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SEXUALIZED VIOLENCE AGAINST IRAQI WOMEN

BY US OCCUPYING FORCES

A Briefing Paper

OF

INTERNATIONAL EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT

Prepared by
Kristen McNutt, Researcher, Association of Humanitarian Lawyers

Presented to
The United Nations
Commission on Human Rights
2005 Session
March
Geneva

Contact: ied@igc.org

Iraqi female detainees have been illegally detained, raped and sexually violated by United
States military personnel. Women who stay at home in traditional roles are more likely to
be imprisoned as bargaining chips by US troops seeking to pressurize male relatives,
according to the New Statesmen (UK)1. In December 2003, a woman prisoner, “Noor”,
smuggled out a note stating that US guards at Abu Ghraib had been raping women
detainees and forcing them to strip naked. Several of the women were now pregnant.2
The classified enquiry launched by the US military, headed by Major General Antonio
Taguba, has confirmed the note by “Noor” and that sexual violence against women at
Abu Ghraib took place. Among the 1,800 digital photographs taken by US guards inside
Abu Ghraib there were, according to Taguba's report, images of naked male and female
detainees; a male Military Police guard “having sex” with a female detainee; detainees
(of unspecified gender) forcibly arranged in various sexually explicit positions for
photographing; and naked female detainees.3 The Bush administration has refused to
release photographs of Iraqi women prisoners at Abu Ghraib, including those of women
forced at gunpoint to bare their breasts (although these have been shown to Congress). 4
UK Member of Parliament Ann Clwyd (L) has confirmed a report of an Iraqi woman in

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her 70s who had been harnessed and ridden like a donkey at Abu Ghraib and another
coalition detention centre after being arrested last July. Clwyd said: "She was held for
about six weeks without charge. During that time she was insulted and told she was a
donkey."5

The Italian journalist, Giuliana Sgrena, reports that In the middle of the night, American
soldiers broke into the home of Mithal al Hassan and arrested both her and her son. “The
soldiers later ransacked the apartment. Denounced as part of a vendetta, Mithal was
condemned without trial to eighty days of horror in the company of other women
prisoners who, like her, were subjected to abuse and torture. She has since spotted her
tormentors on the internet.” 6 A culture of honor prevents many women from telling
stories of rapes. The account given by “Selwa”, illustrates this. In September 2003,
Selwa was taken by US military personnel to a detention facility in Tikrit, where an
American officer lit a mixture of human feces and urine in a metal container and gave
Selwa a heavy club to stir it. She recalls, “The fire from the pot felt very strong on my
face.” She leans forward and sweeps her hands through the air to show how she stirred
the excrement. “I became very tired,” she says. “I told the sergeant I couldn’t do it.”
“There was another man close to us. The sergeant came up to me and whispered in my
ear, ‘If you don’t, I will tell one of the soldiers to fuck you.’” Selwa could not continue
with the story.7 An Iraqi girl, Raghada, reports that her mother, imprisoned at Abu
Ghraib, was forced to eat from a toilet and was urinated on8

Iman Khamas, head of the International Occupation Watch Center, a nongovernmental


organization which gathers information on human rights abuses under coalition rule, has
said; “one former detainee had recounted the alleged rape of her cell mate in Abu
Ghraib.” According to Khamas, the prisoner said; “she had been rendered unconscious
for 48 hours.” She claimed; “She had been raped 17 times in one day by Iraqi police in
the presence of American solders”.9

Another woman, "Nadia," reported that she was raped by US soldiers at Abu Ghraib
prison. She continues to be "imprisoned" by painful memories that left her
psychologically and physically scarred. 10

2
Late last year, attorney Amal Kadham Swadi, one of seven female lawyers now
representing women detainees in Abu Ghraib, began to piece together a picture of
systemic abuse and torture by US guards against Iraqi women held in detention without
charge. This was not only true of Abu Ghraib, she discovered, but was, as she put it,
"happening all across Iraq". Amal Kadham Swadi states that “sexualized violence and
abuse committed by US troops goes far beyond a few isolated cases.” 11 It is unknown as
to exactly how many female detainees there are. ‘The International Committee of the Red
Cross reports that 30 women were housed in Abu Ghraib last October, 2003, which was
reduced to 0 by May 29, 2004”.12

Swadi visited a detainee held at the US military base a Al-Khakh, a former police
compound in Baghdad. The detainee disclosed that, “Several American solders had raped
her and that she had tried to fight them off and they had hurt her arm”.13

These and other incidents are being covered up for US domestic consumption. President
G W Bush has insisted that these were the actions of a few and were not the result of
military policy. However, a fifty-three-page report, obtained by The New Yorker, written
by Major General Antonio M. Taguba and not meant for public release, points to
complicity to sexual torture by the entire Army prison system. Specifically, Taguba found
that between October and December of 2003 there were numerous instances of “sadistic,
blatant, and wanton criminal abuses” at Abu Ghraib.14

The cover-up by the Bush Administration appears to include the silencing of victims.
Professor Huda Shaker al-Nuaimi, a political scientist at Baghdad University, who is
interviewing female prisoners as a volunteer for Amnesty International, reports that the
woman, called “Noor,” who smuggled the letter out of Abu Ghraib, is now presumed
dead. “We believe she was raped and that she was pregnant by a US guard. After her
release from Abu Ghraib, I went to her house. The neighbors said that her family had
moved away. I believed that she was killed”.15

It is well known that the US has a culture of rape: one in six women in the United States
has experienced an attempted or completed sexual assault.16 Reinforcing the climate of

3
sexual violence, photos purporting to be of raped Iraqi women by US troops are surfacing
on the web17, with some are later removed. 18 Actual pictures can be viewed, as of this
writing, at the La Voz de Aztlan website 19 which reports that many of the pictures are
now on pornographic sites.

Women Civilian War Casualties

In October 2004, the Iraq Body Count (IBC) website counted casualties of the US attack
against Fallujah. IBC concluded that 572 and 616 of the approximately 800 reported
deaths were of civilians, with over 300 of these being women and children. 20 The
Chinese news agency Xinhua reported that dozens of Iraqis, including 20 medics, were
killed when the US bombed a medical clinic in Fallujah. The clinic was just erected to
substitute for the main hospital which was seized by the U.S. on Monday. One doctor told
Reuters "There is not a single surgeon in Fallujah. We had one ambulance hit by US fire
and a doctor wounded. There are scores of injured civilians in their homes whom we can't
move. A 13-year-old child just died in my hands."21 Because of the serious assault on
medical neutrality, on 18 November 2004 the Association of Humanitarian Lawyers filed
an emergency petition at the Organization of American States Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights on behalf of “unnamed, unnumbered patients and medical
staff, both living and dead, of the Falluja General Hospital and a trauma clinic.”
International Educational Development, Inc, joined this action immediately thereafter.

According to the Italian journalist Giuliana Sgrena, napalm appears to have been used on
women and children during the US attack on Fallujah. 22

U.S. Military Prevents the Delivery of Medical Care to Women Civilians

The Fourth Geneva Convention forbids attacks on emergency vehicles and the
impediment of medical operations during war. The main hospital in Amiriyat al-Fallujah
was raided twice by US soldiers and the Iraqi National Guard; first on November 29,
2004 at 5:40 am and again the next day. Staff reported; “In the first raid about 150
soldiers and at least 40 members of the Iraqi National Guard stormed the small
hospital”.23 Staff reported; “They divided into groups and were all over the hospital.

4
They broke the gates outside, they broke the doors of the garage, and the raided our
supply room where our food and supplies are”.24 Staff members were then handcuffed
and interrogated for several hours about resistance fighters. One staff member recounts;
“The Americans threatened that they would do what they did in Fallujah if I didn’t
cooperate with them”.25

Medical care for civilians was blocked by snipers that are set up along the roads to
Fallujah that fire on ambulances. Doctors from the main hospital in Amiriyat al-Fallujah
are reporting; “The Americans have snipers all along the road between here and Fallujah.
They are shooting our ambulances if they try to go to Fallujah”.26 In addition, medical
supplies are being blocked from being sent to hospitals by US troops. In nearby
Saqlawiyah, Doctor Abdulla Aziz reported that supplies were being blocked from
reaching or leaving Amiriyat al-Fallujah; “They won’t let any of our ambulances go to
help Fallujah. We are out of supplies and they won’t let anyone bring us more”.27
Obstruction of medical care to the civilian population of Iraq seems to be a pattern that
has persisted. Dr. Abdul Jabbar, orthopedic surgeon at Fallujah General Hospital claims
that; “The marines have said they didn’t close the hospital, but essentially they did. They
closed the bridge, which connects us to the city, and closed our roads. They prevented
medical care reaching countless patients in desperate need. Who knows how many of
them died that we could have saved?”.28

In addition to blocking supplies and aid to victims, hospital staff has been handcuffed and
interrogated and patient care has been violently disrupted. “We were tied up and beaten
despite being unarmed and having only our medical instruments,” reported Dr Asma
Khamis al-Muhannadi present during the raid on Fallujah General Hospital. She reported
abuse to civilian patients as well; “troops dragged patients from their beds and pushed
them against the wall…I was with a woman in labor, the umbilical cord had not yet been
cut,” she said. “At that time, a U.S. soldier shouted at one of the [Iraqi] National Guards
to arrest me and tie my hands while I was helping the mother to deliver”.29

5
6
1
Hilsum, Lindsey, “Worldview” New Statesman, October 4, 2004,
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FQP/is_4708_133/ai_n6258533
2
Hassan, Ghali, “Colonial Violence against Women in Iraq” 31 May, 2004
Countercurrents.org , online, Internet, http://www.countercurrents.org/iraq-hassan310504.htm. Also see, Bazzi,
Mohammed, U.S. using some Iraqis as bargaining chips, Newsweek, 26 May 2004.

3
“Executive summary of Article 15-6 investigation of the 800th
Military Police Brigade by Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba”
NBC News, March 4, 2004, online, Internet, http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4894001/

4
Luke Harding, “The Other Prisoners,” The Guardian U.K. 20 May 2004, online, Internet: www.truthout.org/cgi-
bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/9/4566/printer.
5
Ibid.
6

Sgrena, Giulana, “Interview with an Iraqi woman tortured at Abu Grhaib”, Il Manifesto, July 21, 2004, online, Internet,
http://www.ilmanifesto.it/pag/sgrena/en/420dc5a37ba4d.html
7

McKelvey, Tara, “Unusual Suspects, What happened to the women held at Abu Ghraib? The government isn’t talking.
But some of the women are” . American Prospect Online, February 1, 2005, http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?
section=root&name=ViewPrint&articleId=9044
8
Ciezadlo, Annia, “For Iraqi women, Abu Grhaib’s taint”, Christian Science Monitor, May 24, 2004,
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0528/p01s02-woiq.html
9

Gail Hassan, “Colonial violence Against Women in Iraq,” Counter Currents.org 31 May 2004, online, Internet:
www.countercurents.org/iraq-hassan310504.htm.
10

“ Iraqi Woman Recalls Abu Graib rape ordeal”, July 21 (no year), Islam Online, online, Internet:
http://islamonline.net/English/News/2004-07/21/article06.shtml
11

Luke Harding, “The Other Prisoners,” The Guardian U.K. 20 May 2004, online, Internet: www.truthout.org/cgi-
bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/9/4566/printer.
12

Luke Harding, “The Other Prisoners,” The Guardian U.K. 20 May 2004, online, Internet: www.truthout.org/cgi-
bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/9/4566/printer
13
.
14
Hersh, Seymour, The New Yorker, 2004, http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?040510fa_fact
15

Gail Hassan, “Colonial violence Against Women in Iraq,” Counter Currents.org 31 May 2004, online, Internet:
www.countercurents.org/iraq-hassan310504.htm.
16

US Center for Disease Control and Prevention, quoted in “V-Day Statistics”,Women’s Center, Duke University, March 16,
2005, http://wc.studentaffairs.duke.edu/vdaystats.html
17

“Photos on the net…Iraqi woman raped” Islamic Online, May 3 (no year), online, Internet,
http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2004-05/03/article03.shtml
18

“The rape of Iraqi women and girls by US soldiers”, Black Oklahoma Today, March 16, 2005, online, Internet,
http://www.blackoklahoma.com/html/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=335”
19

See http://www.aztlan.net/iraqi_women_raped.htm and http://www.aztlan.net/nineyearoldrapevictim.htm .


20
IBC Press Release, 26 October 2004, http://www.iraqbodycount.net/press/index.php#pr9
21
Democracy Now, Headlines for November 10, 2004, : http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/11/10/1536241
22
Sgrena, Guiliana, “Napalm Raid on Falluja, 73 charred bodies – women and children – were found” 23 November 2004,
http://www.ilmanifesto.it/pag/sgrena/en/420dd721e0ff0.html

23
Dahr Jamail, “US Military Obstructing Medical Care in Iraq,” Antiwar.Com 14 December 2004,
www.antiwar.com/jamail/?articleid=4158.
24
Ibid.
25
Ibid.
26
Ibid.
27
Ibid.
28
Ibid.
29
Ibid.

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