BBCIraqi security forces systematically abuse prisoners, a leading US-based human rights group reports.
Unlawful arrests, torture and the long-term isolation of detainees are "routine", Human Rights Watch says.
Of 90 prisoners interviewed by the group since 2003, 72 said they had been abused by the new Iraqi authorities.
Another rights group, the American Civil Liberties Union charges that similar abuses allegedly committed by US soldiers have not been investigated.
The ACLU said it had obtained documents that told "a damning story of widespread torture reaching well beyond the walls of Abu Ghraib", the notorious US-run jail in Iraq.
'Bribes'
The 94-page report by Human Rights Watch detailed a catalogue of abuses allegedly committed by Iraqi security forces.
The report - The New Iraq? Torture and ill-treatment of detainees in Iraqi custody - found evidence of widespread human rights violations against alleged national security suspects and common criminals.
Between July and October 2004, HRW's investigations revealed systematic use of arbitrary arrest, torture of detainees, improper treatment of child prisoners and denial of access to lawyers.
Iraqi Human Rights Minister Bakhtiar Amin acknowledged that abuses had occurred and blamed the legacy of Saddam Hussein's regime.
He told the Reuters news agency that the security forces' "shortcomings" were the fault of "three-and-a-half decades of dictatorship, widespread torture and human rights violations".
Among the report's findings are:
Executive director for HRW Sarah Leah Whitson said Iraqi forces and international advisers were allowing abuses to "go unchecked" in the name of bringing stability to Iraq.
- Detainees were routinely beaten with cables and metal rods during interrogation, given electric shocks and kept blindfolded and handcuffed for days
Detainees were held for long periods in isolation, deprived of food and water and crammed into small cells with standing room only
Iraqi police sought bribes in return for releasing prisoners or allowing them access to family members or food and water.
She said: "The people of Iraq were promised something better than this after the government of Saddam Hussein fell.
"The Iraqi interim government is not keeping its promises to honour and respect basic human rights."
Ms Whitson acknowledged Iraqi security forces were targeted by insurgents, but said this did not justify prisoner abuse.
'Whitewash'
The HRW report does not examine claims of mistreatment of prisoners by US or coalition forces.
However, the ACLU said late on Monday that US investigations into alleged abuse committed by American soldiers had been "woefully inadequate" and had "basically whitewashed the torture and abuse".
Quoting US defence department documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, the ACLU said the Pentagon had failed to conduct full inquiries into "serious allegations of torture including electric shocks, forced sodomy and severe physical beatings".
In one case, a 73-year-old Iraqi woman reported that her captors sodomised her with a stick, but the incident was closed on the basis of a "sanitised copy" of a preliminary report, the ACLU said.
US soldier Charles Graner was found guilty of abusing prisoners at Abu Ghraib earlier this month, while cases are also being brought against troops from the UK and Denmark.
Iraqi forces 'committing abuse'
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Iraqi forces 'committing abuse'
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And in other news, scientists announced today that the sky is, indeed, blue. This sounds like much the same sort of abuses that prisoners were subjected to back when Saddam was president of Iraq, only without the bullet in the head at the end and getting unceremoniously dumped in an unmarked mass grave.
Lovely example we've been setting for them, though, with our own excesses at various prisons in Iraq. Even if this democracy thing takes off in Iraq, I wonder how long it will be before someone gets a Baathist elected and things go right back to the way they were in Iraq.
Lovely example we've been setting for them, though, with our own excesses at various prisons in Iraq. Even if this democracy thing takes off in Iraq, I wonder how long it will be before someone gets a Baathist elected and things go right back to the way they were in Iraq.
Tales of the Known Worlds:
2070s - The Seventy-Niners ... 3500s - Fair as Death ... 4900s - Against Improbable Odds V 1.0
2070s - The Seventy-Niners ... 3500s - Fair as Death ... 4900s - Against Improbable Odds V 1.0