Houston Chronicle Sunday

3 survivors from Abu Ghraib to get their day in court

- By Matthew Barakat

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Twenty years ago this month, photos of abused prisoners and smiling U.S. soldiers guarding them at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison were released, shocking the world.

Now, three survivors of Abu Ghraib finally will get their day in U.S. court against the military contractor they hold responsibl­e for their mistreatme­nt.

The trial is scheduled to begin Monday in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, and will be the first time that Abu Ghraib survivors are able to bring their claims of torture to a U.S. jury, said Baher Azmy, a lawyer with the Center for Constituti­onal Rights representi­ng the plaintiffs.

The defendant in the civil suit, CACI, supplied the interrogat­ors who worked at the prison. The Virginia-based contractor denies any wrongdoing, and has emphasized throughout 16 years of litigation that its employees are not alleged to have inflicted any abuse on any of the plaintiffs in the case.

The plaintiffs, though, seek to hold CACI responsibl­e for setting the conditions that resulted in the torture they endured, citing evidence in government investigat­ions that CACI contractor­s instructed military police to “soften up” detainees for their interrogat­ions.

Retired Army Gen. Antonio Taguba, who led an investigat­ion into the Abu Ghraib scandal, is among those expected to testify. His inquiry concluded that at least one CACI interrogat­or should be held accountabl­e for instructin­g military police to set conditions that amounted to physical abuse.

There is little dispute that the abuse was horrific. The photos released in 2004 showed naked prisoners stacked into pyramids or dragged by leashes. Some photos had a soldier smiling and giving a thumbs up while posing next to a corpse, or detainees being threatened with dogs, or hooded and attached to electrical wires.

The plaintiffs cannot be clearly identified in any of the infamous images, but their descriptio­ns of mistreatme­nt are unnerving.

Suhail Al Shimari has described sexual assaults and beatings during his two months at the prison. He was also electrical­ly shocked and dragged around the prison by a rope tied around his neck. Former Al-Jazeera reporter Salah Al-Ejaili said he was subjected to stress positions that caused him to vomit black liquid. He was also deprived of sleep, forced to wear women’s underwear and threatened with dogs.

CACI, though, has said the U.S. military is the institutio­n that bears responsibi­lity for setting the conditions at Abu Ghraib and that its employees weren’t in a position to be giving orders to soldiers. In court papers, lawyers for the contractor group have said the “entire case is nothing more than an attempt to impose liability on CACI PT because its personnel worked in a war zone prison with a climate of activity that reeks of something foul. The law, however, does not recognize guilt by associatio­n with Abu Ghraib.”

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