Iraqi Presidency to Asharq Al-Awsat: More Than 7,000 Prisoners Released in a Year

The Minister of Justice speaks to an Iraqi prisoner in a prison in Baghdad in early March. (government media)
The Minister of Justice speaks to an Iraqi prisoner in a prison in Baghdad in early March. (government media)
TT

Iraqi Presidency to Asharq Al-Awsat: More Than 7,000 Prisoners Released in a Year

The Minister of Justice speaks to an Iraqi prisoner in a prison in Baghdad in early March. (government media)
The Minister of Justice speaks to an Iraqi prisoner in a prison in Baghdad in early March. (government media)

A senior official in the Iraqi presidential office said on Thursday that President Abdul Latif Rashid “contributed to the release of 7,894 prisoners and detainees within one year.”
In October 2022, the Iraqi president launched an initiative to address the issue of the delayed release of prisoners, in cooperation with the Ministries of Justice and Interior, the National Security Advisory, and the Judicial Supervision Service.
According to official information, the initiative has established an “electronic system” to facilitate the exchange of information between various institutions and departments, to follow up on the files of convicts before their release date to verify that they are not wanted in other cases.
The head of the Advisory Board of the Presidency of the Republic, Ali Al-Shukri, told Asharq Al-Awsat: “The electronic mechanism accelerated the release of 7,894 prisoners and detainees within one year, in the first step of its kind at the level of the Presidency of the Republic since 2003.”
Last week, Rashid discussed the conditions of prisoners and detainees in Iraq with Sarah Sanbar, responsible for the Iraq file at Human Rights Watch, and stressed that his country “is committed to the standards of implementing human rights, especially in prisons, improving the conditions of detainees and inmates, and providing legal and administrative procedures to resolve their situation.”
He added that the presidency was working closely with the Ministry of Justice and the relevant security authorities in order to expedite legal mechanisms.
Human Rights Watch had strongly criticized the Iraqi authorities in 2019, as a result of the “severe overcrowding in prisons and the degrading conditions of prisoners.”
For many years, prison inmates in Iraq have been suffering from delayed release after the completion of their sentences, due to administrative procedures, which continue to lead to severe overcrowding in jails and detention centers.
An official source in the Iraqi Ministry of Justice acknowledged the delay in the release of prisoners for various reasons, as well as the overcrowding in the majority of prisons.
The source told Asharq Al-Awsat: “About 64,000 prisoners, excluding those detained in the prisons and parking lots of the Ministry of Interior, have been sentenced in various cases ranging from terrorism, drugs, and other crimes,” noting that the existing 14 prisons could not accommodate this number.
The source expected that overcrowding in prisons would be addressed by the end of 2025, if the construction of new buildings in different regions across the country is completed.

 

 



Hamas Says Delegation Discussed Gaza Truce With Egypt

05 May 2024, Palestinian Territories, Rafah: A Palestinian inspects a damaged house after Israeli warplanes bombed a home for the Al-Shaer family, leading to widespread destruction in the Al-Salam neighborhood, east of the city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. Photo: Abed Rahim Khatib/dpa
05 May 2024, Palestinian Territories, Rafah: A Palestinian inspects a damaged house after Israeli warplanes bombed a home for the Al-Shaer family, leading to widespread destruction in the Al-Salam neighborhood, east of the city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. Photo: Abed Rahim Khatib/dpa
TT

Hamas Says Delegation Discussed Gaza Truce With Egypt

05 May 2024, Palestinian Territories, Rafah: A Palestinian inspects a damaged house after Israeli warplanes bombed a home for the Al-Shaer family, leading to widespread destruction in the Al-Salam neighborhood, east of the city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. Photo: Abed Rahim Khatib/dpa
05 May 2024, Palestinian Territories, Rafah: A Palestinian inspects a damaged house after Israeli warplanes bombed a home for the Al-Shaer family, leading to widespread destruction in the Al-Salam neighborhood, east of the city of Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip. Photo: Abed Rahim Khatib/dpa

A Hamas delegation discussed a ceasefire in Gaza with Egyptian intelligence officials, two officials from the Palestinian group told AFP on Monday.

The "delegation met with the head of the Egyptian general intelligence, Major General Hassan Rashad, and a number of Egyptian intelligence officials, and discussed ways to stop the war and aggression, bring in aid, and open the Rafah crossing" at Gaza's border with Egypt, said a senior Hamas official who was part of the Cairo meeting on Sunday evening.

A second Hamas official also present in Cairo told AFP that "Egypt, Qatar and Türkiye are making great efforts to reach an agreement for a ceasefire and prisoner exchange".

"Our Palestinian people are waiting for American and international pressure on (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu to stop the war and reach an agreement as happened in Lebanon," the official said.

The meeting came shortly after Israel and Lebanese armed group Hezbollah agreed on a ceasefire in Lebanon with mediation from the United States and France.

US President Joe Biden would launch a renewed drive for a ceasefire, his national security adviser Jake Sullivan said last week, adding Biden told his envoys to engage with Türkiye, Qatar, Egypt and other actors in the region.

Egyptian authorities did not publicly comment on any meetings with Hamas on Sunday.

The first official said any deal Hamas agrees to should include the conditions the movement has brought forward since the start of the war.

These include a full ceasefire, complete Israeli military withdrawal, unimpeded entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza, the return of displaced Palestinians to their homes, "a serious deal to exchange prisoners in one go or in two stages", and reconstruction of the war-ravaged Palestinian territory.

Israel has also repeatedly accused Hamas of delaying talks and not sincerely wanting to reach a deal.

The Hamas senior official also told AFP that "under Egyptian sponsorship" the Hamas delegation met Sunday evening with a delegation from the Fatah movement, Hamas's long-term rival currently in power in the occupied West Bank under the Palestinian Authority.

He said that the meeting focused on "arrangements for the internal Palestinian situation and the management of the Gaza Strip once the war ends".

The talks aimed to agree on the shape of "an independent administrative committee to manage the strip and supervise aid, crossings and reconstruction, in agreement with all Palestinian factions".

Jamal Obeid, a member of Fatah's leadership in Gaza, told AFP that Egypt was making intensive efforts to stop the war.

"The first priority (is) the withdrawal of Israeli forces, the return of the displaced, the opening of the crossings, relief for our afflicted people, and reconstruction under the management and supervision of the Palestinian National Authority," he said.

Obeid said meetings in Cairo between Fatah and Hamas were crucial in order "to stop the war and put the Palestinian house in order", and agree on what shape governance will take in Gaza after the war ends.