UPDATED ON:
Thursday, March 22, 2007
09:16 Mecca time, 06:16 GMT
 
News Americas
US soldier admits part in Iraq rape
Two of the five soldiers charged in the rape and murders have been sentenced so far [AFP]
A US soldier has pleaded guilty in connection with the rape and murder of a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and the killing of her family.
 
Private Bryan Howard, 20, also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct justice by lying to his superior officers about the attack in Mahmoudiya, 32km south of Baghdad, in March last year.
He could receive up to 15 years in prison.
 
Five soldiers with the 101st Airborne Division have been charged in the rape and killing of Abeer Qassim al-Janabi. Her mother, father and six-year-old sister were also killed.
'Hectic state'
 
On Wednesday, Howard told a judge at a hearing in Kentucky, US, that he was left behind at a checkpoint while four other soldiers went to rape the girl, and that he had overheard the four planning the attack.
 
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"I was slowly starting to believe what they had done, that they had committed the crimes, the rape and the murder," Howard said.
 
He said he only realised that someone had been killed after the soldiers returned about 10 minutes later, four of them in a "hectic state and hyper", and with blood on one of the soldiers' uniforms.
 
Two of the soldiers who previously pleaded guilty were sentenced to between 90 and 100 years in prison.
 
Captain Megan Shaw, Howard's lawyer, pleaded for leniency in sentencing and asked that he be allowed to return to his unit because he "was a good kid that deserves a second chance".
 
'Horribly wrong'
 
But Captain Alexander Pickands, a military prosecutor, said Howard "knew right from wrong".
 

"If I could go back, I would not have let it happen in the first place, and I definitely would have told someone"

Bryan Howard, third US soldier convicted in Iraqi rape case

"He knew that when his squad members returned bloodied, that something had gone horribly wrong. Knowing that, he chose to shield them," Pickands said.
 
During the sentencing hearing, Howard expressed regret for not stopping the killings and for covering up the truth, and apologised to the military, his family and to the girl and her family.
 
"Finally I want to apologise to the Iraqi people and the victims,'' he said in a statement to the court.
 
"If I could go back, I would not have let it happen in the first place, and I definitely would have told someone."
 Source: Agencies
 
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