I used to be in center faculty when on April 28, 2004, CBS Information first made public the haunting images from Abu Ghraib jail in Iraq. I can’t bear in mind precisely how I felt then besides that it was an extremely darkish second that rocked everybody. That has caught with me to at the present time.
Virtually 20 years later, I discovered myself in court docket wanting on the similar stunning footage of males whose faces are hidden beneath coarse hoods. However this time, the boys tortured in these images weren’t anonymous and faceless. I watched one survivor of Abu Ghraib testify from Iraq by way of videolink, and I shook arms with one other exterior the court docket, 20 minutes away from the nation’s capital the place choices had been made that modified their lives.
It was two weeks earlier than the twentieth anniversary of the Abu Ghraib scandal that the civil trial of Al Shimari v CACI lastly began. I attended as an observer from the Heart for Victims of Torture, which seeks accountability for torture perpetrated by the USA.
This case, introduced forth by three Iraqi males – Suhail Najim Abdullah al-Shimari, Salah Hasan Nusaif al-Ejaili and Asa’advert Hamza Hanfoosh Zuba’e – is the one one by survivors of Abu Ghraib in opposition to a navy contractor that has reached trial.
The three males are suing CACI Worldwide Inc, a non-public navy contractor, over the allegation that CACI personnel “participated in a conspiracy to commit illegal conduct, together with torture and battle crimes at Abu Ghraib jail”. Since 2008, the corporate has tried to dismiss this case greater than 20 instances.
The trial marks a major second within the authorized battle for justice and redress for Abu Ghraib and, extra broadly, the US torture programme. It represents a end result of relentless efforts by the victims themselves, human rights advocates and authorized consultants to make clear the darkish underbelly of the US “battle on terror”.
On the Heart for Victims of Torture, the place I work, we straight work together with survivors of torture, hear them discuss what was completed to them, and the way torture affected their sense of safety, sense of belief, and sense of self. Torture is about deliberately breaking the human – thoughts, physique, and spirit; it doesn’t finish when the acts cease. That’s the reason telling the story issues.
Within the courtroom, the plaintiffs gave harrowing accounts of their experiences at Abu Ghraib and the consequences with which they reside with 20 years later.
They walked the court docket via the sorts of torture and humiliation they had been subjected to by each navy personnel and personal contractors. They spoke in regards to the lasting bodily ache and harm, the difficulties in interacting with household, lack of significant relationships and hassle sleeping as a result of nightmares. They associated how they may not even make eye contact with one another – a easy human act to see and be seen – due to the disgrace they felt over what was completed to them.
Al-Ejaili, a journalist who used to work with Al Jazeera, testified how significant it was to him to inform his story: “Maybe it’s like a type of therapy or a treatment.”
At court docket, Main-Normal (retired) Antonio Taguba and Main-Normal (retired) George Fay testified about their respective investigations into torture at Abu Ghraib. Normal Taguba’s 2004 inquiry was carried out earlier than any footage from Abu Ghraib had been made public and was initiated by the navy following investigations from the Worldwide Committee of the Crimson Cross and the Military’s Legal Investigation Command. Normal Taguba discovered that “incidents of sadistic, blatant and wanton felony abuses had been inflicted on a number of detainees” and that the “systemic and unlawful abuse … was deliberately perpetrated”.
Normal Fay’s report, launched in August 2004, discovered that torture methods on the detainees included the usage of canines, nudity, humiliation and bodily abuse. It described torture, together with “direct bodily assault, corresponding to delivering head blows rendering detainees unconscious, to sexual posing and compelled participation in group masturbation”.
Each Fay and Taguba’s investigations, and a subsequent one by the US Senate Armed Companies Committee in 2008, uncovered that the atrocities at Abu Ghraib weren’t remoted. The horrors had been a part of the Bush administration’s “battle on terror” torture coverage and mirrored techniques authorised by senior officers, together with Protection Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. A few of the torture practices had been introduced over to Abu Ghraib from Guantanamo Bay and Bagram, a navy base in Afghanistan, the place additionally detainees had been tortured.
The Taguba and Fay stories implicate CACI personnel in abuses, corresponding to techniques to “soften up” detainees previous to interrogations. One in all them was Steve Stephanowicz, who, in accordance with inner CACI emails introduced at court docket, was a “NO-GO for filling an interrogator place”, as he was “neither skilled nor certified”. In court docket, Normal Taguba testified that Stephanowicz even tried to “intimidate” him throughout his investigation.
Regardless of this, Stephanowicz was promoted inside CACI and obtained a 48 p.c improve in wage – a pattern additionally seen with these within the Bush administration who authorised torture.
The Fay report mentions unnamed CACI personnel who bodily assaulted detainees and positioned them in unauthorised stress positions. One even bragged about “shaving a detainee and forcing him to put on crimson girls’s underwear”.
What is exclusive about Abu Ghraib is that, in contrast to Guantanamo and different CIA secret prisons, the world has seen the atrocities that occurred there. And in the present day, the world sees once more via this trial, via the tales of those survivors, what was completed by the US. No senior authorities or navy official has been held accountable for crimes perpetrated by the US. No sufferer has obtained redress relative to the hurt they reside with day-after-day until they die.
However this trial gives the chance to acquire some degree of justice. Survivors of torture have the correct to redress, rehabilitation and compensation, all of which I hope these three males obtain. Whereas they’ll by no means get the complete justice they deserve, a verdict of their favour may get them monetary compensation in addition to acknowledgement of their struggling and make public CACI’s complicity.
The battle for justice doesn’t finish with this case. There’s rather more nonetheless that must be completed.
Abu Ghraib and the detention centre at Bagram had been formally closed in 2014, however Guantanamo stays open, with 30 males indefinitely detained in situations that will quantity to torture, in accordance with the United Nations. Efforts to shut have stalled regardless of the present US administration’s said intent to take action. However, efforts to shut the detention centre and search justice and redress for victims of the US torture programme proceed.
The views expressed on this article are the writer’s personal and don’t essentially mirror Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.