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Last updated on February 10, 2012 at 23:41 EST

Iraq says expects US to free women

January 22, 2006

By Mariam Karouny

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Iraq’s Justice Ministry said on Sunday
it still expects U.S. forces to release six Iraqi women
prisoners this week, despite U.S. comments to the contrary.

The issue of the detainees has become central to the case
of kidnapped U.S. journalist Jill Carroll, whose abductors have
threatened to kill her unless all female prisoners are freed.

“The Iraqi detainees will be released within a week from
today,” a spokesman in the Justice Ministry’s media office
said.

A U.S. military spokesman declined comment.

Iraqi officials have since been at odds with their U.S.
counterparts over the release of the six, among eight women
terrorism suspects in American custody. The Justice Ministry
said last week the six were about to be freed, but U.S.
officials have insisted no releases are imminent.

Another Justice Ministry official said a review board,
which comprises six Iraqi officials and three U.S. officers,
met on January 17 and agreed to release the six women within
days.

Later that day, Arabic satellite television channel Al
Jazeera aired a video by a group calling itself the Revenge
Brigades in which they threatened to kill Carroll unless their
demands were met within three days.

In the days since the video was broadcast, U.S. officials
have stressed there are no plans to speed up the release of
Iraqi women detainees, nor to free them in the near future.

U.S. policy is not to negotiate with kidnappers.

“They delayed their release because of the connection with
the kidnapping of the American journalist,” the Justice
Ministry spokesman said.

The hostage-takers’ deadline passed on Friday with no word
on Carroll’s fate.

DETENTIONS

“Those women were arrested in a period of three, four and
five months ago,” said the second ministry official. “Their
families came to the ministry and asked us to help releasing
them as they are women and this is a disgrace.”

The detention of women offends many Iraqis and U.S. forces
seek to avoid it in most cases.

“We talked to the Americans and they agreed to put them
before the review board. On January 17 we reached an agreement
that they will be released,” the official said.

The U.S. military is holding about 14,000 security
detainees following the release of about 500 guerrilla suspects
last week.

Many in the once-dominant Sunni Arab minority, which has
fostered the insurgency against the U.S.-backed, Shi’ite-led
government, resent the detentions system and say thousands are
held on flimsy evidence without recourse to the law.

“Like all detainees, females are held because a
determination was made in each case that the individual poses
an imperative threat to the security of Iraq,” the U.S.
military said in a statement last week.

Carroll was kidnapped on a Baghdad street on January 7 and
her translator was killed. Muslim leaders have joined her
family, friends and colleagues in calling for her release.

More than 200 foreigners and thousands of Iraqis have been
kidnapped since U.S. forces toppled Saddam Hussein three years
ago. Most have been freed but dozens of foreigners have been
killed.


Source: reuters