Real History and Bush’s Quisling in Baghdad The Index to the Traditional Enemies of Free Speech Alphabetical index (text) [images and captions added by this website] Sydney, Australia, July 17, 2004 Allawi shot inmates in cold blood, say witnesses By Paul McGeough, Chief Herald Correspondent, in Baghdad IYAD Allawi, right , the new Prime Minister of Iraq, pulled a pistol and executed as many as six suspected insurgents at a Baghdad police station, just

days before Washington handed control of the country to his interim government, according to two people who allege they witnessed the killings. They say the prisoners — handcuffed and blindfolded — were lined up against a wall in a courtyard adjacent to the maximum-security cell block in which they were held at the Al-Amariyah security centre, in the city’s south-western suburbs.

They say Dr Allawi told onlookers the victims had each killed as many as 50 Iraqis and they “deserved worse than death”. The Prime Minister’s office has denied the entirety of the witness accounts in a written statement to the Herald , saying Dr Allawi had never visited the centre and he did not carry a gun.

But the informants told the Herald that Dr Allawi shot each young man in the head as about a dozen Iraqi policemen and four Americans from the Prime Minister’s personal security team watched in stunned silence. Iraq’s Interior Minister, Falah al-Naqib , is said to have looked on and congratulated him when the job was done. Mr al-Naqib’s office has issued a verbal denial. The names of three of the alleged victims have been obtained by the Herald .

One of the witnesses claimed that before killing the prisoners Dr Allawi had told those around him that he wanted to send a clear message to the police on how to deal with insurgents. “The prisoners were against the wall and we were standing in the courtyard when the Interior Minister said that he would like to kill them all on the spot. Allawi said that they deserved worse than death — but then he pulled the pistol from his belt and started shooting them.”

Re-enacting the killings, one witness stood three to four metres in front of a wall and swung his outstretched arm in an even arc, left to right, jerking his wrist to mimic the recoil as each bullet was fired. Then he raised a hand to his brow, saying: “He was very close. Each was shot in the head.” The witnesses said seven prisoners had been brought out to the courtyard, but the last man in the line was only wounded — in the neck, said one witness; in the chest, said the other.

Given Dr Allawi’s role as the leader of the US experiment in planting a model democracy in the Middle East, allegations of a