From the Los Angeles Times
Sunni anger in Iraqi province
An
ex-SWAT officer's allegations of torture on orders of the Diyala police
chief, a Shiite, roils volunteer fighters aiding the U.S.
By Garrett Therolf
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 14, 2008
BAGHDAD —
The 26-year-old Sunni Arab man sat in the restaurant of a fashionable
Baghdad hotel, his business suit covering marks where he said a power
drill had penetrated his thigh and acid dissolved his calf.
The
former Iraqi SWAT commander had traveled to Baghdad for meetings with
Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and other high-ranking officials in which
he plans to provide an account of torture he says he endured on the
orders of Maj. Gen. Ghanim Quraishi, the Shiite Muslim police chief of
Diyala province.
In an interview, Hisham Mahdi Salih said he
was abused as part of the police chief's sectarian campaign against
Sunni officers. And though American military officers have questioned
portions of his story, the captain's account has become a rallying
point for Sunni protests that erupted in the last week in one of Iraq's
most turbulent regions.
The challenge, involving more than
10,000 protesters, threatens to unravel the U.S.-funded citizens
security group in Diyala, a largely Sunni force. In recent days large
numbers of the group's members have refused to patrol or operate
checkpoints unless Quraishi is ousted.
American military
officials have said that without the nearly 3,000 volunteer fighters in
Diyala -- many of them former insurgents who joined the American side
during the last eight months -- security will not improve in the
region, a crossroads between Baghdad, Iran and insurgent strongholds to
the north.
Quraishi, who has been accused by U.S. commanders
of refusing to integrate Sunnis into his force, declined to comment. An
aide said an order had been issued to all members of the department not
to speak to reporters.
Army Brig. Gen. David Phillips, who
oversees the training of Iraqi police, said a large-scale investigation
had been launched on all the allegations against Quraishi and
preliminary findings would be released next week.
"The allegations are serious, but on the other hand [Quraishi] was the
only person who stepped up to the job," Phillips said.
In
the interview, Salih tearfully but forcefully recounted his allegations
of Quraishi's abuse. "This is my opportunity to have my voice heard,"
he said.
Despite the restaurant's formal setting, he rose at
one point without hesitation to drop his pants to display the scars he
said were caused by acid and a power drill.
An Army
spokeswoman, Maj. Margaret Kageleiry, said the military had thoroughly
investigated Salih's allegation of torture by Iraqi police and
concluded that his injuries were consistent with torture, but it was
unable to determine whether Iraqi police were at fault.
Salih,
in the interview, provided documentation, later confirmed by the U.S.
military, that he had been trained at an American military base to lead
a SWAT team in Muqdadiya, a city 60 miles northeast of Baghdad.
In
January 2006, he said, his team was part of a joint mission with a U.S.
Army special forces unit in nearby Balad Ruz. The targets were hiding
in a Shiite mosque. Unable to enter, the Americans surrounded the
building and sent the Iraqi team inside.
Salih said his team
arrested members of Iran's Quds Force, accused by U.S. military
officials of supporting Shiite militias in Iraq, most notably by
supplying them with armor-piercing bombs known as explosively formed
penetrators.
"Of course, I knew the risk in raiding a Shiite mosque, but it was with
the Americans and I had no choice," Salih said.
Twenty-one days later, he said, an Iraqi arrest warrant was issued
against him.
Salih
said he went into hiding for a year and a half, until a supervisor
called in July to say that he could come to a police office to collect
his salary. Desperate for the money, and trusting the supervisor, he
went.
Shortly after the supervisor served him tea, Salih said, 30 men wearing
black clothing and ski masks entered the room.
"They handcuffed me and covered my eyes," he said. "They hit me all
over my body until I lost consciousness."
Ten
hours later, Quraishi arrived, he said. Salih said the tall, thin chief
told him, "You deserve even worse. Why did you authorize the raid?"
Over
subsequent days, he said, he was hung from the ceiling, his toenails
were ripped off with pliers, a knife was used to cut his scalp and dig
into his skull. He said he was tied to a pole, and was repeatedly raped.
When Quraishi reappeared, Salih said, he spat in the chief's face.
"I wanted him to kill me, but he wouldn't. I started cursing him, but
he still wouldn't."
The power drill and acid followed, he said.
He
was rescued in August, he said, when American forces descended on the
Iraqi police station were he was being held and found him naked and
bloodied. They rehabilitated him and found him a job hundreds of miles
away at a U.S. base in Anbar province.
Army spokeswoman
Kageleiry said she did not know whether Salih was naked when American
soldiers found him. She said he was taken into custody from an Iraqi
police station and detained because U.S. forces had independently come
to believe that Salih had used his position as a SWAT leader to help
insurgents launch attacks against American forces.
Military
spokesman Maj. Brad Leighton said the identification card showing that
Salih worked at an American base in Anbar province was authentic, but
he said he did not know whether it was issued recently.
A
spokesman for Diyala's Sunni political bloc, which includes many
members of the concerned citizens group, which was known as the
Awakening Council but recently renamed the Sons of Iraq, said the
protests would continue unabated until Quraishi is removed.
"If
the people cannot remove a corrupt police chief, what good is the
democracy that the Americans brought?" said the spokesman, who asked to
be identified by only his first name, Rasim.
"If the chief stays in office, our support for the Americans will only
deteriorate."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times