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Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Senate hearing to focus on rapes of contract workers in Iraq

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will hold a hearing tomorrow titled "Closing Legal Loopholes: Prosecuting Sexual Assaults and Other Violent Crimes Committed Overseas by American Civilians in a Combat Environment."

Representatives of the departments of Justice, State and Defense are scheduled to testify. So is Mary Beth Kineston, a former employee of Houston-based contractor and Halliburton spinoff KBR, who alleges she was sexually assaulted in Iraq by one KBR coworker, groped by another -- and then fired after complaining about the company's treatment of women. Kineston won a small arbitration award from the company for her ordeal.

But others have had a difficult time finding any justice. Among them is "Lisa Smith," the pseudonym for a woman who worked for KBR as a medic and alleges she was drugged and raped by a KBR coworker and a soldier; her harrowing story was recently detailed by reporter Karen Houppert for The Nation. The radio show Democracy Now! interviewed Smith and Houppert today as well as Jamie Leigh Jones, another KBR worker who alleges she was sexually assaulted by fellow employees; Smith says she will also testify as part of tomorrow's hearing, at which she will reveal her true identity.

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posted by Sue Sturgis at 4:02 PM | Email this post

Thursday, April 03, 2008

KBR implicated in another rape in Iraq

The Nation published a story today about another case involving a woman working for Texas-based defense contractor KBR who alleges she was gang-raped in Iraq. Lisa Smith, the pseudonym of a 42-year-old paramedic from Texas, claims she was drugged and then sexually assaulted by a U.S. soldier and a fellow KBR employee in January, shortly after she arrived in Iraq. As in the case of Jamie Leigh Jones, another KBR employee from Texas who's been outspoken about her alleged gang-rape by coworkers, the company has been less than supportive -- even confiscating Smith's computer as "evidence" shortly after she e-mailed an attorney for help.

Sexual violence against women contract workers in Iraq appears disturbingly widespread. Reporter Karen Houppert notes that one Houston firm has 15 clients with sexual assault, sexual harassment and related retaliation complaints against KBR, its former parent company Halliburton, and KBR shell company Service Employees International Inc. In addition, Jones has been contacted by 40 U.S. contractor employees who say they've been the victims of sexual assault or harassment. And as Houppert points out, justice has proved elusive for these women:
Most of these complaints never see the light of day, thanks to the fine print in employee contracts that compels employees into binding arbitration instead of allowing their complaints to be tried in a public courtroom. Criminal prosecutions are practically nonexistent, as the US Justice Department has turned a blind eye to these cases.
Last October, the House passed a bill that requires the FBI to investigate allegations of wrongdoing by U.S. contractors and allows them to be tried under American jurisdiction. However, the Senate has not yet taken any action on the measure.

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posted by Sue Sturgis at 8:40 PM | Email this post

Southern News Update

Who Are These Folks?

CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. Chris is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

SUE STURGIS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Sue is the Institute’s Editorial Director and a former reporter for The Independent Weekly and The Raleigh News & Observer.

DESIREE EVANS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Desiree is a Research Associate at the Institute and former policy analyst for TransAfrica.

The views expressed on Facing South are those of the authors and not necessarily represent the views of the Institute for Southern Studies. The editors reserve the right to reject comments that are abusive, offensive, misleading, or that promote commercial goods and services.

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