Daily Mail

Fury as Iraqi admits fake abuse ‘racket’ targeting UK troops

- By Larisa Brown, Vanessa Allen and Richard Marsden l.brown@dailymail.co.uk

MPS last night demanded that a law firm immediatel­y withdraws more than a dozen claims of wrongdoing by British troops after an Iraqi refugee claimed they were fake.

Basim Al- Sadoon, 37, says he arranged hundreds of false abuse claims against UK soldiers to win huge Ministry of Defence payouts.

Al-Sadoon, who now lives in Denmark, says some of his clients exaggerate­d claims for money, produced fake paperwork and accused soldiers of wrongdoing even when they were not present.

He said: ‘It was a racket, all of it. All these people cared about was money. It was like a claims factory and it didn’t matter if the claims were true or false.’

He was employed by UK-based Iraqi middleman Mazin Younis, who was paid £1.6million in 2009 for passing clients on to the British law firm Leigh Day.

Yesterday the firm admitted that about 20 claims from a total of 600 it had lodged in the High Court had come from Mr AlSadoon, either via Mr Younis or directly.

That figure included 17 claims that Mr Al-Sadoon, who ran an office in the Iraqi city of Basra, had later admitted were false, the company added.

It said all 600 claims were under review by both the firm and the MoD after the High Court ruled in December that the MoD had unlawfully detained and illtreated four Iraqis. These claims could result in big payouts for other claimants.

A Leigh Day statement said: ‘ Should any of the remaining claims appear to be false or otherwise without merit as the review process continues, we would of course take the appropriat­e steps in accordance with our profession­al obligation­s with the court, the client and the Ministry of Defence.’

But last night the firm was under pressure to withdraw the claims immediatel­y before any more taxpayers’ cash was spent on them.

Ex- defence minister Andrew Murrison said: ‘ Fictitious or embroidere­d claims should be dropped before they cause any more misery to soldiers and their families and cost to the taxpayer.’

Ex-Sergeant Brian Wood, who was falsely accused by lawyers of mistreatin­g Iraqis, said: ‘If he has admitted lies they should 100 per cent be withdrawn.’

Sgt Wood took part in Battle of Danny Boy in May 2004 which was the subject of an inquiry based on false claims by Iraqis that were thrown out by a judge.

Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said he was ‘repulsed’ Mr Al-Sadoon’s revelation­s.

Tory MP Johnny Mercer added: ‘If a case is built on an individual who has lied I don’t know how they can take it forward. This guy is a self-confessed liar.’ On Wednesday, Mr Al-Sadoon alleged that he helped find more than 300 clients and that many faked their allegation­s purely to make money.

He told The Sun: ‘ It was all about money – people exaggerati­ng’. He blamed the British legal system ‘for making it so easy’ and said many clients used forged documents from Iraqi officials to back their claims: ‘There was no specific standards to accept cases. OK, you have a story and a little papers from any military camp. Also, you can get papers from Red Cross office in Basra fraudulent­ly. You can collect some case elements. After that, you start your story. If you have an old spot on your body from old torture, you can use it, as well, as evidence.

‘In Iraq it’s easy to get doctors’ papers. Doctors, for cash, can give you many reports. Claims were exaggerate­d to make money.’

Mr Al-Sadoon lodged his own fake claim following an alleged beating by soldiers he knew to be Danish. Despite that, he says he and 17 other Iraqis made identical allegation­s against British soldiers in claims submitted through Leigh Day. This claim is still active but he will now withdraw it.

Mr Younis, who employed Al-Sadoon, said last night that most

‘It was a claims factory’ ‘UK legal system makes it so easy’

claims involved detention by British forces, were supported by evidence, and did not involve allegation­s of mistreatme­nt. ‘I never asked Mr Al-Sadoon to lie or to exaggerate claims,’ he declared.

He said it was ‘unimaginab­le to assume that a fraudulent evidence could have passed through Leigh Day and the MoD’.

An MoD spokesman said fake claims caused ‘unnecessar­y distress’ for soldiers and their families, adding: ‘ Credible claims should be and are investigat­ed, but false allegation­s make it harder for justice to be served.’

Leigh Day denies any wrongdoing and a spokesman said: ‘The claims in question have not proceeded past the early procedural stage and are now being reviewed with all other cases following the High Court judgment in December. Leigh Day vehemently denies any allegation that it knew any claims to be false or encouraged false claims at any time.’

 ??  ?? Warzone: Basim Al-Sadoon said claims against British soldiers in Iraq, right, were falsified
Warzone: Basim Al-Sadoon said claims against British soldiers in Iraq, right, were falsified
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