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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqi archivist demands US return seized documents
By Sandy English
17 November 2007
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Millions of historical documents seized by US occupation forces
from Iraqi archives remain held in the United States by the CIA
and the Pentagon and must, under international law, be returned
to Iraq, Dr. Saad Eskander, the director of the Iraqi National
Library and Archive in Baghdad, told an audience at Columbia University
in New York City on November 12.
Eskander stressed that the taking of these documents threatened
the Iraqi people with the loss of their historical memory.
The Iraqi National Library and Archive (INLA) functions as
one of the major cultural institutions in the Middle East. It
is a repository for government and historical documents from many
periods and is the central location for research into the history
of the Iraqi people.
Arsonists destroyed much of the library and archive on April
14, 2003 shortly after the occupation of Baghdad by American-led
forces. The entire Old Library wing was almost completely burnt.
The fire also desolated the microfilm collection of periodicals
and other documents.
A portion of documents removed for safekeeping by Islamic clerics
faced another disaster. These were stored in the basement of the
Board of Tourism, which was deliberately flooded by looters. By
the autumn of 2003, the documents had been moved to a space above
ground, according to a 2005 report, where the Library of
Congress mission saw them in November exhibiting extensive
and active mold growth.
Since then, the INLAs compound has been bombed and shot
at, and its staff have been threatened and beaten. Five of them
have been killed in the last year and a half. For their safety,
employees are discouraged from leaving premises during working
hours.
The Iraqi government routinely ignores the INLAs importance
as a cultural center. In August Iraqi security forces positioned
themselves on the roof of the library and dismantled the buildings
main gate and smashed doors and windows inside the main building,
according to a CBS News report based on a communication from Eskander.
Stanley Cohen, president of the Scone Foundation, which co-sponsored
Eskanders lecture at Columbia, introduced him by noting
that the Bush administration had played a critical role in extinguishing
historical memory in the Untied States as well.
Cohen was referring to the notorious 2001 Executive Order 13233
that gutted the Presidential Records Act of 1978, which allowed
for the public access to presidential documents, and to the 2003
Executive Order 13291 that delayed the declassification of millions
of government documents.
Cohen worried that the history of the last six years is incomplete,
that documents that have been withheld will ultimately be destroyed.
These Executive Orders, he noted, reversed the presumption of
disclosure of public documents. While archivists have vigorously
protested them, Cohen observed that they were Perhaps the
first casualty in the decline of a free and open society.
Eskander began by giving a brief history of the difficulty
in preserving historical documents in Iraq under British colonialism,
the monarchical regime, and then under the republican and Baathist
nationalist regimes.
Eskander then reviewed the disaster of April 2003: the National
Archive lost 60 percent of its documents, the National Library
lost 25 percent of its books, and over 95 percent of its rare
books. The groups that had attacked the institution had been,
on the one hand, professional thieves looking for valuable books,
and on the other hand, ordinary Iraqis who wanted to know the
fate of their relatives under the Baathist regime.
The arsonists, who burned the INLA and destroyed many documents
from the Republican period, have widely been acknowledged to be
Baathist operatives who were protecting the perpetrators of crimes
against the Iraqi people.
Extremely significant was Eskanders observation that
British and American troops had seized millions of documents from
the secret police archives. The Baathist Ministry of the Interior,
for example, had more documents in basements than existed in the
entire National Archive collection.
He said that it was well known that many of these documents
were used by the Americans to blackmail the secret police operatives
of the former regime into working for the occupation.
These documents are now in the United States, presumably held
by the CIA and the Pentagon. Eskander highlighted their importance
for understanding Iraqi history and to the Iraqi people. We
need to compensate the victims of the Hussein regime, he
said.
Eskander outlined the way in which government documents that
do remain in Iraq have been misused or ignored. De-Baathification,
for example, was not supported by documentary evidence, and was
subject to the whims of the partisan groups and individuals.
He also noted the many published documents violated the privacy
of victims, and that the manner in which the names of perpetrators
have been revealed has led to an escalation of violence and revenge
killings. He spoke of the uneven government compensation for crimes
of the former regime, based on selected release of documents.
Without archives, democracy cannot be established,
Eskander said. There is only oral testimony.
Some individuals, such as the American intelligence asset Ahmed
Chalabi, took Baathist records and have printed them to sell at
a profit.
Eskander told the audience that for four years he has tried
to persuade the new government of the importance of archives,
but with little result. The situation is very bad,
he said. Rather than attending to the preservation of historical
memory, Politicians are raising their salaries and holding
parties in the Green Zone.
He ended by saying that he hoped that educated Americans would
pressure the American government to return seized Iraqi documents.
According to international law, they belong to the Iraqi people
and represent an important part of Iraqs cultural heritage.
In a question and answer period, Eskander was asked if documents
were used in the trial of former regime leaders, such as Saddam
Hussein. He said very few were used in the Dujail trial (for reprisals
against the village of Dujail after a failed assassination attempt
on Saddam Hussein in July, 1982). Eskander called the execution
of Hussein morally wrong. Better documentary evidence,
he said, was used in the trial over the Anfal campaigns in which
the Baathists, between 1986 and 1989, gassed thousands of Kurds
to death.
In response to another question, Eskander noted the hypocrisy
of the Arab regimes, which condemned the destruction of Iraqi
cultural heritage, but have done little to stop it themselves.
He noted that rare books looted from Iraqi collections are sold
openly on the black market in Amman, Jordan.
He also observed that over the last period many pledges of
aid and equipment for the reconstruction of the Iraqi National
Library and Archive, particularly from the American military,
had gone unfulfilled.
See Also:
Iraqs libraries:
what recovery from a national disaster beyond imagination?
[17 September 2005]
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