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Claims That UK Soldiers Tortured Iraqis ‘Deliberate Lies’:Al Sweady Inquiry

© AP Photo / Hadi MizbanA British army soldier walks past Iraqi army tanks during a training mission in Latifiyah, 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Baghdad, Iraq
A British army soldier walks past Iraqi army tanks during a training mission in Latifiyah, 30 kilometers (20 miles) south of Baghdad, Iraq - Sputnik International
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The Al Sweady Inquiry, named after 19-year-old Iraqi Hamid al Sweady who was allegedly murdered by British army personnel, is a public investigation into allegations that UK soldiers unlawfully killed or ill-treated Iraqi detainees in the aftermath of the 2004 armed clashes between British soldiers and about 100 Iraqi insurgents in southern Iraq.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said he was in the dark about the date, when the long-overdue report on the nation's role in the Iraq War, known as the Chilcot Inquiry, would be published, a statement posted Wednesday on the UK government website read. - Sputnik International
Cameron Says ‘Not in Control’ of UK Inquiry Into Iraq War
MOSCOW, December 17 (Sputnik) — The five-year-long Al Sweady Inquiry released Wednesday established that the claims suggesting that British soldiers tortured and murdered Iraqi detainees after 2004's "Battle of Danny Boy" are "the product of deliberate lies."

"The work of this Inquiry has established beyond doubt that all the most serious allegations made against British soldiers involved in what has become known as the Battle of Danny Boy and its aftermath … have been found to be wholly without foundation and entirely the product of deliberate lies, reckless speculation and ingrained hostility," Sir Thayne Forbes, the chairman of the Al Sweady inquiry said in a statement released on the Inquiry's website.

However, Forbes noted that the inquiry had revealed that the conduct of several individual British soldiers "fell below the high standards expected of the British Army" and that "certain aspects of the way in which the 9 detainees were treated by the British military did amount to ill-treatment."

The lobby of the CIA Headquarters building in McLean, Virginia. - Sputnik International
UK Torture Program Involvement Likely Be Declassified in US First: Expert
The Al Sweady Inquiry, named after 19-year-old Iraqi Hamid al Sweady who was allegedly murdered by British army personnel, is a public investigation into allegations that British soldiers unlawfully killed or ill-treated Iraqi detainees in the aftermath of the May 14, 2004 armed clashes between British soldiers and about 100 Iraqi insurgents just south of the city of Majar al Kabir in southern Iraq. The clashes were named the Battle of Danny Boy after a nearby British checkpoint known as Danny Boy.

The Al Sweady Inquiry was launched in November 2009 by then British Minister of State for the Armed Forces Bob Ainsworth after "a number of Iraqi Nationals" applied to the UK Administrative Court. The Iraqis suggested that acts of violence took place at a British Camp named Abu Naji on May 14 and 15, 2004 and at the temporary detention facility at Shaibah Logistics Base between May, 14 and September 23, 2004.

According to the BBC, the inquiry cost British taxpayers a total of 31 million pounds (about $49 million).

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