The Commercial Appeal

Relative of Blackwater victim rips pardons

- Samya Kullab

BAGHDAD – Faris Fadel had just one word to describe the recent pardoning by the Trump administra­tion of four private security contractor­s convicted of killing Iraqi civilians – including his brother – in a public square 13 years ago: Unfair.

Fadel’s brother, Osama Abbas, had been on his way to work that fateful day. He had just crossed a street into Baghdad’s Nisoor Square to do a money transfer – a last-minute change in plans that would cost the 41-year-old electrical engineer his life.

At the time, the Blackwater firm had been contracted to provide security for U.S. diplomats in Iraq. It was four years after the 2003 invasion of Iraq that ultimately toppled Saddam Hussein. The four men, military veterans working as contractor­s for the State Department, opened fire in the crowded traffic circle, killing 14 Iraqis, including a child, and wounding more than a dozen more.

The shooting of civilians by the contractor­s prompted an internatio­nal outcry, left a reputation­al black eye on U.S. operations in Iraq and brought into question the government’s use of private contractor­s in military zones.

Nicholas Slatten was convicted of murder, and Paul Slough, Evan Liberty and Dustin Heard were convicted of manslaught­er in 2014 after a monthslong trial in federal court in Washington. Each had pleaded not guilty. On Tuesday, President Donald Trump pardoned them.

“This decision was wrong, it was unfair,” said Fadel, 44. “How can you release those who have blood on their hands?”

Abbas left a wife and four children behind. The eldest was in her second year of university and the youngest in the last of primary school at the time of his death. He was happy with his life, Fadel said.

“He didn’t have much, but he didn’t want for anything,” he said.

On that day in September 2007, Abbas was on his way to work but decided to cross the road to a money transfer service. Fadel said it was a time when the country was still reeling in the aftermath of bloody sectarian street wars. “We were starting to feel like we could come up for air,” he said.

Then, the bullets rained down on Nisoor Square.

Defense attorneys for the four contractor­s argued they were returning fire after being ambushed by Iraqi insurgents. Prosecutor­s said the convoy had launched an unprovoked attack using sniper fire, machine guns and grenade launchers. Iraqis considered it a massacre.

Years after the attack, Fadel is still bitter. “They were all civilians; they weren’t guilty of anything,” he said.

Fadel lost not only a brother, but a father figure. Ten years his senior, Abbas had looked after the family following the untimely death of their father at a young age.

“He raised me,” Fadel said of Abbas. Abbas had started his own engineerin­g company and took responsibi­lity for the entire family. His death had sent them down a spiral of shock and insolvency.

His widow didn’t speak for days, and his mother took to a wheelchair after suffering cardiac arrest from the shock. Abbas’ youngest son suffers from severe depression.

“They destroyed our home and our family,” he said of the contractor­s.

 ?? KHALID MOHAMMED/AP, FILE ?? An Iraqi policeman inspects a car destroyed by a security detail in al-nisoor Square in Baghdad on Sept. 25, 2007.
KHALID MOHAMMED/AP, FILE An Iraqi policeman inspects a car destroyed by a security detail in al-nisoor Square in Baghdad on Sept. 25, 2007.

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