The Iraqi government has refused to provide the UN with civilian casualty figures for its latest report, but numbers from various government ministries indicate over 5,500 people killed in Baghdad alone in the first 3 months of 2007. Numbers provided by ministry employees could not be independently verified but were higher than an independent death count based on news accounts and indicate an increase in the recent weeks of the “security plan.” In October, researchers estimated over 600,000 Iraqi civilians killed since the 2003 invasion.
The UN also accused the Iraqi government of failing to “seriously address” problems of detainee abuse, including torture, and to ensure timely and fair prosecution. The emergency regulations governing the Iraq-US crackdown permit arrest without warrants and open-ended pretrial detention, the report said, estimating that over 3,000 people were taken into custody during the plan's first seven weeks. A rights group reported last month that hundreds of people detained in the security crackdown had been jammed into woefully overcrowded detention centers.
Among the UN report's other findings: More than 200 academics have been killed since the start of the war for sectarian reasons or because of their largely secular views and teachings; detainees in Iraqi government-run prisons have frequently been tortured or forced to confess to alleged crimes; at least 40 women in the Kurdistan region have died this year in suspected "honor killings." Such deaths, many of them from burning, followed family members' accusations of immoral conduct involving the victims, the report says.
At least 9 Iraqi police were killed and 15 people wounded by a suicide bomber at an army checkpoint in the Diyala province town of Balad Ruz, a stronghold of Sunni Muslim insurgents. A roadside bomb in north Baghdad killed at least 3 more people and injured 8. Rockets killed 2 more civilians in a southeast Baghdad area where another rocket attack killed 10 people on Tuesday. Yet another rocket attack killed 2 people southwest of Baghdad.
Main Source: LA Times