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## Nachricht vom / message of 25.10.07 weitergeleitet / forwarded
## Ursprung / origin : T.SLATER@TSLATER.NADESHDA.ORG
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24-Oct-07
Die UNO beginnt zaghaft die USA wegen der hohe Zahl von zivilen Opfernbei
Luftangriffen zu kritisieren.
Diese nehmen Jahr für Jahr rapide zu. 2006 waren es laut dem Report vom
Global Policy Forum
<http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/issues/iraq/occupation/report/index.htm>
bereits 10.500 Einsätze von Kampflugzeugen (US + UK zusammen) zur
"Luftunterstützung" der Bodentruppen, fast 30 pro Tag. Bis März 2007 stieg
diese Zahl schließlich auf 48 Angriffe pro Tag, im Oktober waren es
schließlich laut Juan Cole
<http://www.juancole.com/2007/10/us-troop-deaths-up-over-2006-air.html>
schon bis zu 70 Angriffe am Tag.
Offensichtlich hält die Armeeführer die Bodentruppen bei Angriffen zurück und
läßt das Terrain lieber erst einmal aus der Luft "säubern" - sind die
Gebäude, in denen feindliche Kämpfer vermutet werden, [erst einmal zerstört]
so sind keine Hinterhalte, Scharfschützen, Sprengfallen u.ä. mehr zu
fürchten. Die Zahl der eigenen Verluste ging im Oktober dadurch in der Tat
zurück (2007 ist allerdings jetzt schon das tödlichste Jahr für sie). Dafür
nehmen die Meldungen von Massakern an der Zivilbevölkerung zu. Wobei das, was
davon in die Medien kommt, wie frühere Untersuchungen zeigen, nur die Spitze
des Eisbergs ist.
Nach den Informationen Juan Coles führt die Luftwaffe, wenn sie angefordert
wird, keine vorherige Aufklärung durch und prüft nicht ob in größeren Maß
Zivilisten betroffen sind. Tote in und um die betroffenen Gebäude sind somit
unvermeidlich.
Laut Lancet-Studie stieg die Zahl, der zwischen 2003 und 2006 durch
Luftangriffe getöteten Iraker von 12.00 auf 40.000 pro Jahr. Wenn sich die
Zahl der Lufangriffe seit 2006 fast verdoppelt hat, so steht zu befürchten,
dass sich auch die Zahl der Opfer verdoppelte.
Der Menschenrechtsbericht von UNAMI für den Zeitraum 1. April - 30. Juni2007
<http://www.uniraq.org/FileLib/misc/HR%20Report%20Apr%20Jun%202007%20EN.pdf>
wurde mit großer Verzögerung am 11. Okt. veröffentlicht. Nach Diskussionen
mit US-amerikanischen Stellen und der irakischen Regierung, hatte er, so
heißt es in dem Report, noch nachgebessert werden müssen. Mit anderen Worten:
die UNO muß sich ihre Menschenrechts-Berichte von der Besatzungsmacht
absegnen lassen.
Übrig blieb u.a. noch eine Liste von Luftangriffen, die 88 irakische
Zivilisten töteten und Hausdurchsuchungen mit 15 Opfern. Forsch fordert UNAMI
die Besatzungstruppen auf, alle "glaubwürdigen Vorwürfe unrechtmäßigem
Tötens" durch die "Multi-Nationalen Truppen" zu untersuchungen und die
Schuldigen zu bestrafen.
Der Report stellt fest, dass die Bombardierung dichtbesiedelter Städte, die
die Besatzungsmacht bereits größtenteils kontrolliert, eine klare
Menschenrechtsverletzung ist. -- Genauer gesagt, ist es ein Kriegsverbrechen.
Viele Grüße,
Joachim
Commentary
U.N. challenges U.S. on illegal air strikes in Iraq
By Nicolas J. S. Davies
Online Journal, Oct 23, 2007, 00:37
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_2560.shtml
Just as U.S. air operations over Iraq have reached their highest level since
the destruction of Fallujah in November 2004, with as many as 70 close air
support missions flown on many days since October 1, a new Human Rights
Report published by the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq has
challenged the United States to stop killing civilians in illegal air
strikes.
The Human Rights Report for the second quarter of 2007 was long overdue, and
was finally published on October 11.[UNAMI: Human Rights Report 1 April -- 30
June 2007
<http://www.uniraq.org/FileLib/misc/HR%20Report%20Apr%20Jun%202007%20EN.pdf>
The report explains that it was modified following discussions with U.S. and
Iraqi occupation authorities, and this appears to account for the long delay
in its publication.
The report makes it clear that U.S. air strikes in densely populated
civilian areas are violations of international human rights law. A footnote
to the section on "MNF military operations and the killing of civilians"
explains, "Customary international humanitarian law demands that, as much as
possible, military objectives must not be located within areas densely
populated by civilians. The presence of individual combatants among a great
number of civilians does not alter the civilian character of an area."
UNAMI demands "that all credible allegations of unlawful killings by MNF
(Multi National Force) forces be thoroughly, promptly and impartially
investigated, and appropriate action taken against military personnel found
to have used excessive or indiscriminate force" and adds that, "The
initiation of investigation into such incidents, as well as their findings,
should be made public."
The UNAMI report provides the following details of 88 Iraqi civilians killed
by air strikes, 15 civilians killed "in the context of raid and search
operations" by U.S. ground forces and several incidents of torture and extra-
judicial execution by members of Iraqi auxiliary forces under overall U.S.
command. UNAMI investigated these incidents because a relative, a journalist
or a local official brought each one to its attention. Without doubt, the
U.S. Department of Defense is aware of many more killings of civilians by air
strikes and ground operations, hence UNAMI's urgent demand for full public
disclosure and investigation of all such killings.
March 11 - Nine civilians in 5 villages near Ba'quba killed by U.S.
airstrikes.
March 13 & 14 - Twelve Palestinians detained by the Interior Ministry atal-
Baladiyat and tortured with electric shocks to sensitive parts of the body,
forcing metal sticks down the throat, and rape and other sexual assault with
metal objects.
March 15 - Two civilians killed in Dulu'iya by a U.S. air strike.
March 29 - A 14-year-old boy and three other family members killed in Mosul
by a U.S. raid on the home of Zeyour Mohamed Khalil.
March 30 - Sixteen civilians killed in Sadr City by U.S. air strikes.
April 2 - Six civilians killed in U.S. raids on the homes of Bashar Mahfoudh
and Walid al-Ahmadi near Mosul.
April 3 - Twenty-seven civilians killed in Khaldiya, near Ramadi, by U.S. air
strikes.
April 12 - Three civilians killed in southern Haditha in a house raid by U.S.
forces.
April 26 - U.S. air strikes kill four civilians in Sadr City and four more in
Taji.
April 29 - Al-Kesra, Baghdad, five men found dead after being detained by
Iraqi Army in al-Sifina.
April 30 - Three civilians killed by an air strike in Basra.
May 3 - Hay al-Amel, Baghdad, 16 people detained and killed by Interior
Ministry Public Order Forces.
May 4th - Al-Dubbat, Baghdad, 14 civilians arrested and then shot dead by
Iraqi security forces.
May 5 - Seven civilians killed by a U.S. air strike east of Baghdad.
May 5 - Hay al-Rissala, Baghdad, men guarding a mosque detained and executed
by Iraqi security forces.
May 6 - One civilian killed by a U.S. air strike in Sadr City.
May 8 - Seven children killed by a U.S. helicopter attack on an elementary
school in Diyala province.
May 26 - Eight civilians in Basra killed by air strikes.
May 29 - Four prisoners executed by the Kurdistan Regional Government after
testifying to the death under torture of Fahmi Ismail Abu Bakr in 2005.
June 6 - Yassin Farhan and his son Sarmad killed by U.S. troops in a house
raid in Baghdad.
April-June - Seventy-three percent of KRG detainees interviewed by UNAMI
reported being victims of torture.
The recent increase in U.S. air operations in Iraq has brought a spate of
reports of more such incidents. On the day the UNAMI report was released, six
women, nine children and 19 men were killed in air strikes near Lake
Tharthar, north of Baghdad. The Centcom press office immediately declared
that the 19 men were "terrorists" but similar claims regarding previous
airstrikes have been contradicted by local residents and officials, and they
beg the question as to how you know that 19 men were "terrorists" after
you've blown them off the face of the earth. An air strike on September 25 in
Mussayyib, 30 miles south of Baghdad, killed five women and four children;
and one on September 28 on the al-Saha district of Baghdad killed seven men,
two women and four children. Once again, I must stress that these incidents
just happen to have been reported and that they are probably only the tip of
the iceberg of civilians being killed by U.S. air strikes.
Iraqi Health Ministry reports in September 2004 and January 2005 attributed
72 percent and 62 percent respectively of civilian deaths in Iraq to"
coalition" forces, not "insurgents", and attributed the high numbers killed
by U.S. forces specifically to air strikes. The first of two epidemiological
studies on mortality in Iraq published in the Lancet medical journal
supported these findings, while the second did not attempt to break down
deaths by who was responsible. The Health Ministry retracted its January 2005
figures after the BBC reported them, and has stopped attributing any
proportion of Iraqi deaths to occupation forces. It is important to
understand that, while "precision" weapons are more accurate today than in
the past, about 15-25 percent still miss their targets by at least 40 feet,
so the impression conveyed by the Centcom press office and CNN that they can
be used to safely and surgically "zap" one house in an urban area is an
artful blend of propaganda and science fiction.
Previous reports by Iraqi and international human rights monitors have also
found that 60-80 percent of prisoners held by Iraqi forces recruited, trained
and directed by the U.S. command in Iraq have been tortured, and UNAMI has
documented cases in which people have been sentenced to death and executed
based on confessions apparently obtained by torture. The current report also
protests the indefinite detention of Iraqis without charge by U.S. forces,
and states "persons who are deprived of their liberty are entitled to be
informed of the reasons for their arrest; to be brought promptly before a
judge if held on a criminal charge, and to challenge the lawfulness of their
detention."
The UNAMI report does not directly address torture by U.S. forces, but the
International Committee of the Red Cross and other human rights groups have
documented extensive and systematic violations of international humanitarian
law in the treatment of prisoners by U.S. forces in Iraq. The U.S. government
has tortured and abused prisoners throughout its network of prisons in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Cuba, as well as in CIA-run prisons in Romania, Mauretania,
Diego Garcia, and elsewhere. Human rights groups have amassed
incontrovertible evidence of systematic torture, authorized at the highest
levels, throughout this gulag, including death threats, mock executions,near-
drowning, excruciating stress positions, hypothermia, sleep deprivation,
electric shocks, various forms of sodomy, and endless beatings, to say
nothing of more psychological forms of torture such as sexual humiliation and
torture of family members.
In February 2006, Human Rights First issued "Command's Responsibility," a
report on 98 deaths in U.S. custody in Iraq and Afghanistan, endorsed by two
retired generals and an admiral. The dead included eight people confirmed
tortured to death; another 37 suspected or confirmed homicides; and a tell-
tale lack of information about 48 more who died of "undetermined" or
"unannounced" causes.
Until we succeed in ending the U.S. occupation and restoring genuine
sovereignty and independence to Iraq, preventing the torture and killing of
Iraqi civilians by U.S. forces has to be a top priority. Apart from the brief
and localized scandal over the pictures from Abu Ghraib, this is a topic that
the political debate in Congress and the corporate media have scrupulously
avoided. Senator Bob Graham told his colleagues in October 2002 that "Blood
is going to be on your hands", and they are now in it up to their armpits,
even as they deny both the carnage and their role in continuing and
escalating it. Until this horror comes to an end, Americans must join UNAMI
in publicizing, condemning and demanding accountability for every single act
of illegal, indiscriminate and excessive killing by American forces in Iraq,
with particular attention to the mass killing of Iraqi civilians by U.S.
airstrikes.
Copyright C 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor
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