British Soldier took "trophy snaps" of Iraqi Torture!
The Iraq Solidarity Campaign (UK) | 10.01.2005 23:57 | Repression
The first court martial of a British soldier for alleged torture of prisoners in Iraq will open in Germany on Monday, the defence ministry says.
The first court martial of a British soldier for alleged torture of prisoners in Iraq will open in Germany on Monday, the defence ministry says.
Gary Bartlam, 19, a member of the Royal Fusiliers, will appear before a court martial in Hohne, the regiment's base north of Hanover, Germany. The hearing is expected to last two days.
The courts martial of three other members of the regiment, Corporal Daniel Kenyon, and lance corporals Darren Larkin and Mark Cooley, will follow at nearby Osnabruck on Wednesday.
Bartlam was arrested in Britain in 2003 after staff at a photographic store in Staffordshire tipped off police about "trophy snaps" of the soldier's time in Iraq that he had asked them to develop.
Torture photographed
The photos were reported to show acts of torture inflicted on Iraqi prisoners in a hangar in Basra in southern Iraq.
"The Guardian and a number of other media organisations will mount a legal challenge in the court today if the government attempts to prevent the details from becoming public"
The Guardian
According to the British press, among the images was one of a detained Iraqi suspended in a net by a fork-lift truck then dropped to the floor.
Other pictures allegedly showed detainees forced into sexual acts on other prisoners and a soldier. None of the pictures have been published and the contents of the roll of film have not been officially confirmed.
In a statement to parliament last year, Britain's attorney-general, the government's top legal adviser, conceded that the charges against the troops "apparently involves making the victims engage in sexual activity between them".
Citing defence sources, the Guardian newspaper voiced fears that the media would be banned from divulging details of the charges, on the grounds that this might jeopardise the security of other soldiers operating in Iraq.
"The Guardian and a number of other media organisations will mount a legal challenge in the court today if the government attempts to prevent the details from becoming public," the paper said.
AFP
Monday 10 January 2005, 9:53 Makka Time, 6:53 GMT
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/80390C6C-D555-454A-8C1A-32772C360D12.htm
Gary Bartlam, 19, a member of the Royal Fusiliers, will appear before a court martial in Hohne, the regiment's base north of Hanover, Germany. The hearing is expected to last two days.
The courts martial of three other members of the regiment, Corporal Daniel Kenyon, and lance corporals Darren Larkin and Mark Cooley, will follow at nearby Osnabruck on Wednesday.
Bartlam was arrested in Britain in 2003 after staff at a photographic store in Staffordshire tipped off police about "trophy snaps" of the soldier's time in Iraq that he had asked them to develop.
Torture photographed
The photos were reported to show acts of torture inflicted on Iraqi prisoners in a hangar in Basra in southern Iraq.
"The Guardian and a number of other media organisations will mount a legal challenge in the court today if the government attempts to prevent the details from becoming public"
The Guardian
According to the British press, among the images was one of a detained Iraqi suspended in a net by a fork-lift truck then dropped to the floor.
Other pictures allegedly showed detainees forced into sexual acts on other prisoners and a soldier. None of the pictures have been published and the contents of the roll of film have not been officially confirmed.
In a statement to parliament last year, Britain's attorney-general, the government's top legal adviser, conceded that the charges against the troops "apparently involves making the victims engage in sexual activity between them".
Citing defence sources, the Guardian newspaper voiced fears that the media would be banned from divulging details of the charges, on the grounds that this might jeopardise the security of other soldiers operating in Iraq.
"The Guardian and a number of other media organisations will mount a legal challenge in the court today if the government attempts to prevent the details from becoming public," the paper said.
AFP
Monday 10 January 2005, 9:53 Makka Time, 6:53 GMT
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/80390C6C-D555-454A-8C1A-32772C360D12.htm
The Iraq Solidarity Campaign (UK)
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