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UN report details abduction, torture of Iraqi protestors

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Dozens of demonstrators have disappeared, with many being abducted by armed actors commonly referred to as ‘militia’ since last October, a new United Nations report has said.
The report, published on Saturday by the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), said all of those targeted had participated in protests or provided support to demonstrators demanding an overhaul of the country’s political system.
In its fourth special report on the demonstrations in Iraq, UNAMI based its findings on accounts of incidents that took place between October 1, 2019, and March 21, 2020.
The report was able to verify the disappearance of 123 people. Of these, it confirmed the whereabouts of 98 people but said 25 remained missing or were in an unknown status.
“According to interviews, at least 28 individuals were abducted in circumstances indicating that the perpetrators may be ‘armed actors commonly referred to as militia'”, the report said.
All abductees interviewed in the report described being forced into vehicles by armed or masked men in the vicinity of protest sites, or on their regular daily routes, with none reporting appearing before a judge.
While all were interrogated by their abductors, males in particular reported being subject to some form of ill-treatment, including “severe beatings, electrocution, hosing/bathing in cold water, hanging from the ceiling by the arms and legs, death threats and threats to the family, as well as degrading treatment”, the report said.
Although the UNAMI report did not name who might be behind the abductions, it pointed to “the involvement of armed actors with substantial levels of organization and access to resources”.
The report said the abductions and disappearances occurred amid various incidents involving additional violations and abuses targeting activists and protesters, including “deliberate killings, shooting and knife attacks, threats and intimidation, and excessive and unlawful use of force” at demonstration sites.
Since the protests erupted in October last year, when frustrated Iraqis took to the streets to decry rampant government corruption, unemployment and poor services, the UN has verified 490 deaths of activists and the injuries of 7,783 others.
Rights groups have accused security forces of using excessive force, including live fire and tear gas, against the demonstrators.
Iraq’s previous government repeatedly said it could not find the “unidentified gunmen” who fired on protesters.
But the country’s new Prime Minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, has promised to not hide the “the truth about everything that happened” during the months-long protests as well as to “hold to account all those who shed Iraqi blood”.
In recent weeks, protesters have begun gathering again despite the outbreak of the new coronavirus. Protesters say the political parties that are responsible for the failures of the past government are still controlling Parliament, meaning their demand for a complete system overhaul remains in place.

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