week than adults. Each year the regime enrolls children as
young as 10 years of age in a paramilitary training program (see
Section 5).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
There was no information available regarding minimum wages.
Most workers in urban areas worked a 6-day, 48-hour workweek. The head
of each ministry sets hours for regime employees. Working hours for
agricultural workers varied according to individual employer-employee
agreements.
Occupational safety programs were in effect in state-run enterprises.
Inspectors ostensibly inspected private establishments, but
enforcement varied widely. There was no information regarding workers'
ability to remove themselves from work situations that endanger their
health or safety.
f. Trafficking in Persons
There was no information available regarding whether the law prohibits
trafficking in persons. There were reports of persons trafficked
within the country.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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