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EXCERPT: A document obtained by Knight Ridder appears to reveal the existence of an Interior Ministry death squad.
A memo written by an Iraqi general in the ministry operations room and addressed to the minister’s office says on its subject line: "Names of detainees." It lists 14 men who were taken from Iskan, a Sunni neighborhood in western Baghdad, during the early morning hours of Aug. 18. It also marks the time of their detention: 5:15 a.m.
The bodies of the same 14 men were found in the town of Badrah near the Iranian border in early October. Hussein Sayhoud, a doctor at Baghdad’s main morgue who examined the bodies and signed one of the death certificates, said that most of the men had been killed by single gunshots to their heads.
"I remember when they brought in the whole group," Sayhoud said. "They were so badly decomposed we couldn’t identify any marks of torture."
The general who signed the Interior Ministry memo, Brig. Gen. Abdul Kareem Khalaf, confirmed its authenticity. But despite a heading that reads "Names of the detainees in the Iskan District," Khalaf maintained that insurgents, not Interior Ministry police, had abducted the men.
It’s unclear, however, why an Interior Ministry general would refer to men who’d been kidnapped by Sunni insurgents as "detainees" in an official government document, or how the general knew the exact time of the abduction.
Pressed for more details, Khalaf said: "The minister is very upset. He wants to know how such a document slipped out of the ministry."
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