Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06KIRKUK86
2006-04-12 10:41:00
CONFIDENTIAL
REO Kirkuk
Cable title:  

DRL VISIT TO NORTHERN IRAQ: TREATMENT AT LAST FOR THE

Tags:  PGOV PHUM KDEM KISL KWMN IZ 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO0620
PP RUEHBC RUEHDE RUEHIHL RUEHMOS
DE RUEHKUK #0086/01 1021041
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P R 121041Z APR 06
FM REO KIRKUK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0607
RUEHBP/AMEMBASSY BAMAKO PRIORITY 0001
INFO RUCNRAQ/IRAQ COLLECTIVE
RUEHKUK/REO KIRKUK 0635
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KIRKUK 000086 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

BAGHDAD FOR POL, POLMIL, NCT, ROL COORDINATOR, USAID, ECON
BAGHDAD ALSO FOR IRMO, PAO FOR BATES AND CAPLES

E.O. 12958: DECL: 4/12/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KDEM KISL KWMN IZ
SUBJECT: DRL VISIT TO NORTHERN IRAQ: TREATMENT AT LAST FOR THE
MENTALLY ILL, TORTURED AND IMPRISONED, (#2 OF 2)

REF: REFTEL KIRKUK 85

KIRKUK 00000086 001.2 OF 002


CLASSIFIED BY: Scott Dean, Acting Regional Coordinator, REO
Kirkuk, DoS.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)



C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KIRKUK 000086

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

BAGHDAD FOR POL, POLMIL, NCT, ROL COORDINATOR, USAID, ECON
BAGHDAD ALSO FOR IRMO, PAO FOR BATES AND CAPLES

E.O. 12958: DECL: 4/12/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM KDEM KISL KWMN IZ
SUBJECT: DRL VISIT TO NORTHERN IRAQ: TREATMENT AT LAST FOR THE
MENTALLY ILL, TORTURED AND IMPRISONED, (#2 OF 2)

REF: REFTEL KIRKUK 85

KIRKUK 00000086 001.2 OF 002


CLASSIFIED BY: Scott Dean, Acting Regional Coordinator, REO
Kirkuk, DoS.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)




1. (U) Summary: A DRL site visit to Northern Iraq revealed that
implementing partners are providing Iraqis for the first time
with treatment for the mentally ill, legal services for women in
jail, and a major effort to record the stories of victims of
torture, imprisonment, and the genocide campaigns under the
regime of Saddam Hussayn. Also, victims testified in a public
forum and requested adult education programs, health care,
vocation and literacy training, and employment opportunities as
compensation for their losses. End summary.


2. (U) Department of Human Rights and Labor (DRL) Program
Officer Vitessa Del Prete visited Northern Iraq March 24 - 29 to
assess recipients of over $100 million in DRL grants in Kirkuk,
Erbil, Dahuk, and Sulaymaniyah. This is the second of two
cables covering the visit. (REFTEL)

Treatment for the Tortured and Mentally Ill - An Iraqi First
-------------- --------------


3. (U) Del Prete and IPAO met in Sulaymaniyah with Dr. Ari
Hasan, Program Director for DRL-funded Heartland Alliance (HA).
Hasan explained that HA was treating Iraqis suffering from the
effects of torture, imprisonment, chemical weapons, and civil
war. According to Hasan, over 90% of Iraqis suffered from Post
Traumatic Stress (PTS) disorder. The mentally ill, he said,
typically spent their lives in hospitals for the criminally
insane or prison.


4. (U) Hasan said HA had developed a system for implementing a
mental healthcare program in Iraq. In the first stage,
community mental health workers were trained in case management,
medical referrals, and culturally appropriate counseling
services for rural torture victims. In partnership with the
Ministry of Health, HA was also training physicians and

psychologists to provide improved healthcare services for
torture victims and integrate treatment of the mentally ill into
Iraq's national healthcare system.

A Visit to the Kirkuk Detention Center
--------------


6. (U) Del Prete and IPAO visited the Kirkuk Women and Juvenile
Detention Center of Kirkuk to assess the program run by local
NGO, ASUDA, an HA member. Salah Sadiq, a programming officer
with HA, said ASUDA provided legal services to women in jail and
established safe houses for women escaping domestic violence.


7. (U) A lawyer working with ASUDA, Srwa Sharif, said the women
she represented were typically victims of domestic violence,
often forced into prostitution by family members or guardians.
She said the women often committed crimes in self-defense or
were wrongly accused of crimes in retaliation for not
prostituting themselves.


8. (SBU) Sadiq and Sharif accompanied Del Prete and IPAO to the
Kirkuk Juvenile Detention Center, a temporary location for women
detainees until a dedicated facility is found for them. At the
time of the visit, 7 women and 8 juvenile males were living in
the facility. Colonel Kamaran, Director General for the
facility said detention was supposed to be for only two weeks to
a month; however some inmates stayed at the facility for over 9
months awaiting trial.


9. (SBU) Conditions at the detention center were simple. The
women lived in one room, with an attached bathroom. Beyond a
hole for an air-cooling system, there were no windows. The boys
were divided between two similar rooms, sleeping on bunk beds.
Each bed had sheets, blankets, and pillows. A male government
doctor regularly visits the boys once a week and a female
doctor, supplied by ASUDA, visits the women once every two
weeks. For entertainment, each room had a small TV. Kamaran
told Del Prete that no books, sewing, or other activities took
place. He said that the women "told each other stories" to pass
the time.


10. (SBU) NOTE: The detention center was given one-day's notice
of the visit, but according to Saddiq, besides tidier-than-usual
rooms, no other accommodations were made. Del Prete and IPAO
did not speak to the women; however Saddiq said that one of the
women present had been brought to the facility the day before
after being beaten by the Iraqi police. End Note.

KIRKUK 00000086 002.2 OF 002



Victims Ask for Action on Promises
--------------


11. (SBU) DePaul University and the International Human Rights
Law Institute held a forum for Del Prete to hear first-hand
testimonies by victims of crimes committed by Saddam Hussayn's
regime. Project director Kurdastan Daloye said testifiers were
part of an Iraq history reconciliation project, marking the
first major effort to talk to the victims and record their
testimonies. She said they have already documented 700 cases.


12. (U) Testifiers expressed their frustration over continuing
problems, including lost education and economic opportunities,
the death of family members who were the primary breadwinners,
the inability to support extended families because of a lack of
job opportunities, and physical disabilities and chronic health
problems.


12. Participants repeatedly asked for adult education programs,
health care, jobs and vocational and literacy training as
compensation for their losses. One testifier suggested the
companies that provided the chemicals for the Anfal campaign be
made accountable for their role. Foremost, participants said,
they needed the government to act on promises already made for
assistance and redevelopment.

COMMENT:
--------------


13. (C) The DRL visit highlighted the need to continue to
monitor human rights in the Kurdish regions. DRL funds seem to
be addressing critical areas that need the attention of U.S.
programs. These local implementing partners are significant in
that they are for the most part alone in their endeavors,
tackling issues that the greater Iraqi society ignores.
Unfortunately, some of these programs are scheduled to end in
the next few months due to a lack of DRL FY06 funding. End
Comment.
ORESTE