http://tehrantimes.com/middle-east/94346-iraq-police-say-sorry-for-saddam-era


Iraq police say sorry for Saddam era
In Print: Monday 09 January 2012


Iraqi policemen take part in a graduation ceremony in Baghdad. 

Iraq's police, completely reformed after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, on Sunday 
apologized for acts committed during the rule of the dictator Saddam Hussein, 
on the eve of the force's 90th anniversary.
"Security forces in the interior ministry apologize for the practices that took 
place during the former regime," the ministry said in a statement.
"They were forced to carry out practices that were not their duties."

It went on to say that the fledgling force, which has been rebuilt from the 
ground up in the past eight-plus years, were "the sons of the nation, carrying 
out their duties in order to implement the law and justice."
The statement came on the eve of the 90th anniversary of the police's 1922 
founding, two years after Britain created the country under a League of Nations 
mandate, but a decade before it became fully independent.
Despite the apology for past acts, Iraq's security forces -- the police and 
army -- still regularly face criticism from rights groups for heavy-handedness, 
random arrests and abuses.
Interior ministry security forces, made up of city, oil and federal police as 
well as border enforcement officers and the facilities protection service, 
number around 650,000, according to government figures issued in October.

And even with their high staffing levels, multiple reports have assessed that 
they do not inspire public confidence and are unable to secure Iraq's cities 
and towns without help from the army.
"There is ... still a level of skepticism and mistrust towards the police in 
terms of law enforcement and human security," a UN report said last year.
And a separate report published in October 2011 from a U.S. watchdog warned 
that senior officials in the interior and defense ministry had said "Iraqi 
police forces are currently unable to secure all of Iraq's urban areas without 
assistance from the Iraqi army."

Monday's 90th Police Day commemorations follow the marking of the 91st 
anniversary of the foundation of the Iraqi armed forces on Friday, during which 
mortars targeted the Green Zone while the army staged a parade inside.

The latest events highlighting the Iraqi security forces come amid a spate of 
deadly violence against Shia pilgrims, including a wave of bombings on Thursday 
which killed 70 people.
The violence has dealt a blow to U.S. and Iraqi claims that domestic forces are 
able to maintain internal security, if not defend the country's borders.
U.S. forces dismantled the Iraqi security forces after toppling Saddam Hussein 
in 2003 in a move later panned for having put hundreds of thousands of men with 
military training out of work and creating a potent recruitment pool for 
insurgents.
(Source: AFP)

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