IRAQ: Desperate Iraqis storm intelligence headquarters/Prison to search for relatives believed to have been taken by Saddam Hussein's security force
Record ID:
402159
IRAQ: Desperate Iraqis storm intelligence headquarters/Prison to search for relatives believed to have been taken by Saddam Hussein's security force
- Title: IRAQ: Desperate Iraqis storm intelligence headquarters/Prison to search for relatives believed to have been taken by Saddam Hussein's security force
- Date: 12th April 2003
- Summary: (U4) BAGHDAD, IRAQ (APRIL 12, 2003) (REUTERS) SLV MAN WALKING ALONG CORRIDOR OF INTELLIGENCE H.Q. SLV, MAN SHOWING OPENING DOOR OF CELL CLOSE OF INSECT ON CELL WALL SMV MAN WALKING UP TO GRAFFITI ON WALL CLOSE OF GRAFFITI OF MAN BEING TORTURED SCU (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) A MAN BELIEVED TO BE A FORMER PRISONER (UNIDENTIFIED) SHOWING THE CELLS AND SAYING "There was nothing. T
- Embargoed: 27th April 2003 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: BAGHDAD, IRAQ
- Country: Iraq
- Topics: Conflict
- Reuters ID: LVABNKPT7V5UPZS0MI4QIE0ZMKRC
- Story Text: Crowds of desperate Iraqis stormed the headquarters of Saddam Hussein's military intelligence and hacked through concrete floors to hunt for relatives they believed were trapped in dungeons below.
Family and friends of detained Iraqis appealed for help from the U.S. military to rescue people they said were in underground jails, victims of Saddam's brutal security officers. Some said they could hear voices below the surface as they dug.
U.S. soldiers, who took Baghdad on Wednesday and are trying to restore order in the city, moved into the huge compound in the northwestern district of Kadhimiya with tanks and armoured vehicles and set charges to blast the ground.
But the thrill of anticipation of reaching fathers, brothers, friends -- some who had disappeared some 20 years ago -- turned into bitter disappointment and tears when U.S.
soldiers said the cells were empty.
"The American's said we are coming to you to give you freedom, where is the freedom, when our people are downstairs, and they are bombing (gestures) in the night. There is no administration there is nothing, why of course everybody kills others because there is no system there is no organisation,"
said one angry man.
Before soldiers of the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division arrived, frantic relatives had gouged away at the concrete floor with tools and hauled debris away with bare hands. The search came to an abrupt halt when they hit steel encasing the prison vaults.
Entrances to the sprawling underground prison cell complex were known to have been sited in obscure places outside the military intelligence HQ, possibly inside normal-looking houses.
U.S. soldiers said it looked like the complex was used as an interrogation centre and the prisoners transferred elsewhere.
The General Headquarters of Iraqi military intelligence near the Kadhimiya mosque, a shrine for Shi'ite Muslims, was one of the most feared places in the Iraqi capital under Saddam's rule.
People roaming the complex spoke of seeing what they described as a torture chamber containing tanks which could be used for submersion or partial drowning.
Reports were difficult to verify because of growing chaos inside the complex before the arrival of the American soldiers.
The tense atmosphere reflected the anarchy gripping Baghdad following two days of looting since U.S tanks and troops took control of the centre of the city.
The angry crowd discovered a ledger with the name and rank of more than 200 senior Iraqi army officers -- all of Kurdish origin it said were jailed in 1994 as a "precaution".
Iraqis say thousands of people went missing during Saddam's 24-year rule, allegedly executed, tortured or shut away in jail.
U.S. Marines said on Wednesday they had found what appeared to be a torture centre in the town of Nassiriya, 375 km (235 miles) southeast of Baghdad.
Photographs of burned bodies and a iron rod possibly used to deliver electric shocks suggested the building could have been used by security agents to inflict pain.
Other restraining devices were also found. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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