Detention at Abu Ghraib | US military contractor ordered to pay 42 million to Iraqis

Detention at Abu Ghraib | US military contractor ordered to pay 42 million to Iraqis
Detention at Abu Ghraib | US military contractor ordered to pay 42 million to Iraqis

(Washington) A federal court on Tuesday ordered a private company subcontracting the American army to pay $42 million to three former detainees of Abu Ghraib, an Iraqi prison infamous for torture and humiliation.


Posted at 2:13 p.m.

The private American company CACI International, to which the army had delegated the interrogations of the detainees, was found by a jury in the American state of Virginia (is) responsible for the “torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment” suffered by the three Iraqis, according to the decision. She was consequently ordered to compensate each person to the tune of $14 million.

They include a school principal, a fruit seller and journalist Salah al-Ejaili – who currently lives in Sweden – arrested following the US invasion of Iraq in 2003 and detained at Abu Ghraib, west of the capital, Baghdad.

“Today is a great day for me and for justice,” responded the latter, quoted in a press release from the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), which represented the three plaintiffs.

“I have waited a long time to see this day. It’s not just the victory of the three plaintiffs in this case against one company,” he added.

“Our clients have courageously fought for 16 years to obtain redress for the horrors they suffered at Abu Ghraib, against all the obstacles that this enormous private military contractor put in their way,” said the director. lawyer of the CCR, Baher Azmy, cited in the text.

In 2014, after years of proceedings and the court-martial sentencing of eleven soldiers to prison terms from 2004 to 2006, a federal appeals court authorized legal proceedings against CACI International.

The plaintiffs invoked the Alien Tort Statute (ATS), a 1789 federal law that allows aliens who are victims of violations of international law to be heard in U.S. courts.

They claimed that, in their cases, the soldiers were de facto under the orders of the private interrogators. On the contrary, the company argued that the American army exercised total control over these interrogations, and in particular the techniques used.

Civilian CACI employees were accused of encouraging the military to mistreat prisoners to prepare them for interrogations.

The dissemination in 2004 of photos showing Abu Ghraib detainees humiliated and mistreated by American soldiers sparked global indignation, further weakening the position of the George W. Bush administration, already widely criticized for its decision to invade. Iraq.

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