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Subject:

US free Iraqi kidnappers to spy on insurgents - IOS - 20/03/2005

From:

Julie-ann Davies <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Julie-ann Davies <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Sun, 20 Mar 2005 11:18:29 -0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (102 lines)

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=621845


US frees Iraqi kidnappers so they can spy on insurgents
Americans undermining local police attempts to crack down on wave of
abductions
By Patrick Cockburn
20 March 2005


US intelligence and military police officers in Iraq are routinely freeing
dangerous criminals in return for a promise to spy on insurgents, The
Independent on Sunday can reveal.

In one case where the IoS has seen documents, police rescued a doctor after
a gun battle with his kidnappers and arrested two of the kidnap gang, who
made full confessions. But US military police took over custody of the two
men and let them go. The doctor had to flee to Egypt after being threatened
by the gang.

The police station where the men were held recorded that they had been
handed over to an American military police lieutenant for transfer to the
US-run Camp Cuervo detention centre. But an American military spokesman told
the IoS that there was no record of the two prisoners in their database.

"The Americans are allowing the breakdown of Iraqi society because they are
only interested in fighting the insurgency," said a senior Iraqi police
officer. "We are dealing with an epidemic of kidnapping, extortion and
violent crime, but even though we know the Americans monitor calls on
mobiles and satellite phones, which are often used in ransom negotiations,
they will not pass on any criminal intelligence to us. They only want to use
the information against insurgents."

An Iraqi government source confirmed that criminal suspects were often
released if they agreed to inform on insurgents, despite the dangers to
ordinary Iraqis. The Iraqi middle class has been heavily targeted by
kidnappers since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Many doctors, a favourite
target, and businessmen have fled to Syria, Jordan and Egypt. The police
admit that they have been unable to do anything to stop the wave of
abductions.

Dr Thamir Mohammed Ali Hasafa al-Kaisey, 60, a GP, was seized by a gang of
11 kidnappers in three cars as he drove home from his clinic in Baghdad at
6.30pm on 23 December. "I was 50 metres from my house when men with guns in
a Jeep Cherokee stopped me and beat me with their fists," Dr Hasafa later
told police. "They put me in their car with my face on the ground and tied
me up with my own jacket."

Although kidnappers operate with near impunity in central Iraq, Dr Hasafa
had an extraordinary stroke of luck. His captors ran into a police
checkpoint, and shooting broke out. Even though his leg was broken in the
beating, the doctor was able to crawl out of the back of the car and shout
to the police: "I am a doctor and I was kidnapped."

The case was a rare breakthough for the police. In their confessions,
obtained by the IoS, the two suspects - one a serving police lieutenant -
give a unique picture of how the gangs work, and the extraordinarily high
number of kidnappings they carry out.

Mohammed Najim Abdullah al-Dhouri, the police lieutenant, and Adnan Ashur
Ali al-Jabouri are both members of powerful tribes from which Saddam drew
many of his inner circle of security men and army officers. But the motive
of the gang seemed to have been purely criminal.

Adnan Ashur told the investigating judge that the leaders of the gang were
Eyhab, nicknamed Abu Fahad, who ran a mobile phone shop, and his brother,
Hisham. Eyhab, he said, was a criminal sentenced to 40 years in jail by the
old regime. He had apparently been freed during a general amnesty by Saddam
at the end of 2002.

Mohammed Najim, who was based in Sadr City in east Baghdad, lived in special
police housing. He said: "I was involved with Hisham prior to the fall of
Saddam. Later he approached me about kidnapping prominent men. My task was
to provide security for the gang." All the gang members were armed with
pistols. They had safe houses in which to keep kidnap victims. Both suspects
said they had taken part in numerous other kidnappings in the previous few
months, with their victims paying up to $60,000 (£31,000) each. Ironically,
the informant who had told them that Dr Hasafa was worth kidnapping was a
guard hired by householders to protect the street where he lived.

The Iraqi police were jubilant that they finally had detailed information on
how a kidnap gang operated. The two captured men were willing to provide the
names and addresses of other gang members, and the success was lauded by
Iraqi television and the local press. To the consternation of the police,
however, on 30 December a convoy of US military police arrived at al-Khansa
police station, where Mohammed Najim and Adnan Ashur were being held. The
Iraqi police officer at the station recorded: "They have requested the
custody of the two assailants." Iraqi police dropped the case against the
rest of the gang.

Dr Hasafa, meanwhile, received two visits from the families of the
prisoners. The first was from the father of Mohammed Najim, who offered
money if the kidnap charge was withdrawn. He said he had been an officer in
the Republican Guard and added menacingly: "You know what we are capable of
doing."

During the second meeting Dr Hasafa learned that his kidnappers had been
freed. He refused to withdraw charges, despite death threats to his family,
but in January he fled to Jordan and then Egypt.


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