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Iraq
Marines free 123 from Iraq hellhole
2003-04-16
For three days, American tanks have been shelling a military intelligence building in the posh Al-Khathamia area in west Baghdad. The dozen or so tanks are not here to pound intransigent fighters but to break down concrete beams and steel, to reach bunkers deep underground at the Al-Istikhbarat Al-'Askariya facility. The Marines found 123 prisoners, including five women, barely alive in an underground warren of cells and torture chambers. Being trapped underground probably kept them safe from the bombing of Baghdad by the coalition.

Severely emaciated, some had survived by eating the scabs off their sores. All the men had beards down to their waists, said onlookers. Most looked absolutely dazed when they emerged, said Mr Sadoun Mohamed, 37, who lives in the area.
'They had not seen sunlight for a long time,' he said. 'They kept blinking and covering their faces.' He said they were taken to the Saddam Hospital for treatment. Their names were posted on the walls of the Al-Hajabehia Mosque in west Baghdad, as were names of some 40 others known to have been executed or murdered in prison. Hundreds of anxious locals wait for word of their family, relatives and friends, some of whom were taken away more than 10 years ago.

Outside Al-Istikhbarat Al-'Askariya, Mr Sadeq Al Saeed, 24, a construction worker, has been waiting sleepless for the last 36 hours. He said he had heard the facility had five levels below ground. He said his father, an Iraqi army captain, was killed in 1991 during the first Gulf War, and his cousins Amer and Jasem and some 50 others were picked out by the secret police for chanting anti-Saddam slogans during the funeral procession. 'That was the last I saw of them,' he said. 'In the night, people raided their houses, blindfolded them and took them away.' He hopes against hope that the Marines will be able to find his cousins, who were brought here to be interrogated.

This hellhole is believed to be one of many for Iraq's political prisoners. Thousands may still be behind bars though the regime released many criminals from prisons before the war. The United States soldiers at Al-Istikhbarat Al-'Askariya would not say what they were doing there. Their tanks blocked the entrance. This place could be part of the labyrinth of underground facilities which might still shelter regime members. More than 24 bunkers were identified 12 years ago. There may be more now, located under schools, hospitals, even mosques, and linked together. The security police, or Da'irat Al-Mukhabbarat Al-'Amma; Iraqi Intelligence Service; and military intelligence, also built cells and tunnels underground. Taxi driver Hathem Ejam, 36, said Mr Saddam's older son Uday, also used them for his harem discards. Relaying widely-believed rumours, he said: 'He would pick any young girl he liked from the street, rape her, shave her head bald and then get his guards to dump her in an underground cell.'
Funny that this isn't getting more press coverage. -Steve

How many other prisons will we find, possibly too late? Remind me again why the anti-war crowd think they support the Iraqi people? -Frank G.
Posted by:Frank G & Steve

#11  The Soviets actually turned Buchenwald into a concentration camp again, shortly after the Americans moved out of Thuringia. Some people went there twice.
Posted by: True German Ally   2003-04-16 22:38:44  

#10  How many Germans ended up in the gulags after the disaster at Stalingrad? How many were never seen again?
Posted by: mojo   2003-04-16 14:56:01  

#9  I lived on the economy my first tour in Germany, in the early 1970's. My landlady's husband was released from a SOVIET Prisoner of War camp in October, 1958, just two months before he died. Compare to the United States releasing all but political (I.E., NAZI) prisoners in 1945. Very few Americans know about that kind of SOVIET behavior. There is still considerable resentment in Germany against Russia and its many forms, just from such things as this.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2003-04-16 14:20:41  

#8  ? TGA?
Posted by: Frank G   2003-04-16 10:11:33  

#7  I can imagine how these guys are feeling. More than all of you ever could.
Posted by: True German Ally   2003-04-16 10:03:22  

#6  ...they were taken to the Saddam Hospital for treatment.

Need to do something about that name. It should be all but eliminated from Iraq over the next year. The only place it should be left is over a sewer treatment facility - "Saddam Personal Waste" Facility.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2003-04-16 09:32:13  

#5  So, Murat, how's that indignation over the "American invasion" doing? Still going strong? I suppose those with your mind-set may come up with a way to infer the US put those people down there to subsist on scabbrous peelings. Saddam was/is a goddamned monster - I REPEAT: Nothing the US has done in Iraq or can conceivably do there will EVER EVER EVER compare to what Saddam and his regime have done to their own people. They were in his keeping, in his trust, and he slaughtered them.
Posted by: Tadderly   2003-04-16 09:31:02  

#4  In fake news today, Hollywood spokesman Tim Robbins, after hearing of the release of 123 Iraqi prisoners by US Marines, fired off an e-mail to President Bush which says, "Dammit! Knock it off!"

Mr. Robbins was unavailable for comment.
Posted by: FormerLiberal   2003-04-16 09:23:49  

#3  ah - *nods*
Posted by: Frank G   2003-04-16 10:55:52  

#2  C'mon guys! Don't start projecting all this Saddam stuff on the sewage treatment plant in Baghdad. Those little protozoa and rotofers are just doing a nasty job that has fallen upon their lot. Heh heh.....
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2003-04-16 10:44:38  

#1  Buchenwald (Germany) and Workuta (Soviet Union)
Posted by: True German Ally   2003-04-16 10:41:21  

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