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Dienstag, den 17. April 2007

Fotos von `quälten' die freigegebene Leiche des Irakers

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Die Fotographien, die das strenge Schlagen zeigen, litten durch einen irakischen Zivilisten, der im britischen Schutz wurden freigegeben heute starb, wie das Oberhaus eine Hörfähigkeit in anfängt, ob Gesetz der menschlichen Rechte auf britische Kräfte auswärts zutreffen sollte.

 
Baha Mousa starb während im britischen militärischen Schutz im Irak
Daoud Mousa fängt an zu weinen, während er Fotographien seines Sohns Baha anzeigt

Die Abbildungen von 26 Einjahres Baha Mousa wurden von seinem Rechtsanwalt vorgestellt und menschliche Rechte gruppieren Freiheit, die ein „Unabhängiges verlangen, wirkungsvolle Untersuchung in die grossen Körperausgaben“, die durch den Fall angehoben werden.

Baha Mousa’s case is one of six test cases being examined by the Law Lords, along with five Iraqis who died at the hands of British soldiers in the streets of Basra.

Mr Mousa’s father Daoud Mousa could not get a visa to attend the hearing but said in a statement: “When I saw the corpse I burst into tears and I still cannot bear to think about what I saw.

“I was horrified to see that my son had been severely beaten and his body was literally covered in blood and bruises.”

Phil Shiner, of Public Interest Lawyers, showed pictures and medical evidence relating to Mr Mousa, who died in 2003, and other men beaten in custody. Photographs and records showed 93 injuries, including a fractured nose and four broken ribs, severe injuries to his wrists and a ligature around his neck.

Mr Shiner said: “We’re not just talking about nuanced degrading treatment. This is torture by any definition of that word.

“And we’re not just talking about torture, we’re talking about the banned techniques … such as hooding, sleep deprivation, stressing, food deprivation and white noise.”

A recent court martial cleared Cpl Donald Payne, of 2 Bn The Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment, of Mr Mousa’a manslaughter and convicted him only of inhumane treatment. Other officers and soldiers were cleared of all charges relating to the incident. Mr Shiner described the case as “a shambles, a farce and a travesty”.

The House of Lords hearing will examine whether the Human Rights Act applies in situations such as Mr Mousa’s or situations where people are killed during British patrols in Iraq. If so, the Law Lords will then rule on whether there has been a breach of the obligation to hold an independent effective inquiry into those cases.

Mr Shiner and Liberty are calling for an independent inquiry. “This is not about holding the military to higher standards than they should be subject to anywhere, it’s about accountability,” said Liberty director Shami Chakrabarti.

“This is about holding Government and the highest level of military to the highest accountability in a democracy.”

MP Diane Abbott, who was at today’s press conference in Westminster, central London, added: “MPs of all sides believe the best protection for our soldiers is the acknowledgement that we treat people according to the best human rights standards.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/16/wmousa116.xml

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  • This entry was posted on Tuesday, April 17th, 2007 at 4:25 pm and is filed under Breaking . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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