30,000 Iraqis Imprisoned Without Trial

Amnesty International released a new report on Iraq today: New Order, Same Abuses: Unlawful Detentions and Torture in Iraq. After the United States’ withdrawal from Iraq, the majority of Iraqi prisoners captured by the US army have been transferred to Iraqi custody, joining those who were in jails before the US invasion and others who were captured by the Iraqi security forces after 2003.

Many prisoners have not gone on trial and as a result have no charges against them. Others have release orders that have not been enforced. Thousands have been tortured, held incommunicado and have no access to their lawyers. Their families were not informed of their detentions or allowed to visit.

In the Kurdistan region of Iraq, which is run by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and where the security situation has generally been better than in the rest of Iraq, similar abuses have been reported.


For example, Walid Yunis Ahmad has been detained without trial for ten years.  He was arrested by men in civilian clothes, believed to be Asayish officials, on an Erbil street on 6 February 2000. He disappeared. His relatives began looking for him and sought information from the authorities but they received none. Three years later his family learned that he had been detained and discovered his whereabouts, when they were notified that he was being held at the Erbil headquarters of the Asayish, where they were then able to visit him.

Walid Yunis Ahmad had worked for a local radio and TV station linked to the Islamic Movement in Kurdistan. He was held in solitary confinement and probably tortured. When his family visited him on 23 November 2008 they found him in poor health following a 45-day hunger strike. At the end of March 2010 he was questioned twice and told that he was accused of trying to revive Ansar al-Islam from prison and that he is considered a danger to the security of the Kurdistan region. On 1 April 2010, he was questioned about his past activities with a legal Islamist political party, the Kurdistan Islamic Union. The Director of the Asayish in Erbil told Amnesty International delegates that Walid Yunis Ahmad was “too dangerous to be freed” but gave no details.

Please urge the Kurdistan government to give Walid Yunis Ahmad and other prisoners a fair trial, to investigate allegations of torture and to release those who have release orders. You can also order pre-addressed postcard actions that you can mail on behalf of Walid Yunis Ahmad by sending your mailing address to [email protected].

Visit Amnesty International’s page on human rights in Iraq for further information and to take action on other human rights issues in Iraq.

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11 thoughts on “30,000 Iraqis Imprisoned Without Trial

  1. Adriana's meaning is as clear to me as a drink of pure water from the earth.

    i didn't need a "correction" to Know her mind.

    It comes by itself from a heart.

  2. Adriana’s meaning is as clear to me as a drink of pure water from the earth.

    i didn’t need a “correction” to Know her mind.

    It comes by itself from a heart.

  3. Joe: or maybe if you can …use the doble meaning:

    " Fairy (as a substabtive) dictators, please, give a FAIR trial to prisioners."
    LOLOLOL

  4. Joe: or maybe if you can …use the doble meaning:

    ” Fairy (as a substabtive) dictators, please, give a FAIR trial to prisioners.”
    LOLOLOL

  5. Have to laugh as well.

    Adriana Lovinho, you got to be the magic fairy flying here to break the spell of english & free our voices !!!

  6. Have to laugh as well.

    Adriana Lovinho, you got to be the magic fairy flying here to break the spell of english & free our voices !!!

  7. They are not even trying to cover these things up or to pretend at least that they have reasons for taking these people in. They simply don't care and don't fear any consequences.

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