Iraqis Outraged as Blackwater Case Gets Thrown Out

Posted on by

ARMY TIMES– Iraqis seeking justice for 17 people shot dead at a Baghdad intersection responded with bitterness and outrage Friday at a U.S. judge’s decision to throw out a case against a Blackwater security team accused in the killings.

The Iraqi government vowed to pursue the case, which became a source of contention between the U.S. and the Iraqi government. Many Iraqis also held up the judge’s decision as proof of what they’d long believed: U.S. security contractors were above the law.

“There is no justice,” said Bura Sadoun Ismael, who was wounded by two bullets and shrapnel during the shooting. “I expected the American court would side with the Blackwater security guards who committed a massacre in Nisoor Square.”

What happened on Nisoor Square on Sept. 16, 2007, raised Iraqi concerns about their sovereignty because Iraqi officials were powerless to do anything to the Blackwater employees who had immunity from local prosecution. The shootings also highlighted the degree to which the U.S. relied on private contractors during the Iraq conflict.

Blackwater had been hired by the State Department to protect U.S. diplomats in Iraq. The guards said they were ambushed at a busy intersection in western Baghdad, but U.S. prosecutors and many Iraqis said the Blackwater guards let loose an unprovoked attack on civilians using machine guns and grenades.

“Investigations conducted by specialized Iraqi authorities confirmed unequivocally that the guards of Blackwater committed the crime of murder and broke the rules by using arms without the existence of any threat obliging them to use force,” Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said in a statement Friday.

He did not elaborate on what steps the government planned to take to pursue the case.

The shootings led the Iraqi government to strip the North Carolina-based company of its license to work in the country, and Blackwater replaced its management and changed its name to Xe Services.

Five guards from the company were charged in the case with manslaughter and weapons violations. The charges carried mandatory 30-year prison terms, but a federal judge Friday dismissed all the charges.

Continue reading about the Court Throwing Out Blackwater Case.

By Rebecca Santana- The Associated Press/ Associated Press Writers Katharine Houreld, Saad Abdul-Kadir and Bushra Juhi contributed to this report.

© COPYRIGHT AP, 2010

Leave a Reply

RELATED NEWS

  • MR Original – Monsanto’s Global Food Domination
  • Blackwater Sued for Failing to Pay Benefits
  • Secret Desert Force Set Up by Blackwater’s Founder
  • Blackwater Founder Said to Back Somalia Mercenaries
  • CORPORATE MISCONDUCT

  • Media Roots Radio: China Derangement Syndrome, Big Pharma Opioid Erasure & Apple Fed Pedo Hunters
  • Empire Files: A Guide to US Empire in Africa: Neocolonial Order & AFRICOM
  • Media Roots Radio: PG&E’s Criminal Extortion Racket & California’s Collapsing Infrastructure
  • Media Roots Radio: Tasmanian Alkaloids and the Johnson & Johnson Opium Poppy Monopoly w/ Peter Andrey Smith
  • Abby Martin Speaks Out Against Venezuela Coup
  • Abby Martin Presents 2018 Motherfucker Award for Fire to PG&E
  • Media Roots Radio: Deadly Wildfires, Midterm Wash, Trump Fans Flames of Civil War
  • Media Roots Radio: George W. Kavanaugh, Haley is Out, Tech Purge Intensifies, Peaceful Protests Now ‘Terrorism’
  • Media Roots Radio: US Aids Yemen Massacres, Venezuela Regime Change Plot, Sanctions Shut Down “Empire Files”
  • Media Roots Radio: Cambridge Analytica Private Mercenaries, Blue Planet & Jones/Stone/Neocon Alliance
  • Empire Files’ Best of 2017 Roundup
  • Empire Files: The Sacrifice Zones of Hurricane Harvey
  • Who Newsies the Newsmen? A Sober Look At “Fake News”
  • Chevron vs. the Amazon – Full Documentary
  • Abby Martin Interviews President Rafael Correa on Empire & the Environment