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US frees 500
prisoners from Abu Ghraib
Foreign Desk Report
BAGHDAD—Five hundred prisoners walked free from the US military’s Abu
Ghraib jail in Iraq on Tuesday, released in a goodwill gesture to mark
the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The detainees were
presented with a Koran and $25 on their release which marked Eid al-Fitr
celebrations. Their release was in addition to 1,000 prisoners set free
in October at the start of the month of fasting.
All 1,500, who also received traditional white shirts, were released
after their cases went before an Iraqi-led review board and were found
not to have committed serious or violent crimes, the US military said in
a statement. “These detainees have confessed to their crimes, renounced
violence and pledged to be good citizens of Iraq,” it said. Deputy Prime
Minister Abed Mutlak al-Jibouri and other ministers were present for the
release, requested by the Iraqi government, but media were not invited
to Abu Ghraib, a vast complex about 15 km (10 miles) west of Baghdad. US
forces are holding 13,885 detainees, including 5,074 at Abu Ghraib,
behind barbed wire at several facilities across Iraq, up from a total of
about 11,800 a month ago, a spokesman for the US military’s prison
operations said. Iraqi critics say US military detentions are too
arbitrary and too long. Abu Ghraib became notorious for the images of US
soldiers mocking, physically abusing and torturing Iraqi prisoners that
emerged last year. |