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14 years of torture and humiliation in Saddam's jail
Times Online ^ | February 25, 2003 | Anthony Loyd

Posted on 02/24/2003 6:32:20 PM PST by Nachum

Our correspondent meets a Baghdad camera shop owner who sold a roll of film to a British journalist and paid for it with his freedom

RAFAT Abdulmajeed Muhammad is a slightly built man of 45 with a distant stare and a scarred body. He lives alone in Sulaimaniyah, northern Iraq, and owns nothing but the clothes he stands in. He spends his days trying to forget the past 14 years, which he spent in the darkness of Saddam Hussein’s most infamous political prison. Mr Muhammad’s only crime was to sell a British journalist a roll of film, but his treatment bears ample testimony to the nature of Saddam’s regime.

Mr Muhammad was an Egyptian photography graduate who moved to Iraq in 1985 and opened a small photographic shop, Rafat’s Photography, in Baghdad. In August 1989 a foreigner visited his shop and bought a roll of film. Mr Muhammad gave him his business card and forgot about him.

The next month he encountered the man again, this time in very different circumstances. Mr Muhammad, who had been arrested the previous day and charged with espionage, was sitting blindfolded in a chair in Room 18 of the headquarters of the Iraqi secret police, the Mukhabarat.

“They pulled the blindfold up so that I could see the spy I was accused of aiding,” he said. “There, standing in silence, was the man to whom I had sold a roll of film. His name was Farzad Bazoft. The Mukhabarat had found my business card in his belongings.”

Mr Muhammad never saw Mr Bazoft again. The Iranian-born journalist, who was working for The Observer, was executed for spying the following March.

The Mukhabarat never extracted a verbal confession from Mr Muhammad during the four months he was held in a tiny cell in the headquarters. He said that he was interrogated by a Mukhabarat officer named Basim twice a day, each time being whipped with cables while suspended from the ceiling, his hands tied behind his back. He had his jaw, ribs and hands broken. Sometimes he was taken to the basement, strapped into an electric chair and given shock treatment.

“I had nothing to confess to,” he said. “They said I worked for Mossad (the Israeli intelligence agency) but my only mistake was that I sold Bazoft a roll of film.”

In January 1990, days before Mr Muhammad’s trial, the Mukhabarat inked his thumb and pressed it against a statement in lieu of a signature. He was charged under article 158 of Iraqi law and sentenced by a military court to life imprisonment. He was transferred to the notorious Abu Greeb penitentiary, west of Baghdad, where 7,000 political prisoners lived in constant fear of torture and execution.

He spent the next three years in solitary confinement. He was taken out of his cell twice a week for beatings. He said that in the prison basement were deep pits, each a metre wide. Up to ten prisoners deemed guilty of disciplinary offences would be dropped into these pits and kept there for a week at a time. “Many died in those pits,” he said.

Last summer Mr Muhammad had the top joint of the second finger of his left hand smashed off with an iron bar for insulting Saddam, an offence for which five years were added to his sentence.

Large-scale executions were a regular occurrence. The first that Mr Muhammad remembered was on March 27, 1991, during the uprisings in Iraq that followed the coalition victory in Kuwait.

“There was no rioting in the prison, just a feeling of unease,” he said. “Then that day hundreds of men from a special unit arrived. They took all the prisoners from their cells and made them parade in the yard facing the walls. It was the first time I had been in daylight since my imprisonment.When we all had our backs to them, standing in the sun, they opened fire on us. Over a hundred men lay dead and dying. The rest of us were made to stand up again and they kept us paraded there until 8pm, when we were returned to our cells.”

Mr Muhammad had some notable companions in Abu Greeb, and their identity sheds light on the broad interpretation of “political prisoner” in Iraq. In a neighbouring cell during his first year of solitary confinement was Hussain al-Shahristani, an internationally renowned Iraqi expert on neutron activity. He had been imprisoned for refusing to co-operate on Saddam’s nuclear programme.

“We used to whisper to each other through the doors of our cells when the guards were eating their supper,” Mr Muhammad said. “We even made a plan, through one of the men who gave us meals, to bribe the Mukhabarat and escape.”

He later found himself rubbing shoulders with seven Iraqi al- Qaeda inmates. “Their chief was Dr Mohammad,” he said. “He was an Iraqi from Mosul who had fought in Afghanistan and was a personal friend of Osama bin Laden. We became very close. I remember him praying specially for Osama when the Americans began to attack Afghanistan.” The seven al-Qaeda prisoners received special privileges. Dr Mohammad was allowed a bed and a private room in which to meet his wife and “special visitors”.

On October 20 last year, 400 prisoners were taken out before dawn and marched to a field inside the Abu Greeb complex, where they were shot.

“In a way it was good news for us,” Mr Muhammad said. “Though executions happened the whole time, usually mass killings preceeded an amnesty. It was a way the authorities had of culling the prison population. So that morning, after the shooting, we hoped some of us may be freed.”

An immediate amnesty announcement did indeed follow. Along with 2,000 other prisoners from Abu Greeb, many of them Kurds, Mr Muhammad was simply ejected from the gates that afternoon.

He had no money and no documentation. He had no idea where to go. He had no idea of the fate, or whereabouts, of his two brothers and two sisters in Egypt. In the end, some Kurds took him northwards and he crossed into Kurdish- controlled northern Iraq two days later. There local people put him up in a small, spartan hotel in the centre of Sulaimaniyah.

The local branch of the UN and the Red Cross appeared unwilling or unable to help him. “They were polite but firm,” he said. “They told me I was a released prisoner so was out of their jurisdiction.”

He sits alone in his bare room, waiting, and hoping that something will happen to change things.

“I am surprised to hear of all the anti-war demonstrations in the West,” he said. “I wish that the demonstrators could spend just 24 hours in the place I have come from and see the reality of Iraq.

“Fourteen lost years of my life. Nothing but bread for food — darkness, filth, beatings, torture, killings, bitterness and humiliation. I wish they could experience it for just 24 hours.”

Killed for 'spying'

In 1989 Farzad Bazoft, an Iranian-born freelance journalist, was working for The Observer. Having established close links with the Iraqi Embassy in London, Mr Bazoft was invited to cover a showpiece election in Kurdistan.

While he was in Iraq, news broke of an explosion at a secret missile plant to the south of Baghdad. Defying an official ban, Mr Bazoft went to the site disguised as a doctor. He was driven by his friend Daphne Parish, a British nurse. While there, he took photos and two soil samples, which he believed would show that the site was contaminated. When Mr Bazoft attempted to leave Iraq he was arrested by the secret police and put into solitary confinement for six weeks. When he emerged he was shown in a televised interview confessing to being an Israeli spy.

On March 10, 1990, Mr Bazoft was convicted of spying and sentenced to death. Ms Parish was jailed for 15 years but released after ten months. Despite appeals from Margaret Thatcher, the British Prime Minister, Mr Bazoft was hanged on March 15 on the orders of Saddam Hussein.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 14years; humiliation; saddamsjail; torture; warlist
“Fourteen lost years of my life. Nothing but bread for food — darkness, filth, beatings, torture, killings, bitterness and humiliation. I wish they could experience it for just 24 hours.”
1 posted on 02/24/2003 6:32:20 PM PST by Nachum
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To: Nachum
The Iraqi people will soon be liberated.
2 posted on 02/24/2003 6:35:27 PM PST by yonif
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To: Nachum
Soon they will be free. I hope we get plenty of pictures to shove up the liberals @ss.
3 posted on 02/24/2003 6:38:53 PM PST by SeeRushToldU_So ( Something witty, etc, etc....)
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To: Nachum
Hang on... Iraq's going to get liberated...then when the truth comes out...the French...Germans...Russians...will be telling us how they want there crow cooked!
4 posted on 02/24/2003 6:44:48 PM PST by Hotdog
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To: Nachum
Saddam has deluded himself with his reign of terror for so lng that he believes his own propaganda that is is loved by all Iraqis when the truth is that millions of Iraqis will actively support and help U.S. troops while ratting out Saddam's Republican Guard.
5 posted on 02/24/2003 6:47:56 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants (Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn’t be, in its eyes, a slave.)
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To: Nachum
Fourteen lost years of my life. Nothing but bread for food ? darkness, filth, beatings, torture, killings, bitterness and humiliation. I wish they could experience it for just 24 hours.

What a gentle, forgiving man. Cause I want to sentence them to at least a month and I haven't suffered at all. Just reading about it makes my kettle whistle.

6 posted on 02/24/2003 6:57:49 PM PST by A_perfect_lady (Let them eat cake.)
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To: Nachum
“I am surprised to hear of all the anti-war demonstrations in the West,” he said. “I wish that the demonstrators could spend just 24 hours in the place I have come from and see the reality of Iraq.

I agree, completely.

7 posted on 02/24/2003 7:00:19 PM PST by Pan_Yans Wife (Lurking since 2000.)
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To: Hotdog
cooked???
8 posted on 02/24/2003 7:01:34 PM PST by Adrastus
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To: Nachum
Iraqi exiles write to the Prime Minister Blair

During his monthly press conference this morning the Prime Minister noted that increasing numbers of Iraqi exiles are now writing direct to the Prime Minister's Office with their own experiences of life in Saddam's Iraq.

The letters and e-mails the Prime Minister's Office has received include the following.

Dr Adil Awadh was a doctor who treated Iraqi soldiers whose ears were deliberately cut off as punishment. "I personally treated many Iraqi soldiers from ear wounds infections after they were subjected to Ear Cutting operations in Al Amarah military hospital".

Dr Awadh also saw, in 1991, military choppers that "dropped papers that informed the Iraqis who live in Al-Hilla that they were about to strike with chemical weapons".

Dr Sabah Ali says four of the 52 students he graduated with have been hanged. "We were 52 graduates who completed our degree in medicine. Six years later my colleagues Jawad, Adel, Foad and Abdul Nabi have been hanged...sixteen orphans in my family all because of Saddam".

He goes on to say that Sadam Hussein is "a breed of his own, he is alone".

Bakhtiar Amin, head of the Paris-based International Association for Justice, talks of "the mass graves of all disappeared Iraqis, Saddam's torture chambers and hidden WMD".

He goes on to note that "Iraqis have never lived in peace during Saddam's rule. They will never live in peace as long as he remains in power. The region and the world will never be in peace as long as he will be around."

Dr Munther Alfadhal writes that "we Iraqis have suffered enormously under Saddam".

He goes on to note that "Saddam Hussein has been a disaster, not only for Iraq, but also for the whole region". Another correspondent says Saddam's rule is a glaring shame on the face of humanity.

Nadia Allawi describes Saddam's regime as "brutal and cruel". She notes that "it is enough to look the wrong way for it to be deemed as subversive behaviour, an act punishable by death or worse."

A group of Iraqi exiles in the UK have written collectively to stress that Saddam "has managed to virtually destroy the very fabric of our society".

They go on to note the "execution of thousands of decent, honourable citizens, politicians, scientists and army officers. The groundless jailing and torture of our people which includes branding and the cutting out of tongues in public places and the decapitation of women is an affront to civilisation."

There is a letter from a North London school child, who says "My Dad, brother, my mum's brother, and my grandad were all tortured and hanged because they chose to speak against Saddam Hussein".


Another Iraqi exile wants those who took place in the marches over the weekend to understand the full nature of Saddam's violation of human rights. An Iraqi doctor asks if the marchers knew that ordinary Iraqis go hungry while Saddam feasts.

Others note that human rights do not exist in Iraq, that nobody is now free, democratic countries can only begin to imagine what it is like to live in Iraq under Saddam's rule.

Finally, Sharif Ali Bin AlHussein, Chairman of the Iraqi National Congress, stresses that "sanctions have not wrecked Iraq, but have kept Saddam from further developing his weapons of mass destruction, which he has already used on his own people".

He adds that "there can be few families in Iraq which remain untouched by the all-pervasive grasp of Saddam's security apparatus
9 posted on 02/24/2003 7:02:16 PM PST by ez (Advise and Consent=Debate and VOTE!!)
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To: Nachum
bump
10 posted on 02/24/2003 7:04:22 PM PST by drq
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To: Nachum
Where there is smoke there is fire. This poor man. On the brighter side there is more for the just cause. I just got in out of the Canadian cold (5 fahr)there on T/V (CNBC),was a program called After Hours, with Maria Bartiromo. I hope the guide was right. She had on Ambassador Richard Murphy, an expert on things Arabia, also Andrew Cockburn, a Saddam biographer.

Wow, after my dose of gloom and despair delivered by CNN, this was a shot of adrenalin. These two men- with the aid of old films, laid it to that (blank) Saddam. Yes, along the same lines. The infamous calling out of the "traitors" at a meeting. All executed just after they were taken out,supervised by Saddam. No trial.

The just cause has got friends on T/V. Can one believe it? Brutal executions were claimed ie: in other cases- hooks through the eyes. The power of the message, this time on our side.

Dan Rather where are you?

11 posted on 02/24/2003 7:04:24 PM PST by Peter Libra
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To: Nachum
When all the peaceniks say that the if we go to war with Iraq we will be the agressors. I'd like to know, at what point did we retaliate for the bombing of Pearl Harbor?
12 posted on 02/24/2003 7:09:24 PM PST by Slyfox
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To: yonif
Just think of even one person you know well being treated in this fashion, jailed for fourteen years for selling film...then realize that this is happening by the THOUSANDS.

Peaceniks should be ashamed of their own ignorance...

13 posted on 02/24/2003 7:12:00 PM PST by ez (Advise and Consent=Debate and VOTE!!)
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To: Nachum
What Will They Say When the Dungeons are Opened?
14 posted on 02/24/2003 7:16:13 PM PST by mitchbert (Facts are Stubborn Things)
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To: mitchbert
The liberal press will ignore it.
15 posted on 02/24/2003 7:23:43 PM PST by diamond6
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To: Nachum; ATOMIC_PUNK; knighthawk
" The local branch of the UN and the Red Cross appeared unwilling or unable to help him. “They were polite but firm,” he said. “They told me I was a released prisoner so was out of their jurisdiction.” "

Whaaaat? The UN I can understand, but the Red Cross useless too?

16 posted on 02/24/2003 7:53:22 PM PST by NonValueAdded ("Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." GWB 9/20/01)
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To: *war_list
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
17 posted on 02/24/2003 8:02:39 PM PST by Free the USA (Stooge for the Rich)
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To: Nachum
“I am surprised to hear of all the anti-war demonstrations in the West,” he said. “I wish that the demonstrators could spend just 24 hours in the place I have come from and see the reality of Iraq..bump....
18 posted on 02/24/2003 8:45:35 PM PST by Intolerant in NJ
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To: diamond6
Sadly, you are likely correct. They will run endless stories about emaciated Iraqi children created by, of course, the heartless American and Zionist-influenced sanctions. Frustrating, to be sure.
19 posted on 02/24/2003 8:52:07 PM PST by mitchbert (Facts are Stubborn Things)
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