IRAQ - Dec 25 - British Troops Attack Iraqi Police Station In Basra.Hundreds of British soldiers assault a police station in the southern city of Basra, killing seven gunmen, rescuing 127 prisoners and ultimately reducing the facility to rubble. When British forces eventually gained control of the facility, they found the prisoners being held in conditions that a spokesman, Major Charlie Burbridge, described as "appalling". He said that more than 100 men were crowded into a single 9-meter by 12-meter cell, or 30 feet by 40 feet, with two open toilets, two sinks and just a few blankets spread over the concrete floor. A significant number showed signs of torture. Some had crushed hands and feet, Burbridge said, while others had cigarette and electrical burns and a significant number had gunshot wounds to their legs and knees. The discovery of the fetid fetid /fet·id/ (fe´tid) (fet´id) having a rank, disagreeable smell. fet·id adj. Having an offensive odor. fetid having a rank, disagreeable smell. dungeon Dungeon - Zork added to a string of abuses by the Iraqi security forces Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) is the Multi-National Force-Iraq umbrella name for the military and police forces that serve under the Government of Iraq. The armed forces are administered by the Ministry of Defense (MOD), and the Iraqi Police is administered by the Ministry of , highlighting the continuing struggle to combat the infiltration of the police and army by militias and criminal elements - even in a Shi'ite city like Basra, where there is no sectarian violence Sectarian violence or sectarian strife is violence inspired by sectarianism, that is, between different sects of one particular mode of thought, not necessarily religious (e.g. . As recently as October, the Iraqi government suspended an entire police brigade in Baghdad on suspicion of participation in death squads. The raid also raised echoes of the Baghdad prison run by the Interior Ministry, known as Site 4, which was discovered last November. A human rights report published by the UN mission in Iraq found clear evidence of systematic abuse and torture at the prison, where more than 1,400 prisoners were kept. The focus of the attack was an arm of the local police called the serious crimes unit, which British officials said had been thoroughly infiltrated by criminals and militias who used it to terrorise Verb 1. terrorise - coerce by violence or with threats terrorize coerce, force, hale, pressure, squeeze - to cause to do through pressure or necessity, by physical, moral or intellectual means :"She forced him to take a job in the city"; "He squeezed her for local residents and violently settle scores with political or tribal rivals. "The serious crimes unit was at the center of death squad activity", Burbridge said. A little more than a year ago, British troops had stormed the same building seeking to rescue two British special forces soldiers who had been captured by militants. A mob of 1,000 to 2,000 people gathered in protest, and a video showed boys throwing stones at a burning British armored fighting vehicle parked outside the station. The soldiers, who were being held in a nearby building, were eventually freed. Although some local officials, including Basra's police chief, publicly condemned action, local residents privately said they were grateful and painted an image of an organization widely feared for its brutality. They are like savage dogs that bite when they are hungry", said one resident, who insisted on anonymity for fear of retribution. "Their evaluation of guilt or innocence is how much money you can pay". Residents said that people were afraid to challenge them because they were backed by powerful militia groups including the Mahdi Army This page describes the Shia Mahdi Army of contemporary Iraq; for the Sunni Mahdi Army of Nineteenth Century Sudan, see Muhammad Ahmad. The Mahdi Army, also known as the Mahdi Militia or Jaish al Mahdi (Arabic , which is led by the rebel theologian Muqtada al-Sadr Muqtada al-Sadr (مقتدى الصدر Muqtadā aṣ-Ṣadr , though the extent of his control is unclear. Burbridge said that the dismantling of the serious crimes unit had been planned for months. As far back as 2004, he said, there was a growing realisation that the police had been widely infiltrated by members of various militia and elements of organised crime. To combat their influence, the British have been trying to cull cull the act of culling. Called also cast. them from the forces in a campaign called Operation Sinbad Operation Sinbad was an operation led by the Iraqi Security Forces and supported by British, Danish and other Multi-National Forces in southern Iraq.[4][5][6] The operation began during the early hours of September 27, 2006. , which began in September. After trying to determine who was fit to serve in the police, the British began outfitting trusted officers with sophisticated identification cards meant to limit the access of impostors to police intelligence, weapons and vehicles. In late October, gunmen - believed by the British to have been connected to the serious crimes unit - ambushed a mini- bus carrying 17 employees of a new police academy and slaughtered them all. Their mutilated mu·ti·late tr.v. mu·ti·lat·ed, mu·ti·lat·ing, mu·ti·lates 1. To deprive of a limb or an essential part; cripple. 2. To disfigure by damaging irreparably: mutilate a statue. remains were dumped in the Shuaiba area of the city in an effort to intimidate the local population. "It had simply gone beyond the pale, and it was clear it was time for the serious crimes unit to go", Burbridge said in an interview. While they had planned to take over the station, British forces had to speed up the operation by several hours. "We received information late last night that the crimes unit was aware this was going to take place, and we received information that the prisoners lives were in danger", Burbridge said. More than 800 British soldiers, supported by five Challenger tanks There have been three tanks named Challenger in British military service.
prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the British military, fled. The British forces turned over the prisoners to the regular Iraqi police The creation of this unit was guided by the Coalition Provisional Authority however the command of the Police belongs to the new Government of Iraq. Overview The Iraqi Police Forces are part of the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior (MOI) which in conjunction with the Civilian , who put them in a new detention facility. The two-story building, once used by Saddam Hussein's security forces, was then demolished, in an attempt to remove all traces of the serious crimes unit, Burbridge said. The entire battle lasted nearly three hours, and no British soldiers were killed. But the streets around the station were littered with bombed-out cars and rubble. In other violence, at least 10 civilians were killed and 15 wounded when a car bomb exploded in the Jadida neighbourhood of Baghdad. In north-eastern Baghdad, a suicide bomber Noun 1. suicide bomber - a terrorist who blows himself up in order to kill or injure other people act of terrorism, terrorism, terrorist act - the calculated use of violence (or the threat of violence) against civilians in order to attain goals that are political with explosives tied to his body blew himself up on a crowded bus, killing two people. |
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