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US denies Sanchez saw abuse
23/05/2004 20:26  - (SA)  

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  • Iraq: Troops seek immunity
  • 'Cocktail for disaster' in Iraq
  • Top brass 'present at abuse'
  • Baghdad - The US military command on Sunday denied a report that the top US general in Iraq was present during some interrogations at the Abu Ghraib prison and witnessed some of the abuse of Iraqi inmates.

    The Washington Post said a military lawyer stated at an open hearing April 2 that Capt. Donald J. Reese told him that Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez and other senior military officers were aware of the abuse at the prison.

    The military lawyer, Capt. Robert Shuck, representing Staff Sgt. Ivan L "Chip" Frederick II, one of seven members of the 372nd Military Police Company facing criminal charges for abusing Iraqi inmates. Reese is the company commander.

    "There was a news report published May 23, 2004, which suggests that Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of Multinational Forces-Iraq was aware of, and in some instances, present at Abu Ghraib while detainee abuse was occurring," the US military said. "This report is false."

    Sanchez stands by his testimony before congressional committees that he was unaware of the abuses until he ordered an investigation into the allegations in January.

    Although Sanchez ordered the investigation in January, the scandal did not break open until late April, when CBS' 60 Minutes II broadcast photos of American guards abusing and sexually humiliating Iraqi prisoners who were naked except for hoods covering their heads, including a group stacked in a human pyramid.

    Sanchez told the US senate armed services committee that he did not receive a November 6 report by the international committee of the Red Cross detailing abuses at Abu Ghraib until two months later.

    During testimony on Wednesday in Washington, Sanchez told the senate committee that he ordered an investigation "as soon as I learned" of the reported abuses at the prison and within days of receiving the initial report, "I directed suspension of key members of the chain of command of the unit responsible for detainee security at Abu Ghraib," Sanchez said.

    The Post reported that a transcript of the April hearing at Camp Victory in Baghdad shows Capt. John McCabe, the military prosecutor, asking Shuck, "Are you saying that Captain Reese is going to testify that General Sanchez was there and saw this going on?"

    "That's what he told me," Shuck replied, according to the transcript cited by the Post.

    "I am an officer of the court, sir, and I would not lie. I have got two children at home, I'm not going to risk my career."

    According to the Post, Shuck also said at the April hearing that Capt. Carolyn A. Wood, supervisor of the military intelligence operation at Abu Ghraib, was "involved in intensive interrogations of detainees, condoned some of the activities and stressed that that was standard procedure, what the accused was doing."

    Col. Jill Morgenthaler, public affairs officer in Baghdad, said the transcript of the April 2 hearing would not be released.

    US military officials have said there is no evidence that Sanchez or other senior military officers were aware of the prisoner abuse while it was happening. Prison officials have blamed the abuse on low-level military police, some of whom have maintained they were just following orders.

    - AP



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