Abu Ghraib guard tells of worse abuse

A US soldier convicted of humiliating and abusing Iraqi prisoners has said she knew of “worse things” happening at Abu Ghraib.

Lynndie England got three years in jail for her part in the abuse

Former private first class Lynndie England also insisted on Sunday that military commanders were fully aware of what was going on in Iraq’s infamous jail.
  
In her first post-court marshal interview, England contradicted assertions by top Pentagon officials that a small group of out-of-control soldiers was responsible for abuse at Abu Ghraib and said that however repulsive that mistreatment was, it did not amount to torture.
  
England, who became the face of the scandal because of a photograph of her holding a naked prisoner by a leash, was sentenced on Tuesday to three years in prison and dishonourably discharged from the US Army after a military jury found her guilty of maltreating prisoners and committing an indecent act.
  
The trial capped a scandal that erupted in 2004 after publication of pictures that showed Abu Ghraib inmates piled up naked on the floor in front of US soldiers, cowering in front of snarling military dogs, chained to beds in stress positions and forced to stand naked in front of female guards. 
  
Haunting memory

England, appearing on NBC’s Dateline programme, said the pictures did not convey the full extent of the abuse that took place in the cell block.
  
“I know worse things were happening over there,” said the 22-year-old convict.
  
She said one night she heard blood-curdling screams coming from the block’s shower room, where non-military interrogators had taken an Arab detainee.
  
“They had the shower on to muffle it, but it wasn’t helping,” she recalled.

“They never screamed like that when we were humiliating. But this guy was like screaming bloody murder. I mean it still haunts me. I can still hear it just like it happened yesterday.”
  
The interrogators were not identified, but several investigations into the abuse have disclosed that Central Intelligence Agency operatives worked at Abu Ghraib alongside US military intelligence, trying to glean useful information.

Source: AFP