4 militants flee prison, Iraqi says

U.S. handed over facility days before; escapees tied to al-Qaida

— Four al-Qaida-linked detainees have escaped from a Baghdad-area prison that was handed over by the U.S. to Iraqi authorities a week ago, Iraq’s justice minister said Thursday.

Dara Noureddin said the four, awaiting trial on terrorism charges, escaped from the high-security prison formerly known as Camp Cropper.

The escape is the second to come to light in Iraq in about a week, and it occurred a month before U.S. combat forces are to be sharply scaled back in the country.

The July 15 hand-over by U.S. forces of the prison that once held Saddam Hussein and other senior members of his regime marked a milestone for Iraq’s push to regain full sovereignty. It occurred as bombings and assassinations are still common and the formation of a new government has been stymied by politicians jostling for power since a March 7 parliamentary election.

Noureddin did not identify the men who escaped, but said they had been arrested by U.S. forces after a clash with the men in 2008 in western Iraq.

The U.S. military, in an email statement, said it had “no information to share” on the case and referred questions to the Iraqi government.

Two Iraqi intelligence officials and a third in the Interior Ministry who are knowledgeable about the case said authorities think the four men, whom they identified as al-Qaida members, were aided by the prison official in charge of their block.

The intelligence officials said the four were discovered missing Tuesday during an evening roll call. When prison staff members went to inform the unit head, they found that he, too, was missing. He has not reported for work since, the officials said.

The intelligence officials said one of the escaped inmates is believed to be a senior member of the group, and had the title of finance minister of the Islamic State of Iraq, an al-Qaida front group.

One intelligence official said the four men were officially listed in a security report as Mohammed Hamid, Qais Azmi, Malik Nazzal and Hussein Ahmed.

He did not have their nicknames, however. Most militants take on other names.

All three officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the details of the investigation to media.

The U.S. forces handed over about 1,500 prisoners to Iraqi authorities during the changing of the guard at Camp Cropper, but continue to hold 200 detainees at the request of the Iraqi government. They arekept in a separate part of the prison dubbed Compound 5.

Just before the prison’s hand-over, Iraqi officials announced that U.S. forces had transferred dozens of members of Saddam’s toppled regime to their custody. Included in the list was Tariq Aziz, Iraq’s former foreign minister who became the international face of Saddam’s policies.

The intelligence officials said Iraqi authorities have removed many of the officials who headed units in the prison, fearing other escapes.

The officials said a ministerial committee has been set up to investigate the escape from the high-security prison, and authorities think the head of the unit where the men were held may have given them Iraqi army uniforms and driven them out of the base using a special pass that allowed him to escort visitors in and out of the facility.

Karkh Prison, the name given by the Iraqis to the Cropper detention facility since the July 15 hand-over, is divided into six detainee compounds and is manned by 700 Iraqi corrections officers and about 100 support staff members. The $48 million compound was used by U.S. forces since April 2003 and can hold up to 4,000 prisoners.

A day before Camp Cropper’s hand-over, the family of slain British aid worker Margaret Hassan said the man whowas sentenced to life for her murder and kidnapping was missing from prison.

Ali Lutfi al-Rawi had successfully appealed his conviction and was to be retried. But he failed to show up for his court date, and authorities said they could not locate him in prison. The incident is also being investigated.

While Iraq has made dramatic security gains since 2008, with attacks down significantly from levels seen during the peak of the insurgency, it continues to face challenges.

Two Ugandans and a Peruvian who worked as security contractors for the U.S. government were killed during a rocket attack Thursday on the Green Zone, a fortified area in Baghdad that houses the U.S. embassy and the Iraqi government.

The embassy said in a statement that 15 others, including two Americans, were wounded in the attack.

In northern Iraq, a bombing and a series of drive-by shootings in a city where al-Qaida retains a stronghold left 7 people dead and nine others wounded. Among those killed in Mosul were an Iraqi army brigadier general, a Sunni cleric, two policemen, a soldier and two civilians.

Information for this article was contributed by Barbara Surk and Saad Abdul-Kadir of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 2 on 07/23/2010

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