Friday, Nouri's thugs attacked and killed 7 protesters while wounding at least 60.
Amnesty International issued the following call:
Iraq
must immediately investigate the killings of protestors in accordance
with international standards, Amnesty International said today after
several people died when troops in the city of Fallujah fired on
anti-government demonstrators who had reportedly thrown stones at
them.
Several others were said to be seriously injured
during Friday's protest, the latest in an ongoing and largely peaceful
campaign protesting against the government and its abusive treatment of
detainees.
"The Iraqi authorities must ensure that the
investigation they have announced into these killings is independent,
impartial and that the methods and findings are made public. Anyone
found responsible for abuses – including anyone found to have used
excessive force against protestors – must be brought to justice," said
Ann Harrison, Deputy Middle East and North Africa Programme Director at
Amnesty International.
"The authorities should also
ensure that security forces are trained and properly equipped to
police demonstrations and other gatherings in a manner which respects
human rights, including those where some protestors turn violent."
There
were conflicting reports about what had caused the shooting by the
Iraqi troops. However, subsequently further clashes erupted and army
vehicles were burned. There have been claims that some Iraqi soldiers
were also injured in the incident.
The UN Code of Conduct
for Law Enforcement Officials and the UN Basic Principles on the Use
of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials both lay down clear
standards for the policing of demonstrations and the use of firearms,
including by armed forces.
Since last December tens of
thousands of mainly Sunni Muslim Iraqis have taken to the streets
expressing discontent with the government of Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki, a Shi'a Muslim, at the continuing discrimination against them
in Iraq. The daily and largely peaceful demonstrations took place
mainly in predominantly Sunni Muslim provinces, including Anbar, Mosul
and Salah al-Din.
The protests were triggered by the
detention of several bodyguards of the Finance Minister Rafi'e
al-Issawi, a senior Sunni Muslim political leader, on terrorism charges.
The move was thought by many Sunni Muslims to be politically
motivated. There are concerns that increasing sectarian tensions may
result in further violence.
There continue to be
frequent bomb attacks by armed groups targeting civilians. For
example, dozens of pilgrims for Shi'a Muslim festival of Arba'een were
killed at the end of last month; this week several people were killed
by car bombs in Baghdad and more than 20 people were killed by a
suicide bomber at a Shi'a Muslim mosque in Tuz Khurmato.
Protesters
continue to call for respect for due process and legislative measures
- including an amnesty law and a review of anti-terror legislation -
and for an end to human rights violations against prisoners and
detainees in Iraq.
For years Amnesty International has
documented cases of torture during interrogations while held
incommunicado; deaths in custody in circumstances suggesting that
torture was the cause; detainees being coerced into making
"confessions"; and unfair trials, sometimes resulting in the death
penalty.
A few days before the protests started, Amnesty
International contacted the Iraqi government about dozens of reported
cases of human rights violations against detainees and prisoners. The
Iraqi government has yet to reply.
In one such case in
2012, four men were reportedly tortured while held incommunicado for
several weeks at the Directorate of Counter-Crime in Ramadi, Anbar
Province before their release in April 2012. Their "confessions" were
then broadcast on local television.
During their trial,
they told the Anbar Criminal Court that their "confessions" had been
extracted under torture. A medical examination presented to the court
of one of the men's injuries indicated bruising and burning consistent
with his allegations.
"As far as we know, no official investigation into these allegations of torture is known to have been held," said Harrison.
"It
is imperative that investigations into this – and the dozens of other
cases that we have raised with the Iraqi authorities – are carried
out as a matter of urgency, particularly as these men are now on death
row.
"Perpetrators of abuse need to know that they will
face the consequences of their actions, and victims have a right to
truth, justice and reparation."
The four men were sentenced to death on 3 December 2012, convicted of offences under Iraq's Anti-Terror Law.