A Decade Of Deception And Defiance - Iraq Fact Sheet
A DECADE OF DECEPTION AND DEFIANCE - SADDAM HUSSEIN’S DEFIANCE OF THE UNITED NATIONS SEPTEMBER 12, 2002
A Decade of Deception and Defiance serves as a background paper for President George W. Bush's September 12th speech to the United Nations General Assembly. This document provides specific examples of how Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has systematically and continually violated 16 United Nations Security Council resolutions over the past decade. This document is not designed to catalogue all of the violations of UN resolutions or other abuses of Saddam Hussein’s regime over the years. For more than a decade, Saddam Hussein has deceived and defied the will and resolutions of the United Nations Security Council by, among other things: continuing to seek and develop chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, and prohibited long-range missiles; brutalizing the Iraqi people, including committing gross human rights violations and crimes against humanity; supporting international terrorism; refusing to release or account for prisoners of war and other missing individuals from the Gulf War era; refusing to return stolen Kuwaiti property; and working to circumvent the UN’s economic sanctions. The Administration will periodically provide information on these and other aspects of the threat posed to the international community by Saddam Hussein.
3 TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Saddam Hussein’s Defiance of United Nations
Resolutions 4 Saddam Hussein’s Development of Weapons of
Mass Destruction 8 Saddam Hussein’s Repression of the Iraqi
People 11 Saddam Hussein’s Support for International
Terrorism 18 Saddam Hussein’s Refusal to Account for Gulf
War Prisoners 19 Saddam Hussein’s Refusal to Return Stolen
Property 20 Saddam Hussein’s Efforts to Circumvent Economic
Sanctions 21
4 SADDAM HUSSEIN’S DEFIANCE OF UNITED
NATIONS RESOLUTIONS
Saddam Hussein has repeatedly
violated sixteen United Nations Security Council Resolutions
(UNSCRs) designed to ensure that Iraq does not pose a threat
to international peace and security. In addition to these
repeated violations, he has tried, over the past decade, to
circumvent UN economic sanctions against Iraq, which are
reflected in a number of other resolutions. As noted in the
resolutions, Saddam Hussein was required to fulfill many
obligations beyond the withdrawal of Iraqi forces from
Kuwait. Specifically, Saddam Hussein was required to, among
other things: allow international weapons inspectors to
oversee the destruction of his weapons of mass destruction;
not develop new weapons of mass destruction; destroy all of
his ballistic missiles with a range greater than 150
kilometers; stop support for terrorism and prevent terrorist
organizations from operating within Iraq; help account for
missing Kuwaitis and other individuals; return stolen
Kuwaiti property and bear financial liability for damage
from the Gulf War; and he was required to end his repression
of the Iraqi people. Saddam Hussein has repeatedly violated
each of the following resolutions:
UNSCR 678 – NOVEMBER
29, 1990
· Iraq must comply fully with UNSCR 660
(regarding Iraq’s illegal invasion of Kuwait) “and all
subsequent relevant resolutions.” Authorizes UN Member
States “to use all necessary means to uphold and implement
resolution 660 and all subsequent relevant resolutions and
to restore international peace and security in the area.”
UNSCR 686 – MARCH 2, 1991
· Iraq must release
prisoners detained during the Gulf War.
· Iraq must
return Kuwaiti property seized during the Gulf War.
· Iraq must accept liability under international law for
damages from its illegal invasion of Kuwait.
UNSCR
687 – APRIL 3, 1991
· Iraq must “unconditionally accept
the destruction, removal or rendering harmless “under
international supervision” of all “chemical and biological
weapons and all stocks of agents and all related subsystems
and components and all research, development, support and
manufacturing facilities.”
· Iraq must “unconditionally
agree not to acquire or develop nuclear weapons or
nuclear-weapons-usable material” or any research,
development or manufacturing facilities.
· Iraq must
“unconditionally accept” the destruction, removal or
rendering harmless “under international supervision” of all
“ballistic missiles with a range greater than 150 KM and
related major parts and repair and production facilities.”
· Iraq must not “use, develop, construct or acquire” any
weapons of mass destruction.
· Iraq must reaffirm its
obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
· Creates the United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM)
to verify the elimination of Iraq’s chemical and biological
weapons programs and mandated that the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) verify elimination of Iraq’s nuclear
weapons program.
· Iraq must declare fully its weapons
of mass destruction programs.
· Iraq must not commit or
support terrorism, or allow terrorist organizations to
operate in Iraq.
· Iraq must cooperate in accounting for
the missing and dead Kuwaitis and others.
· Iraq must
return Kuwaiti property seized during the Gulf War. 5
UNSCR 688 – APRIL 5, 1991
· “Condemns” repression of
Iraqi civilian population, “the consequences of which
threaten international peace and security.”
· Iraq must
immediately end repression of its civilian population.
· Iraq must allow immediate access to international
humanitarian organizations to those in need of assistance.
UNSCR 707 – AUGUST 15, 1991
· “Condemns” Iraq’s
“serious violation” of UNSCR 687.
· “Further condemns”
Iraq’s noncompliance with IAEA and its obligations under the
Nuclear Non- Proliferation Treaty.
· Iraq must halt
nuclear activities of all kinds until the Security Council
deems Iraq in full compliance.
· Iraq must make a full,
final and complete disclosure of all aspects of its weapons
of mass destruction and missile programs.
· Iraq must
allow UN and IAEA inspectors immediate, unconditional and
unrestricted access.
· Iraq must cease attempts to
conceal or move weapons of mass destruction, and related
materials and facilities.
· Iraq must allow UN and IAEA
inspectors to conduct inspection flights throughout Iraq.
· Iraq must provide transportation, medical and
logistical support for UN and IAEA inspectors.
UNSCR 715
– OCTOBER 11, 1991
· Iraq must cooperate fully with UN
and IAEA inspectors.
UNSCR 949 – OCTOBER 15,
1994
· “Condemns” Iraq’s recent military deployments
toward Kuwait.
· Iraq must not utilize its military or
other forces in a hostile manner to threaten its neighbors
or UN operations in Iraq.
· Iraq must cooperate fully
with UN weapons inspectors.
· Iraq must not enhance its
military capability in southern Iraq.
UNSCR 1051 – MARCH
27, 1996
· Iraq must report shipments of dual-use items
related to weapons of mass destruction to the UN and IAEA.
· Iraq must cooperate fully with UN and IAEA inspectors
and allow immediate, unconditional and unrestricted access.
UNSCR 1060 – JUNE 12, 1996
· “Deplores” Iraq’s
refusal to allow access to UN inspectors and Iraq’s “clear
violations” of previous UN resolutions.
· Iraq must
cooperate fully with UN weapons inspectors and allow
immediate, unconditional and unrestricted access. 6
UNSCR
1115 – JUNE 21, 1997
· “Condemns repeated refusal of
Iraqi authorities to allow access” to UN inspectors, which
constitutes a “clear and flagrant violation” of UNSCR 687,
707, 715, and 1060.
· Iraq must cooperate fully with UN
weapons inspectors and allow immediate, unconditional and
unrestricted access.
· Iraq must give immediate,
unconditional and unrestricted access to Iraqi officials
whom UN inspectors want to interview.
UNSCR 1134 –
OCTOBER 23, 1997
· “Condemns repeated refusal of Iraqi
authorities to allow access” to UN inspectors, which
constitutes a “flagrant violation” of UNSCR 687, 707, 715,
and 1060.
· Iraq must cooperate fully with UN weapons
inspectors and allow immediate, unconditional and
unrestricted access.
· Iraq must give immediate,
unconditional and unrestricted access to Iraqi officials
whom UN inspectors want to interview.
UNSCR 1137 –
NOVEMBER 12, 1997
· “Condemns the continued violations
by Iraq” of previous UN resolutions, including its “implicit
threat to the safety of” aircraft operated by UN inspectors
and its tampering with UN inspector monitoring
equipment.
· Reaffirms Iraq’s responsibility to ensure
the safety of UN inspectors.
· Iraq must cooperate fully
with UN weapons inspectors and allow immediate,
unconditional and unrestricted access.
UNSCR 1154 – MARCH
2, 1998
· Iraq must cooperate fully with UN and IAEA
weapons inspectors and allow immediate, unconditional and
unrestricted access, and notes that any violation would have
the “severest consequences for Iraq.”
UNSCR 1194 –
SEPTEMBER 9, 1998
· “Condemns the decision by Iraq of 5
August 1998 to suspend cooperation with” UN and IAEA
inspectors, which constitutes “a totally unacceptable
contravention” of its obligations under UNSCR 687, 707, 715,
1060, 1115, and 1154.
· Iraq must cooperate fully with
UN and IAEA weapons inspectors, and allow immediate,
unconditional and unrestricted access.
UNSCR 1205 –
NOVEMBER 5, 1998
· “Condemns the decision by Iraq of 31
October 1998 to cease cooperation” with UN inspectors as “a
flagrant violation” of UNSCR 687 and other resolutions.
· Iraq must provide “immediate, complete and
unconditional cooperation” with UN and IAEA inspectors. 7
UNSCR 1284 – DECEMBER 17, 1999
· Created the United
Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspections Commission
(UNMOVIC) to replace previous weapon inspection team
(UNSCOM).
· Iraq must allow UNMOVIC “immediate,
unconditional and unrestricted access” to Iraqi officials
and facilities.
· Iraq must fulfill its commitment to
return Gulf War prisoners.
· Calls on Iraq to distribute
humanitarian goods and medical supplies to its people and
address the needs of vulnerable Iraqis without
discrimination.
ADDITIONAL UN SECURITY COUNCIL STATEMENTS
In addition to the legally binding UNSCRs, the UN
Security Council has also issued at least 30 statements from
the President of the UN Security Council regarding Saddam
Hussein’s continued violations of UNSCRs. The list of
statements includes:
· UN Security Council Presidential
Statement, June 28, 1991
· UN Security Council
Presidential Statement, February 5, 1992
· UN Security
Council Presidential Statement, February 19, 1992
· UN
Security Council Presidential Statement, February 28,
1992
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement, March
6, 1992
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement,
March 11, 1992
· UN Security Council Presidential
Statement, March 12, 1992
· UN Security Council
Presidential Statement, April 10, 1992
· UN Security
Council Presidential Statement, June 17, 1992
· UN
Security Council Presidential Statement, July 6, 1992
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement, September
2, 1992
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement,
November 23, 1992
· UN Security Council Presidential
Statement, November 24, 1992
· UN Security Council
Presidential Statement, January 8, 1993
· UN Security
Council Presidential Statement, January 11, 1993
· UN
Security Council Presidential Statement, June 18, 1993
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement, June 28,
1993
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement,
November 23, 1993
· UN Security Council Presidential
Statement, October 8, 1994
· UN Security Council
Presidential Statement, March 19, 1996
· UN Security
Council Presidential Statement, June 14, 1996
· UN
Security Council Presidential Statement, August 23, 1996
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement, December
30, 1996
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement,
June 13, 1997
· UN Security Council Presidential
Statement, October 29, 1997
· UN Security Council
Presidential Statement, November 13, 1997
· UN Security
Council Presidential Statement, December 3, 1997
· UN
Security Council Presidential Statement, December 22, 1997
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement, January
14, 1998
· UN Security Council Presidential Statement,
May 14, 1998 8
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S DEVELOPMENT OF WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION
Saddam Hussein has continued to defy UN weapons inspectors for more than a decade, and he continues his efforts to develop or acquire weapons of mass destruction – including biological, chemical and nuclear weapons, and prohibited long-range missiles – and other means to deliver them.
BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS
· In 2001,
an Iraqi defector, Adnan Ihsan Saeed al-Haideri, said he had
visited twenty secret facilities for chemical, biological
and nuclear weapons. Mr. Saeed, a civil engineer, supported
his claims with stacks of Iraqi government contracts,
complete with technical specifications. Mr. Saeed said Iraq
used companies to purchase equipment with the blessing of
the United Nations – and then secretly used the equipment
for their weapons programs.1
· Iraq admitted to
producing biological agents, and after the 1995 defection of
a senior Iraqi official, Iraq admitted to the weaponization
of thousands of liters of anthrax, botulinim toxin, and
aflatoxin for use with Scud warheads, aerial bombs and
aircraft. 2
· United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM)
experts concluded that Iraq’s declarations on biological
agents vastly understated the extent of its program, and
that Iraq actually produced two to four times the amount of
most agents, including anthrax and botulinim toxin, than it
had declared.3
· UNSCOM reported to the UN Security
Council in April 1995 that Iraq had concealed its biological
weapons program and had failed to account for 3 tons of
growth material for biological agents.4
· The Department
of Defense reported in January 2001 that Iraq has continued
to work on its weapons programs, including converting L-29
jet trainer aircraft for potential vehicles for the delivery
of chemical or biological weapons.5
· The al-Dawrah Foot
and Mouth Disease Vaccine Facility is one of two known
biocontainment levelthree facilities in Iraq that have an
extensive air handling and filtering system. Iraq has
admitted that this was a biological weapons facility. In
2001, Iraq announced that it would begin renovating the
plant without UN approval, ostensibly to produce vaccines
that it could more easily and more quickly import through
the UN.
· Saddam Hussein continues its attempts to
procure mobile biological weapons laboratories that could be
used for further research and development. 1 “Secret Sites:
Iraqi tells of Renovations at Sites for Chemical and Nuclear
Arms,” The New York Times, December 20, 2001 2 UNSCOM
Report, January 25, 1999 3 Ibid. 4 Ibid. 5 Proliferation:
Threat and Response; Department of Defense; January 2001 9
CHEMICAL WEAPONS Saddam Hussein launched a large-scale
chemical weapons attack against Iraq’s Kurdish population in
the late 1980s, killing thousands. On at least 10 occasions,
Saddam Hussein’s military forces have attacked Iranian and
Kurdish targets with combinations of mustard gas and nerve
agents through the use of aerial bombs, 122-millimeter
rockets, and conventional artillery shells. Saddam Hussein
continues his efforts to develop chemical weapons:
· Gaps identified by UNSCOM in Iraqi accounting and
current production capabilities strongly suggest that Iraq
maintains stockpiles of chemical agents, probably VX, sarin,
cyclosarin and mustard.
· Iraq has not accounted for
hundreds of tons of chemical precursors and tens of
thousands of unfilled munitions, including Scud variant
missile warheads.6
· Iraq has not accounted for at least
15,000 artillery rockets that in the past were its preferred
vehicle for delivering nerve agents, nor has it accounted
for about 550 artillery shells filled with mustard agent.7
· Iraq continues to rebuild and expand dual-use
infrastructure that it could quickly divert to chemical
weapons production, such as chlorine and phenol plants.
· Iraq is seeking to purchase chemical weapons agent
precursors and applicable production equipment, and is
making an effort to hide activities at the Fallujah plant,
which was one of Iraq’s chemical weapons production
facilities before the Gulf War.
· At Fallujah and three
other plants, Iraq now has chlorine production capacity far
higher than any civilian need for water treatment, and the
evidence indicates that some of its chlorine imports are
being diverted for military purposes.
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Saddam Hussein had an advanced nuclear weapons development
program before the Gulf War and continues his work to
develop a nuclear weapon:
· A new report released on
September 9, 2002 from the International Institute for
Strategic Studies – an independent research organization –
concludes that Saddam Hussein could build a nuclear bomb
within months if he were able to obtain fissile
material.8
· Iraq has stepped up its quest for nuclear
weapons and has embarked on a worldwide hunt for materials
to make an atomic bomb. In the last 14 months, Iraq has
sought to buy thousands of specially designed aluminum tubes
which officials believe were intended as components of
centrifuges to enrich uranium. 6 UNSCOM Report, January 25,
1999 7 Ibid. 8 Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction: A Net
Assessment; September 9, 2002; The International Institute
for Strategic Studies 10
· Iraq has withheld
documentation relevant to its past nuclear program,
including data about enrichment techniques, foreign
procurement, weapons design, experimental data, and
technical documents.
· Iraq still has the technical
expertise and some of the infrastructure needed to pursue
its goal of building a nuclear weapon.
· Saddam Hussein
has repeatedly met with his nuclear scientists over the past
two years, signaling his continued interest in developing
his nuclear program.
BALLISTIC MISSILES
· Iraq is
believed to be developing ballistic missiles with a range
greater than 150 kilometers – as prohibited by the UN
Security Council Resolution 687.
· Discrepancies
identified by UNSCOM in Saddam Hussein’s declarations
suggest that Iraq retains a small force of Scud-type
missiles and an undetermined number of launchers and
warheads.9
· Iraq continues work on the al-Samoud liquid
propellant short-range missile (which can fly beyond the
allowed 150 kilometers). The al-Samoud and the solid
propellant Ababil-100 appeared in a military parade in
Baghdad on December 31, 2000, suggesting that both systems
are nearing operational deployment.
· The al-Rafah-North
facility is Iraq’s principal site for testing liquid
propellant missile engines. Iraq has been building a new,
larger test stand there that is clearly intended for testing
prohibited longer-range missile engines.
· At their
al-Mamoun facility, the Iraqis have rebuilt structures that
had been dismantled by UNSCOM that were originally designed
to manufacture solid propellant motors for the Badr-2000
missile program. 9 UNSCOM Report 11
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S REPRESSION OF THE IRAQI PEOPLE
UNSCR 688 (April 5, 1991) “condemns” Saddam Hussein’s repression of the Iraqi civilian population -- “the consequences of which threaten international peace and security.” UNSCR 688 also requires Saddam Hussein to end his repression of the Iraqi people and to allow immediate access to international humanitarian organizations to help those in need of assistance. Saddam Hussein has repeatedly violated these provisions and has: expanded his violence against women and children; continued his horrific torture and execution of innocent Iraqis; continued to violate the basic human rights of the Iraqi people and has continued to control all sources of information (including killing more than 500 journalists and other opinion leaders in the past decade). Saddam Hussein has also harassed humanitarian aid workers; expanded his crimes against Muslims; he has withheld food from families that fail to offer their children to his regime; and he has continued to subject Iraqis to unfair imprisonment.10
REFUSAL TO ADMIT HUMAN RIGHTS MONITORS
· The UN
Commission on Human Rights and the UN General Assembly
issued a report that noted "with dismay" the lack of
improvement in the situation of human rights in Iraq. The
report strongly criticized the "systematic, widespread, and
extremely grave violations of human rights" and of
international humanitarian law by the Iraqi Government,
which it stated resulted in "all-pervasive repression and
oppression sustained by broad-based discrimination and
widespread terror." The report called on the Iraqi
Government to fulfill its obligations under international
human rights treaties.
· Saddam Hussein has repeatedly
refused visits by human rights monitors and the
establishment of independent human rights organizations.
From 1992 until 2002, Saddam prevented the UN Special
Rapporteur from visiting Iraq.11
· In September 2001 the
Government expelled six UN humanitarian relief workers
without providing any explanation.12
VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN
· Human rights organizations and opposition groups
continued to receive reports of women who suffered from
severe psychological trauma after being raped by Iraqi
personnel while in custody.13
· Former Mukhabarat member
Khalid Al-Janabi reported that a Mukhabarat unit, the
Technical Operations Directorate, used rape and sexual
assault in a systematic and institutionalized manner for
political purposes. The unit reportedly also videotaped the
rape of female relatives of suspected oppositionists and
used the videotapes for blackmail purposes and to ensure
their future cooperation.14 10 Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department of
State; www.state.gov 11 Page 2-3, Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department of
State; www.state.gov 12 Ibid, Page 6 13 Ibid, Page 5 14
Ibid, Page 5 12
· In June 2000, a former Iraqi general
reportedly received a videotape of security forces raping a
female family member. He subsequently received a telephone
call from an intelligence agent who stated that another
female relative was being held and warned him to stop
speaking out against the Iraqi Government.15
· Iraqi
security forces allegedly raped women who were captured
during the Anfal Campaign and during the occupation of
Kuwait. 16
· Amnesty International reported that, in
October 2000, the Iraqi Government executed dozens of women
accused of prostitution.17
· In May, the Iraqi Government
reportedly tortured to death the mother of three Iraqi
defectors for her children’s opposition activities.18
· Iraqi security agents reportedly decapitated numerous
women and men in front of their family members. According to
Amnesty International, the victims’ heads were displayed in
front of their homes for several days.19
TORTURE
· Iraqi security services routinely and systematically
torture detainees. According to former prisoners, torture
techniques included branding, electric shocks administered
to the genitals and other areas, beating, pulling out of
fingernails, burning with hot irons and blowtorches,
suspension from rotating ceiling fans, dripping acid on the
skin, rape, breaking of limbs, denial of food and water,
extended solitary confinement in dark and extremely small
compartments, and threats to rape or otherwise harm family
members and relatives. Evidence of such torture often was
apparent when security forces returned the mutilated bodies
of torture victims to their families.20
· According to a
report received by the UN Special Rapporteur in 1998,
hundreds of Kurds and other detainees have been held without
charge for close to two decades in extremely harsh
conditions, and many of them have been used as subjects in
Iraq’s illegal experimental chemical and biological weapons
programs.21
· In 2000, the authorities reportedly
introduced tongue amputation as a punishment for persons who
criticize Saddam Hussein or his family, and on July 17,
government authorities reportedly amputated the tongue of a
person who allegedly criticized Saddam Hussein. Authorities
reportedly performed the amputation in front of a large
crowd. Similar tongue amputations also reportedly
occurred.22 15 Page 7, Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department of State;
www.state.gov 16 Ibid, Page 5 17 Ibid, Page 2 18 Ibid, Page
3 19 Ibid, Page 3 20 Ibid, Page 4 21 Ibid, Page 6 22 Ibid,
Page 4-5 13
· Refugees fleeing to Europe often reported
instances of torture to receiving governments, and displayed
scars and mutilations to substantiate their claims.23
· In August 2001 Amnesty International released a report
entitled Iraq -- Systematic Torture of Political Prisoners,
which detailed the systematic and routine use of torture
against suspected political opponents and, occasionally,
other prisoners. Amnesty International also reports
“Detainees have also been threatened with bringing in a
female relative, especially the wife or the mother, and
raping her in front of the detainee. Some of these threats
have been carried out.”24
· Saad Keis Naoman, an Iraqi
soccer player who defected to Europe, reported that he and
his teammates were beaten and humiliated at the order of
Uday Saddam Hussein for poor performances. He was flogged
until his back was bloody, forcing him to sleep on his
stomach in the tiny cell in Al- Radwaniya prison.25
EXECUTIONS AND REPRESSION OF POLITICAL
OPPOSITION
· Former UN Human Rights Special Rapporteur
Max Van der Stoel’s report in April 1998 stated that Iraq
had executed at least 1,500 people during the previous year
for political reasons.
· The government continues to
execute summarily alleged political opponents and leaders in
the Shi’a religious community. Reports suggest that persons
were executed merely because of their association with an
opposition group or as part of a continuing effort to reduce
prison populations.26
· In February 2001, the Government
reportedly executed 37 political detainees for opposition
activity.27
· In June 2001, security forces killed a
Shi’a cleric, Hussein Bahar al-Uloom, for refusing to appear
on television to congratulate Qusay Saddam Hussein for his
election to a Ba’th Party position. Such killings continue
an apparent government policy of eliminating prominent Shi’a
clerics who are suspected of disloyalty to the government.
In 1998 and 1999, the Government killed a number of leading
Shi’a clerics, prompting the former Special Rapporteur in
1999 to express his concern to the government that the
killings might be part of a systematic attack by government
officials on the independent leadership of the Shi’a Muslim
community. The government did not respond to the Special
Rapporteur’s letter.28
· There are persistent reports
that families are made to pay for the cost of executions.29
· Saddam Hussein destroyed the southern Iraqi town of
Albu ‘Aysh sometime between September 1998 and December
1999.30 23 Page 4, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
– Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department of State; www.state.gov
24 Iraq – Systematic Torture of Political Prisoners; Amnesty
International; web.amnesty.org 25 Page 4, Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department
of State; www.state.gov 26 Ibid, Page 1 27 Ibid, Page 2 28
Ibid, Page 2 29 Ibid, Page 4 30 Iraq – Systematic Torture of
Political Prisoners; Amnesty International; web.amnesty.org
14
· Iraq has conducted a systematic “Arabization”
campaign of ethnic cleansing designed to harass and expel
ethnic Kurds and Turkmen from government-controlled areas.
Non-Arab citizens are forced to change their ethnicity or
their identity documents and adopt Arab names, or they are
deprived of their homes, property and food-ration cards, and
expelled.
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S ABUSE OF CHILDREN
· Saddam
Hussein has held 3-week training courses in weapons use,
hand-to-hand fighting, rappelling from helicopters, and
infantry tactics for children between 10 and 15 years of
age. Camps for these "Saddam Cubs" operated throughout the
country. Senior military officers who supervised the courses
noted that the children held up under the "physical and
psychological strain" of training that lasted for as long as
14 hours each day. Sources in the opposition report that the
army found it difficult to recruit enough children to fill
all of the vacancies in the program. Families reportedly
were threatened with the loss of their food ration cards if
they refused to enroll their children in the course. The
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq reported
in October 1999 that authorities were denying food ration
cards to families that failed to send their young sons to
Saddam Cubs compulsory weapons-training camps. Similarly,
authorities reportedly withheld school examination results
to students unless they registered in the Fedayeen Saddam
organization.31
· Iraq often announces food ration cuts
for the general population, blaming US or UK actions. Among
the most controversial have been cuts in baby milk rations.
Iraq has blamed the shortages on US and UK contract
rejections, although the UN has approved all baby milk
contracts submitted.
· Child labor persists and there
are instances of forced labor.
· There are widespread
reports that food and medicine that could have been made
available to the general public, including children, have
been stockpiled in warehouses or diverted for the personal
use of some government officials.32
DISAPPEARANCES
· Amnesty International reported that Iraq has the
world’s worst record for numbers of persons who have
disappeared or remain unaccounted for. 33
· In 1999, the
UN Special Rapporteur stated that Iraq remains the country
with the highest number of disappearances known to the UN:
over 16,000.
BASIC FREEDOMS: FREEDOM OF SPEECH, FREEDOM
OF THE PRESS, FREEDOM OF INFORMATION
· In practice,
Saddam Hussein does not permit freedom of speech or of the
press, and does not tolerate political dissent in areas
under its control. In November 2000, the UN General Assembly
criticized Saddam Hussein’s "suppression of freedom of
thought, expression, information, association, and
assembly." The Special Rapporteur stated in October 1999
that citizens lived "in a climate of fear," in 31 Page 1,
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices – Iraq, March 4,
2002; US Department of State; www.state.gov 32 Ibid, Page 16
33 Ibid, Page 3 15 which whatever they said or did,
particularly in the area of politics, involved "the risk of
arrest and interrogation by the police or military
intelligence." He noted that "the mere suggestion that
someone is not a supporter of the President carries the
prospect of the death penalty."34
· In June 2001, the
Human Rights Alliance reported that Saddam Hussein had
killed more than 500 journalists and other intellectuals in
the past decade.35
· Saddam Hussein frequently infringes
on citizens' constitutional right to privacy. Saddam
routinely ignores constitutional provisions designed to
protect the confidentiality of mail, telegraphic
correspondence, and telephone conversations. Iraq
periodically jams news broadcasts from outside the country,
including those of opposition groups. The security services
and the Ba'th Party maintain pervasive networks of informers
to deter dissident activity and instill fear in the
public.36
· Foreign journalists must work from offices
located within the Iraqi ministry building and are
accompanied everywhere they go by ministry officers, who
reportedly restrict their movements and make it impossible
for them to interact freely with citizens.37
· The Iraqi
Government, the Ba'th Party, or persons close to Saddam
Hussein own all print and broadcast media, and operate them
as propaganda outlets. They generally do not report opposing
points of view that are expressed either domestically or
abroad.38
· In September 1999, Hashem Hasan, a
journalist and Baghdad University professor, was arrested
after declining an appointment as editor of one of Uday
Hussein's publications. The Paris-based Reporters Sans
Frontieres (RSF) sent a letter of appeal to Uday Hussein;
however, Hassan's fate and whereabouts remained unknown at
year's end.39
· Saddam Hussein regularly jams foreign
news broadcasts. Satellite dishes, modems, and fax machines
are banned, although some restrictions reportedly were
lifted in 1999.40
· In government-operated Internet
cafes, users only are permitted to view web sites provided
by the Ministry of Culture and Information.41
· In 1999,
Uday Hussein reportedly dismissed hundreds of members of the
Iraqi Union of Journalists for not praising Saddam Hussein
and the Government sufficiently.42 34 Page 9, Country
Reports on Human Rights Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US
Department of State; www.state.gov 35 Ibid, Page 9 36 Ibid,
Page 7 37 Ibid, Page 9 38 Ibid, Page 9 39 Ibid, Page 10 40
Ibid, Page 10 41 Ibid, Page 10 42 Ibid, Page 10 16
WITHHOLDING OF FOOD
· Relatives who do not report
deserters may lose their ration cards for purchasing
government-controlled food supplies, be evicted from their
residences, or face the arrest of other family members. The
Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq reported
in October and December 1999 that authorities denied food
ration cards to families that failed to send their young
sons to the "Saddam’s Cubs” compulsory weapons training
camps.43
CRIMES AGAINST MUSLIMS
· The Government
consistently politicizes and interferes with religious
pilgrimages, both of Iraqi Muslims who wish to make the Hajj
to Mecca and Medina and of Iraqi and non-Iraqi Muslim
pilgrims who travel to holy sites within the country. For
example, in 1998 the UN Sanctions Committee offered to
disburse vouchers for travel and expenses to pilgrims making
the Hajj; however, the Government rejected this offer. In
1999 the Sanctions Committee offered to disburse funds to
cover Hajj-related expenses via a neutral third party; the
Government again rejected the offer. Following the December
1999 passage of UN Security Council Resolution 1284, the
Sanctions Committee again sought to devise a protocol to
facilitate the payment for individuals making the journey.
The Sanctions Committee proposed to issue $250 in cash and
$1,750 in travelers checks to each individual pilgrim to be
distributed at the U.N. office in Baghdad in the presence of
both U.N. and Iraqi officials. The Government again declined
and, consequently, no Iraqi pilgrims were able to take
advantage of the available funds or, in 2000, of the
permitted flights. The Government continued to insist that
these funds would be accepted only if they were paid in cash
to the government-controlled central bank, not to the Hajj
pilgrims.44 More than 95 percent of the population of Iraq
are Muslim. The (predominantly Arab) Shi'a Muslims
constitute a 60 to 65 percent majority:
· The Iraqi
government has for decades conducted a brutal campaign of
murder, summary execution, and protracted arbitrary arrest
against the religious leaders and followers of the majority
Shi'a Muslim population. Despite nominal legal protection of
religious equality, the Government has repressed severely
the Shi'a clergy and those who follow the Shi'a faith.
45
· Forces from the Mukhabarat, General Security (Amn
Al-Amm), the Military Bureau, Saddam's Commandos (Fedayeen
Saddam), and the Ba'th Party have killed senior Shi'a
clerics, desecrated Shi'a mosques and holy sites, and
interfered with Shi'a religious education. Security agents
reportedly are stationed at all the major Shi'a mosques and
shrines, where they search, harass, and arbitrarily arrest
worshipers.46 43 Page 8, Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department of State;
www.state.gov 44 Ibid, Page 11-12 45 Ibid, Page 11 46 Ibid,
Page 11 17
· The following government restrictions on
religious rights remained in effect during 2001:
restrictions and outright bans on communal Friday prayer by
Shi'a Muslims; restrictions on the loaning of books by Shi'a
mosque libraries; a ban on the broadcast of Shi'a programs
on government-controlled radio or television; a ban on the
publication of Shi'a books, including prayer books and
guides; a ban on funeral processions other than those
organized by the Government; a ban on other Shi'a funeral
observances such as gatherings for Koran reading; and the
prohibition of certain processions and public meetings that
commemorate Shi'a holy days. Shi'a groups report that they
captured documents from the security services during the
1991 uprising that listed thousands of forbidden Shi'a
religious writings.47
· In June 1999, several Shi'a
opposition groups reported that the Government instituted a
program in the predominantly Shi'a districts of Baghdad that
used food ration cards to restrict where individuals could
pray. The ration cards, part of the UN oil-for-food program,
reportedly are checked when the bearer enters a mosque and
are printed with a notice of severe penalties for those who
attempt to pray at an unauthorized location.48 47 Page 11,
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices – Iraq, March 4,
2002; US Department of State; www.state.gov 48 Ibid, Page 11
18
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S SUPPORT FOR INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM
Iraq is one of seven countries that have been designated by
the Secretary of State as state sponsors of international
terrorism. UNSCR 687 prohibits Saddam Hussein from
committing or supporting terrorism, or allowing terrorist
organizations to operate in Iraq. Saddam continues to
violate these UNSCR provisions.49
· In 1993, the Iraqi
Intelligence Service (IIS) directed and pursued an attempt
to assassinate, through the use of a powerful car bomb,
former U.S. President George Bush and the Emir of Kuwait.
Kuwaiti authorities thwarted the terrorist plot and arrested
16 suspects, led by two Iraqi nationals.
· Iraq shelters
terrorist groups including the Mujahedin-e-Khalq
Organization (MKO), which has used terrorist violence
against Iran and in the 1970s was responsible for killing
several U.S. military personnel and U.S. civilians.50
· Iraq shelters several prominent Palestinian terrorist
organizations in Baghdad, including the Palestine Liberation
Front (PLF), which is known for aerial attacks against
Israel and is headed by Abu Abbas, who carried out the 1985
hijacking of the cruise ship Achille Lauro and murdered U.S.
citizen Leon Klinghoffer.51
· Iraq shelters the Abu
Nidal Organization, an international terrorist organization
that has carried out terrorist attacks in twenty countries,
killing or injuring almost 900 people. Targets have included
the United States and several other Western nations. Each of
these groups have offices in Baghdad and receive training,
logistical assistance, and financial aid from the government
of Iraq.52
· In April 2002, Saddam Hussein increased
from $10,000 to $25,000 the money offered to families of
Palestinian suicide/homicide bombers. The rules for
rewarding suicide/homicide bombers are strict and insist
that only someone who blows himself up with a belt of
explosives gets the full payment. Payments are made on a
strict scale, with different amounts for wounds,
disablement, death as a “martyr” and $25,000 for a suicide
bomber. Mahmoud Besharat, a representative on the West Bank
who is handing out to families the money from Saddam, said,
“You would have to ask President Saddam why he is being so
generous. But he is a revolutionary and he wants this
distinguished struggle, the intifada, to continue."53
· Former Iraqi military officers have described a highly
secret terrorist training facility in Iraq known as Salman
Pak, where both Iraqis and non-Iraqi Arabs receive training
on hijacking planes and trains, planting explosives in
cities, sabotage, and assassinations. 49 Patterns of Global
Terrorism 2001: Overview of State-Sponsored Terrorism; US
Department of State; May 21, 2002. 50 Ibid. 51 Ibid. 52
Ibid. 53 “Jenin Families Pocket Iraqi Cash”; The Washington
Times: London Daily Telegraph; May 31, 2002. 19
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S REFUSAL TO ACCOUNT FOR GULF WAR PRISONERS
UNSCRs 686, 687 and others require Saddam Hussein to release
immediately any Gulf War prisoners and to cooperate in
accounting for missing and dead Kuwaitis and others from the
Gulf War. Saddam has continued to violate these resolutions.
· Saddam Hussein has failed to return, or account for, a
large number of Kuwaiti citizens and citizens of other
countries who were detained during the Iraqi occupation of
Kuwait and continues to refuse to cooperate with the
Tripartite Commission to resolve the cases.
· Of 609
cases of missing Gulf War POWs/MIAs representing 14
nationalities – including one American pilot – under review
by the Tripartite Commission on Gulf War Missing, only 4
have been resolved. Because of continued Iraqi obfuscation
and concealment, very few cases have been resolved since the
Gulf War. Saddam Hussein denies having any knowledge of the
others and claims that any relevant records were lost in the
aftermath of the Gulf War.
· In a December 2001 report
to the UN Security Council, the UN Secretary-General
criticized the Iraqi Government's refusal to cooperate with
the U.N. on the issue of the missing POWs/MIAs citizens.
Iran reports that the Iraqi Government still has not
accounted for 5,000 Iranian POW's missing since the
Iran-Iraq War.
· “Secretary General reiterates little
progress on the issue of repatriation or return of all
Kuwaiti and third country nationals or their remains, as
Iraq refused to cooperate with the Tripartite Commission.”54
· In August 2001, Amnesty International reported that
Saddam Hussein has the world's worst record for numbers of
persons who have disappeared and remain unaccounted for. 55
· The Iraqi Government continued to ignore the more than
16,000 cases conveyed to it in 1994 and 1995 by the UN, as
well as requests from the Governments of Kuwait and Saudi
Arabia to account for the whereabouts of those who had
disappeared during Iraq's 1990-91 occupation of Kuwait, and
from Iran regarding the whereabouts of prisoners of war that
Iraq captured in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War.
56
· ”Security Council regrets that no progress made on
return of Kuwaiti national archives, reiterate need for Iraq
to immediately fulfill all requirements under the relevant
resolutions, including repatriation or return of all Kuwaiti
and third country nationals or their remains.”57 54
Vorontsov Report; UN SG/2002/931 on Iraqi Non-Compliance
With UNSCR 1284 55 Page 3, Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices – Iraq, March 4, 2002; US Department of State;
www.state.gov 56 Ibid, Page 3 57 Vorontsov Report; UN
SG/2002/931 on Iraqi Non-Compliance With UNSCR 1284 20
SADDAM HUSSEIN’S REFUSAL TO RETURN STOLEN PROPERTY
Iraq destroyed much stolen property before it could be
returned, and Kuwait claims that large quantities of
equipment remain unaccounted for:
· The UN and Kuwait
say Iraq has not returned extensive Kuwaiti state archives
and museum pieces, as well as military equipment, including
eight Mirage F-1 aircraft, 245 Russian-made fighting
vehicles, 90 M113 armored personnel carriers, one Hawk
battery, 3,750 Tow and anti-tank missiles, and 675
Russian-made surface-to-air missile batteries.
SADDAM
HUSSEIN’S EFFORTS TO CIRCUMVENT ECONOMIC SANCTIONS AND
IMPEDE THE OIL-FOR-FOOD PROGRAM
· Saddam Hussein has
illegally imported hundreds of millions of dollars in goods
in violation of economic sanctions and outside of the UN’s
Oil-for-Food program. For example, Iraq has imported fiber
optic communications systems that support the Iraqi
military.
· Iraq has diverted dual-use items obtained
under the Oil for Food program for military purposes. For
example, Iraq diverted UN approved trucks from humanitarian
relief purposes to military purposes, and has used
construction equipment to help rebuild WMD-affiliated
facilities.
· The Iraqi regime illicitly exports
hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil each day in flagrant
violation of UNSCRs and blatant disregard for the
humanitarian well-being of the Iraqi people. In so doing, it
has deprived the Iraqi people of billions of dollars in
food, medicine, and other humanitarian assistance that would
have been provided if the regime had exported the oil under
the UN Oil-for-Food program. Instead, Saddam Hussein has
used these billions to fund his WMD programs, pay off his
security apparatus, and supply himself and his supporters
with luxury items and other goods.
· In January 2002,
President Bush reported to Congress that “as most recently
stated in a November 19 UN report, the government of Iraq is
not committed to using funds available through the Oil for
Food program to improve the health and welfare of the Iraqi
people…Iraq’s contracting delays, cuts in food, medicine,
educational and other humanitarian sector allocations,
government attempts to impede or shut down humanitarian NGO
operations in northern Iraq, and Baghdad’s delays in the
issuance of visas for UN personnel demonstrate that the
Iraqi regime is trying to undermine the effectiveness of the
program.”58
· Saddam Hussein spends smuggled oil wealth
on his lavish palaces and inner circle, rather than on the
humanitarian needs of the Iraqi people.
· Saddam Hussein
has used water pumps, piping, and other supplies that could
have been used to repair urban sewer and water systems in
order to construct moats and canals at his palaces.