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Iraq’s al-Maliki frees prisoners as pledged
Published Wednesday, June 7, 2006
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki released nearly 600 detainees today, making good on a pledge intended to ease feuding between Sunni Arabs and Shiites. The detainees were the first of 2,000 prisoners who al-Maliki promised would be freed from Iraq’s most notorious prisons in an apparent effort to ease anger among minority Sunnis over allegations of arbitrary detentions and mistreatment of prisoners. Sectarian tensions surged with Monday’s abductions of 50 people in downtown Baghdad by gunmen wearing police uniforms and the shooting deaths of 21 Shiites north of the capital, including students pulled from their minivans. Police said today that 15 of the kidnapped people had been released, some with signs of torture, but provided no details on their identities. Al-Maliki, a Shiite who took office two weeks ago, has made security and reconciliation among Sunnis and Shiites a priority of his government. He has stressed, however that the detainee release plan excludes loyalists of ousted leader Saddam Hussein and his Sunni-dominated Ba’ath Party, as well as "terrorists whose hands are stained with the blood of the Iraqi people." The government said 2,000 detainees whose cases have been reviewed will be released in the coming days in batches of about 500. The first 594 were released today from U.S.- and Iraqi-run prisons around Iraq, including Abu Ghraib. Released inmates dropped off at a bus station in Baghdad kissed the ground and sat down and cheered. One man used crutches for support. "I was arrested from my home on Dec. 19, 2004, so I was accused of kidnapping people working for Iraqna mobile company," said one released prisoner, Mohammed Jassim. Al-Maliki said yesterday 2,500 would be released but changed that number to 2,000 today. Iraqi officials have said there is an agreement to release as many as 14,000 detainees once their cases have been reviewed. A U.N. report last month said there were 28,700 detainees in Iraq. Omar al-Jubori, a member of the Iraq Islamic Party, the largest Sunni Arab group in the governing coalition, said the agreement came after negotiations with U.S. Embassy and military officials, as well as street protests. Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Copyright © 2006 The Columbia Daily Tribune. All Rights Reserved.
The Columbia Daily Tribune
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