Human rights in Saddam Hussein's Iraq

Iraq under Saddam Hussein had high levels of torture and mass murder.

Secret police, torture, murders, rape, abductions, deportations, forced disappearances, assassinations, chemical weapons, and the destruction of wetlands (more specifically, the destruction of the food sources of rival groups) were some of the methods Saddam Hussein used to maintain control. The total number of deaths related to torture and murder during this period are unknown, as are the reports of human rights violations. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International issued regular reports of widespread imprisonment and torture.

Contents

Documented human rights violations 1979–2003

Human rights organizations have documented government-approved executions, acts of torture and rape for decades since Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979 until his fall in 2003.

'Saddam's Dirty Dozen'

According to officials of the United States State Department, many human rights abuses in Saddam Hussein's Iraq were largely carried out in person or by the orders of Saddam Hussein and eleven other people. The term "Saddam's Dirty Dozen" was coined in October 2002 (from a novel by E.M. Nathanson, later adapted as a film directed by Robert Aldrich) and used by US officials to describe this group. Most members of the group held high positions in the Iraqi government and membership went all the way from Saddam's personal guard to Saddam's sons. The list was used by the Bush Administration to help argue that the 2003 Iraq war was against Saddam Hussein and the Baath Party leadership, rather than against the Iraqi people. The members are:

Number of Victims

According to The New York Times, "he [Saddam] murdered as many as a million of his people, many with poison gas. He tortured, maimed and imprisoned countless more. His unprovoked invasion of Iran is estimated to have left another million people dead. His seizure of Kuwait threw the Middle East into crisis. More insidious, arguably, was the psychological damage he inflicted on his own land. Hussein created a nation of informants — friends on friends, circles within circles — making an entire population complicit in his rule".[9] Others have estimated 800,000 deaths caused by Saddam not counting the Iran-Iraq war.[10] Estimates as to the number of Iraqis executed by Saddam's regime vary from 300-500,000[11] to over 600,000,[12] estimates as to the number of Kurds he massacred vary from 70,000 to 300,000,[13] and estimates as to the number killed in the put-down of the 1991 rebellion vary from 60,000[14] to 200,000.[12] Estimates for the number of dead in the Iran-Iraq war range upwards from 300,000.[15]

Iraq sanctions

Researcher Richard Garfield estimated that "a minimum of 100,000 and a more likely estimate of 227,000 excess deaths among young children from August 1991 through March 1998" from all causes including sanctions.[16] Other estimates have ranged as low as 170,000 children.[17][18] UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said that

if the substantial reduction in child mortality throughout Iraq during the 1980s had continued through the 1990s, there would have been half a million fewer deaths of children under-five in the country as a whole during the eight year period 1991 to 1998. As a partial explanation, she pointed to a March statement of the Security Council Panel on Humanitarian Issues which states: "Even if not all suffering in Iraq can be imputed to external factors, especially sanctions, the Iraqi people would not be undergoing such deprivations in the absence of the prolonged measures imposed by the Security Council and the effects of war." [19]

The US State Department has stated that Iraq was offered the Oil-for-Food Program designed to alleviate the humanitarian condition of Iraq in 1991 but that Iraq refused to accept it for years. It stated:

In Northern Iraq, where the UN administers humanitarian assistance, child mortality rates have fallen below pre-Gulf War levels. Rates rose in the period before oil-for-food, but with the introduction of the program the trend reversed, and now those Iraqi children are better off than before the war. Child mortality figures have more than doubled in the south and center of the country, where the Iraqi government—rather than the UN—controls the program. If a turn-around on child mortality can be made in the north, which is under the same sanctions as the rest of the country, there is no reason it cannot be done in the south and center. The fact of the matter is, however, that the government of Iraq does not share the international community's concern about the welfare of its people. Baghdad's refusal to cooperate with the oil-for-food program and its deliberate misuse of resources are cynical efforts to sacrifice the Iraqi people's welfare in order to bring an end to UN sanctions without complying with its obligations."[20]

This view has been disputed by authors such as Anthony Arnove, who argued that the one-sided heaping of blame on the Baghdad government was overly simplistic and dishonest because Iraq's north received more supplies per capita;[21] the State Department responded by saying that the rest of Iraq could order supplies "without limit" but was simply refusing to purchase them in adequate quantities.[22] President Bill Clinton argued that Iraq actually had far more money to spend on humanitarian supplies under the sanctions regime than it would have had over the same period based on the trends that existed before the Gulf War, adding that "we have worked like crazy" to avoid the unnecessary suffering of civilians.[23] Critics of sanctions, however, argued that UN prohibitions on items that could (allegedly) be used for chemical or biological weapons exacerbated the situation.[24] A study in the Middle East Review of International Affairs argued that the sanctions, in and of themselves, would actually have saved lives in that they required the government to spend at least 72% of its income on human services, whereas the government had previously never spent more than 25%.[25]

In Significance, economist Michael Spagat argues that the ICMMS survey, the only one (of four) international sanctions surveys (graphed in his paper) to show a dramatic increase in child mortality, is suspect because of the abusive, manipulative nature of the Iraqi regime. He offers two possible explanations for the north/south discrepancy:

First, the Kurdish zone was free of Saddam’s control. In the South/centre, though, the reaction of Saddam Hussein’s regime to the sanctions must be part of a full explanation for child mortality patterns in this zone. ... A second potential explanation for the strange patterns displayed by the South/ Centre in the [data] is that they were not real, but rather results of manipulations by the Iraqi government.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ "UN condemns Iraq on human rights". BBC News. 2002-04-19. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/1940050.stm. 
  2. ^ JURIST - Dateline
  3. ^ a b "Whatever Happened To The Iraqi Kurds?". Hrw.org. http://www.hrw.org/reports/1991/IRAQ913.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-25. 
  4. ^ "Iraq: ‘Disappearances’ – the agony continues". Web.amnesty.org. 2005-07-30. http://web.amnesty.org/pages/irq-article_6-eng. Retrieved 2009-09-25. 
  5. ^ "ENDLESS TORMENT, The 1991 Uprising in Iraq And Its Aftermath". Hrw.org. http://www.hrw.org/reports/1992/Iraq926.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-25. 
  6. ^ "Human Rights Watch, Iraq archive". Hrw.org. http://www.hrw.org/reports/1995/IRAQ955.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-25. 
  7. ^ Jordan, Eason (April 11, 2003). "The News We (CNN) Kept To Ourselves". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/11/opinion/11JORD.html.  (requires login)
  8. ^ http://www.npr.org/2011/04/20/135570128/grave-discovery-in-iraq-unearths-sectarian-unease
  9. ^ By Dexter Filkins (2007-10-07). "Iraq – Kanan Makiya – Saddam Hussein – New York Times". Iraq: Nytimes.com. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/magazine/07MAKIYA-t.html?pagewanted=2&ei=5088&en=310195565a77e9ff&ex=1349409600&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  10. ^ "News". Indict. 2003-06-18. http://www.indict.org.uk/newsarticles.php?article=news180603. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  11. ^ A Lifesaving War | The Weekly Standard
  12. ^ a b "Bland words, vivid images wait to nail Saddam's crimes". The Age (Melbourne). 2003-03-18. http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/03/17/1047749719178.html. 
  13. ^ Twentieth Century Atlas - Death Tolls and Casualty Statistics for Wars, Dictatorships and Genocides
  14. ^ http://www.hrw.org/reports/1992/Iraq926.htm
  15. ^ Twentieth Century Atlas - Death Tolls
  16. ^ "Morbidity and Mortality Among Iraqi Children". Casi.org.uk. http://www.casi.org.uk/info/garfield/dr-garfield.html. Retrieved 2009-06-15. 
  17. ^ "Reason Magazine – The Politics of Dead Children". Reason.com. 2002-03-01. http://reason.com/archives/2002/03/01/the-politics-of-dead-children. Retrieved 2009-05-30. 
  18. ^ "The Wages of War: Iraqi Combatant and Noncombatant Fatalities in the 2003 Conflict. PDA Research Monograph 8, 20 October 2003. Carl Conetta". Comw.org. http://www.comw.org/pda/0310rm8.html#N_93_. Retrieved 2009-05-30. 
  19. ^ Iraq surveys show 'humanitarian emergency' UNICEF Newsline August 12, 1999
  20. ^ "Saddam Hussein's Iraq". Fas.org. http://www.fas.org/news/iraq/1999/09/iraq99.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  21. ^ Arnove, Anthony. Iraq Under Siege: The Deadly Impact of Sanctions and War, South End Press, April 2000.
  22. ^ http://www.usembassy.it/pdf/other/iraqfocus1.pdf
  23. ^ Bill Clinton Loses His Cool in Democracy Now! Interview on Everything But Monica: Leonard Peltier, Racial Profiling, the Iraqi Sanctions, Ralph Nader, the Death Penalty and th...
  24. ^ Hans Koechler (ed.), ECONOMIC SANCTIONS AND DEVELOPMENT - Studies in International Relations, XXIII - Vienna: International Progress Organization, 1997
  25. ^ Rubin, Michael (December 2001). Sanctions on Iraq: A Valid Anti-American Grievance?. 5. Middle East Review of International Affairs. pp. 100–115. http://meria.idc.ac.il/journal/2001/issue4/mrubin.pdf. 
  26. ^ Spagat, Michael (2010 September). "Truth and death in Iraq under sanctions". Significance (journal). http://personal.rhul.ac.uk/uhte/014/Truth%20and%20Death.pdf. 

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