Fact Sheet
Office of the White House Press Secretary
Washington, DC
April 4, 2003
http://www.state.gov/p/nea/rls/19675.htm
For over 20 years, the greatest threat to Iraqis
has been Saddam Hussein's regime -- he has killed,
tortured, raped, and terrorized the Iraqi people
and his neighbors for over two decades.
When Iraq is free, past crimes against humanity
and war crimes committed against Iraqis, will be
accounted for, in a post-conflict Iraqi-led process.
The United States, members of the coalition, and
the international community will work with the Iraqi
people to build a strong and credible judicial process
to address these abuses.
Under Saddam's regime many hundreds of thousands
of people have died as a result of his actions,
the vast majority of them Muslims. According to
a 2001 Amnesty International report, "victims
of torture in Iraq are subjected to a wide range
of forms of torture, including the gouging out of
eyes, severe beatings, and electric shocks ... some
victims have died as a result and many have been
left with permanent physical and psychological damage."
Saddam has had approximately 40 of his own relatives
murdered. Allegations of prostitution are used to
intimidate opponents of the regime and have been
used by the regime to justify the barbaric beheading
of women. There have been documented chemical attacks
by the regime, from 1983 to 1988, resulting in some
30,000 Iraqi and Iranian deaths.
Human Rights Watch estimates that Saddam's 1987-1988
campaign of terror against the Kurds killed at least
50,000 and possibly as many as 100,000 Kurds. The
Iraqi regime used chemical agents to include mustard
gas and nerve agents in attacks against at least
40 Kurdish villages between 1987-1988. The largest
was the attack on Halabja which resulted in approximately
5,000 deaths. o 2,000 Kurdish villages were destroyed
during the campaign of terror.
Iraq's 13 million Shi'a Muslims, the majority of
Iraq's population of approximately 22 million, face
severe restrictions on their religious practice,
including a ban on communal Friday prayer, and restriction
on funeral processions.
According to Human Rights Watch, "senior Arab
diplomats told the London-based Arabic daily newspaper
al-Hayat in October [1991] that Iraqi leaders were
privately acknowledging that 250,000 people were
killed during the uprisings, with most of the casualties
in the south." Refugees International reports
that
"Oppressive government policies have led to
the internal displacement of 900,000 Iraqis, primarily
Kurds who have fled to the north to escape Saddam
Hussein's Arabization campaigns (which involve forcing
Kurds to renounce their Kurdish identity or lose
their property) and Marsh Arabs, who fled the government's
campaign to dry up the southern marshes for agricultural
use. More than 200,000 Iraqis continue to live as
refugees in Iran."
In 2002, the U.S. Committee for Refugees estimated
that nearly 100,000 Kurds, Assyrians, and Turkomans
had previously been expelled, by the regime, from
the "central-government-controlled Kirkuk and
surrounding districts in the oil-rich region bordering
the Kurdish controlled north."
"Over the past five years, 400,000 Iraqi children
under the age of five died of malnutrition and disease,
preventively, but died because of the nature of
the regime under which they are living." (Prime
Minister Tony Blair, March 27, 2003) Under the oil-for-food
program, the international community sought to make
available to the Iraqi people adequate supplies
of food and medicine, but the regime blocked sufficient
access for international workers to ensure proper
distribution of these supplies. Since the beginning
of Operation Iraqi Freedom, coalition forces have
discovered military warehouses filled with food
supplies meant for the Iraqi people that had been
diverted by Iraqi military forces.
The Iraqi regime has repeatedly refused visits
by human rights monitors. From 1992 until 2002,
Saddam prevented the UN Special Rapporteur from
visiting Iraq. The UN Special Rapporteur's September
2001, report criticized the regime for "the
sheer number of executions," the number of
"extrajudicial executions on political grounds,"
and "the absence of a due process of the law."
Saddam Hussein's regime has carried out frequent
summary executions, including:
4,000 prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison in 1984;
3,000 prisoners at the Mahjar prison from 1993-1998;
2,500 prisoners were executed between 1997-1999
in a "prison cleansing campaign;"
122 political prisoners were executed at Abu Ghraib
prison in February/March 2000;
23 political prisoners were executed at Abu Ghraib
prison in October 2001; and
At least 130 Iraqi women were beheaded between June
2000 and April 2001.
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