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War, War, War
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Title: Whistleblower says Army abuse not investigated
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8300726.stm
Published: Oct 11, 2009
Author: Innes Bowen
Post Date: 2009-10-11 21:10:37 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 50
Comments: 1

damning High Court judgment into claims of Army abuse in Iraq has concluded that one of the Royal Military Police's (RMP) most senior figures is "a most unsatisfactory witness".

Three High Court judges ruled that RMP Deputy Provost Marshal Colonel Dudley Giles "lacked reliability" when he gave evidence to an inquiry into claims UK soldiers mistreated and murdered prisoners.

A whistleblower has told the BBC he was not surprised when he heard the judges' comments.

"I believe that I was serving in something that was party to covering up quite serious allegations of torture and murder," said the former Royal Military Policeman of his time in the corps.

John, not his real name, spent much of his career in the Special Investigation Branch, the Royal Military Police's equivalent of the CID.

But it was a career he felt he was forced to abandon after concluding that the RMP's standards were increasingly at odds with his own moral values.

"For too long I belonged to an organisation that wasn't seeking out the truth."

The turning point for him was a series of suspicious deaths of Iraqi citizens.

One case which came to his attention involved the alleged murder of an Iraqi by a British sergeant.

There was, he claims, evidence to strongly suggest that the Iraqi victim had been shot at point blank range for merely throwing rocks at a British army tank.

Baha Mousa and family. The hotelier died in custody of British forces. "A friend of mine who was a senior NCO went to the scene and was ordered not to investigate it as a murder. He was told that statements should just be taken as if it was routine incident."

Some cases involving allegations of murder and abuse, followed by a failure to carry out an adequate investigation, have already come to public attention.

The death of Baha Mousa, an Iraqi hotel receptionist who died in British military custody having allegedly been beaten by soldiers, is currently the subject of a public inquiry.

The terms of reference for another inquiry, into the alleged death in custody of Hamid Al-Sweady, will be announced on Friday.

Abuse is rare

The Ministry of Defence insists that any substantive allegations of abuse brought to its attention will always be investigated and that such cases are relatively rare.

"We must remember that over a hundred thousand of our personnel served in Iraq and, with the exception of a few individuals, they have performed to the highest standards under extraordinarily testing conditions there," said an MoD statement responding to the allegations.

Any substantive allegations of abuse brought to our attention will always be investigated and such cases are relatively rare

Ministry of Defence John agrees that the vast majority of British soldiers have served their country with distinction.

However he believes that serious cases of suspected abuse are far more common than army is prepared to admit.

"I've seen documentary evidence that there were incidents, running into the 100s, involving death and serious injury to Iraqis," he claims.

"It is the actions of a few who have been shown to be bad apples. But the system is so flawed and some of the decision making has been so perverse that it is fair to say that the barrel is probably rotten."

Out of depth

In recent decades, the bulk of military police work has involved dealing with the alleged crimes of soldiers stationed at bases in the UK and Germany.

"Soldiers fighting each other, the odd drink drive a bit of theft here and there," were the staple source of investigations according to John.

Whistleblower 'John' says the majority of troops serve with distinction But when troops are deployed to theatres of war and peacekeeping roles abroad, the RMP goes with them.

In the case of Iraq, this meant the RMP suddenly found itself having to investigate alleged war crimes.

"We saw the military police, and the Special Investigation Branch in particular, being massively out of its depth," says John.

The most serious cases arising out of the British involvement in Iraq have, according to John, been characterised by RMP "blunders, mistakes, ineptitude and the course of investigations being bent to serve the real or perceived interests of the chain of command of the army" rather than the interests of justice.

Toe the line

A lack of resources, he claims, is partly to blame. But, he believes, there are also serious structural flaws in the army justice system.

Senior officers in the mainstream army have to be informed when the RMP mounts any investigation into serious allegations.

This, says John, gives the army hierarchy the opportunity to interfere or to make life difficult for the investigators by, for example, refusing to provide transport to the scene of an alleged crime.

"There is a common misconception that the Royal Military Police are in some way independent of the army.

In fact they are very, very closely wrapped in to the chain of command and that is why so many things go wrong."

The dark picture John paints of a military police force infected by a culture of ineptitude and cover-up was dramatically reinforced last week when three high court judges accused the RMP's second in command, Colonel Dudley Giles, of being "a most unsatisfactory witness".

In a damning judgment concerning the RMP's failure to disclose documents relating to the alleged murder of Hamid Al-Sweady, the judges concluded that Colonel Giles "lacked the necessary objectivity, proficiency and reliability" expected of an official government witness.

The motto of the Royal Military Police is "By example, shall we lead". But with the trustworthiness of one of the force's most senior officers now in doubt, the RMP will be under more pressure than ever to set a higher standard.

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#1. To: Horse. all (#0)

Our incursion into the ME has just reminded me of our high school outings into the local garbage dump back in high school days.

We'd drive in with the headlights on, get out with our .22's, and open up fire on the rats that were running around.

The problem is, these are real, living human beings that we are wasting in the ME for no good reason.

Why don't we come home and let them sort out their own problems and differences there?

We bring nothing to the table except more death.

Iran Truth Now!

Lod  posted on  2009-10-11   21:26:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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