BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Iraq has signed a deal with the United States to settle claims from Americans who say they were mistreated by Saddam Hussein’s regime during the 1990-91 Gulf conflict, officials said yesterday.
The payout — to total $400 million according to a Christian Science Monitor report — was intended to safeguard Iraqi funds abroad and help lift UN sanctions imposed during the rule of Saddam, toppled by the US-led invasion in 2003.
Scores of Americans were captured by Iraq in 1990 and used as human shields to deter allied air strikes. Some have alleged that they were tortured by Saddam’s regime.
In court cases filed in the United States, the former prisoners alleged they suffered death threats, mock executions, starvation, sleep deprivation and withholding of medical care.
Iraq’s Foreign Affairs ministry said the deal, signed by Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari and US Ambassador James Jeffrey, would help end sanctions imposed by the United Nations two decades ago after Saddam invaded Kuwait.
“The agreement was signed between the two countries to resolve several legal claims inherited from the former regime for US citizens,” the ministry said on its website.
David Ranz, the US embassy spokesman in Iraq, said the deal was signed on Sept. 2 but he provided no more details.
After the 1991 war, the UN Security Council ordered Iraq to compensate countries that suffered as a result of its Kuwait occupation. Baghdad now sets aside 5 per cent of its oil revenues for reparations payments, most of which go to Kuwait.
But Iraq says the reparations — totalling over $20 billion so far — are unfair and wants the amount reduced so it has more money for reconstruction and development after the 2003 war.
It has called for annulling UN Security Council decisions requiring the payments under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter.
Kuwait has opposed ending Iraq’s Chapter 7 status and has so far successfully lobbied the Security Council to preserve it.
The United States agreed in late 2008 to help Iraq come out of the Chapter 7 sanctions as part of a security agreement signed between Washington and Baghdad.