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The Rush to Hang Saddam Hussein

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Patty View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Patty Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 31 December 2006 at 11:14am

 It seems there are many mixed opinions on the execution of Saddam Hussein.  May God have mercy on his soul, and on all our souls.

Patty

By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA

BAGHDAD, Iraq Dec 30, 2006 (AP)� Saddam Hussein struggled briefly after American military guards handed him over to Iraqi executioners before dawn Saturday. But as his final moments approached and masked executioners slipped a black cloth and noose around his neck, he grew calm.

In a final moment of defiance, he refused a hood to cover his eyes.

Hours after Saddam faced the same fate he was accused of inflicting on countless thousands during a quarter-century of ruthless power, Iraqi state television showed grainy video of what it said was his body, the head uncovered and the neck twisted at a sharp angle.

A man whose testimony helped lead to Saddam's conviction and execution before sunrise said he was shown the body because "everybody wanted to make sure that he was really executed."

"Now, he is in the garbage of history," said Jawad Abdul-Aziz, who lost his father, three brothers and 22 cousins in the reprisal killings that followed a botched 1982 assassination attempt against Saddam in the Shiite town of Dujail.

The post-execution footage showed the man identified as Saddam lying on a stretcher, covered in a white shroud. His neck and part of the shroud have what appear to be bloodstains. His eyes are closed.

In Baghdad's Shiite enclave of Sadr City, hundreds of people danced in the streets while others fired guns in the air to celebrate. The government did not impose a round-the-clock curfew as it did last month when Saddam was convicted to thwart any surge in retaliatory violence.

It was a grim end for the 69-year-old leader who had vexed three U.S. presidents. Despite his ouster, Washington, its allies and the new Iraqi leaders remain mired in a fight to quell a stubborn insurgency by Saddam loyalists and a vicious sectarian conflict.

The execution took place during the year's deadliest month for U.S. troops, with the toll reaching 109. At least 2,998 members of the U.S. military have been killed since the Iraq war began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

President Bush said in a statement issued from his ranch in Texas that bringing Saddam to justice "is an important milestone on Iraq's course to becoming a democracy that can govern, sustain and defend itself, and be an ally in the war on terror."

He said that the execution marks the "end of a difficult year for the Iraqi people and for our troops" and cautioned that Saddam's death will not halt the violence in Iraq.

Within hours of his death, bombings killed at least 68 people in Iraq, including one planted on a minibus that exploded in a fish market in a mostly Shiite town south of Baghdad.

Ali Hamza, a 30-year-old university professor, said he went outside to shoot his gun into the air after he learned of Saddam's death.

"Now all the victims' families will be happy because Saddam got his just sentence," said Hamza, who lives in Diwaniyah, a Shiite town 80 miles south of Baghdad.

But people in the Sunni-dominated city of Tikrit, once a power base of Saddam, lamented his death.

"The president, the leader Saddam Hussein is a martyr and God will put him along with other martyrs. Do not be sad nor complain because he has died the death of a holy warrior," said Sheik Yahya al-Attawi, a cleric at the Saddam Big Mosque.

Police blocked the entrances to Tikrit and said nobody was allowed to leave or enter the city for four days. Despite the security precaution, gunmen took to the streets of Tikrit, carrying pictures of Saddam, shooting into the air, and calling for vengeance.

Security forces also set up roadblocks at the entrance to another Sunni stronghold, Samarra, and a curfew was imposed after about 500 people took to the streets protesting the execution of Saddam.

A couple hundred people also protested the execution just outside the Anbar capital of Ramadi, and more than 2,000 people demonstrated in Adwar, the village south of Tikrit where Saddam was captured by U.S. troops hiding in an underground bunker.

In a statement, Saddam's lawyers said that in the aftermath of his death, "the world will know that Saddam Hussein lived honestly, died honestly, and maintained his principles."

"He did not lie when he declared his trial null," they said.

Saddam's half-brother Barzan Ibrahim and Awad Hamed al-Bandar, the former chief justice of the Revolutionary Court, were not hanged along with their former leader as originally planned. Officials wanted to reserve the occasion for Saddam alone.

"We wanted him to be executed on a special day," National Security adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie told state-run al-Iraqiya television.

Sami al-Askari, the political adviser of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, told the AP that Saddam initially resisted when he was taken by Iraqi guards but was composed in his final moments.

He said Saddam was clad in a black suit, hat and shoes, rather than prison garb. His hat was removed and his hands tied shortly before the noose was slipped around his neck.

Saddam repeated a prayer after a Sunni Muslim cleric who was present.

"Saddam later was taken to the gallows and refused to have his head covered with a hood," al-Askari said. "Before the rope was put around his neck, Saddam shouted: 'God is great. The nation will be victorious and Palestine is Arab.'"

Iraqi state television showed footage of guards in ski masks placing a noose around Saddam's neck. Saddam appeared calm as he stood on the metal framework of the gallows. The footage cuts off just before the execution.

Saddam was executed at a former military intelligence headquarters in Baghdad's Shiite neighborhood of Kazimiyah, al-Askari said. During his regime, Saddam had numerous dissidents executed in the facility, located in a neighborhood that is home to the Iraqi capital's most important Shiite shrine the Imam Kazim shrine.

Al-Askari said the government had not decided what to do with Saddam's body.

Al-Arabiya satellite television reported that a delegation including the governor of Salahuddin Province and the head of Saddam's clan had retrieved his body from Baghdad and was taking it to Tikrit, near the executed dictator's hometown, for burial. The report could not immediately be verified.

The Iraqi prime minister's office released a statement that said Saddam's execution was a "strong lesson" to ruthless leaders who commit crimes against their own people.

"We strongly reject considering Saddam as a representative of any sect in Iraq because the tyrant only represented his evil soul," the statement said. "The door is still open for those whose hands are not tainted with the blood of innocent people to take part in the political process and work on rebuilding Iraq."

The execution came 56 days after a court convicted Saddam and sentenced him to death for his role in the killings of 148 Shiite Muslims from Dujail. Iraq's highest court rejected Saddam's appeal Monday and ordered him executed within 30 days.

A U.S. judge on Friday refused to stop Saddam's execution, rejecting a last-minute court challenge.

U.S. troops cheered as news of Saddam's execution appeared on television at the mess hall at Forward Operating Base Loyalty in eastern Baghdad. But some soldiers expressed doubt that Saddam's death would be a significant turning point for Iraq.

"First it was weapons of mass destruction. Then when there were none, it was that we had to find Saddam. We did that, but then it was that we had to put him on trial," said Spc. Thomas Sheck, 25, who is on his second tour in Iraq. "So now, what will be the next story they tell us to keep us over here?"

At his death, he was in the midst of a second trial, charged with genocide and other crimes for a 1987-88 military crackdown that killed an estimated 180,000 Kurds in northern Iraq. Experts said the trial of his co-defendants was likely to continue despite his execution.

Many people in Iraq's Shiite majority were eager to see the execution of a man whose Sunni Arab-dominated regime oppressed them and Kurds. Before the hanging, a mosque preacher in the Shiite holy city of Najaf on Friday called Saddam's execution "God's gift to Iraqis."

In a farewell message to Iraqis posted Wednesday on the Internet, Saddam said he was giving his life for his country as part of the struggle against the U.S. "Here, I offer my soul to God as a sacrifice, and if he wants, he will send it to heaven with the martyrs," he said.

One of Saddam's lawyers, Issam Ghazzawi, said the letter was written by Saddam on Nov. 5, the day he was convicted by an Iraqi tribunal in the Dujail killings.

Najeeb al-Nauimi, a member of Saddam's legal team, said U.S. authorities maintained physical custody of Saddam until the execution to prevent him being humiliated publicly or his corpse being mutilated, as has happened to previous Iraqi leaders deposed by force. He said they didn't want anything to happen to further inflame Sunni Arabs.

"This is the end of an era in Iraq," al-Nauimi said from Doha, Qatar. "The Baath regime ruled for 35 years. Saddam was vice president or president of Iraq during those years. For Iraqis, he will be very well remembered. Like a martyr, he died for the sake of his country."

Iraq's death penalty was suspended by the U.S. military after it toppled Saddam in 2003, but the new Iraqi government reinstated it two years later, saying executions would deter criminals.

Saddam's own regime used executions and extrajudicial killings as a tool of political repression, both to eliminate real or suspected political opponents and to maintain a reign of terror.

In the months after he seized power on July 16, 1979, he had hundreds of members of his own party and army officers slain. In 1996, he ordered the slaying of two sons-in-law who had defected to Jordan but returned to Baghdad after receiving guarantees of safety.

Saddam built Iraq into a one of the Arab world's most modern societies, but then plunged the country into an eight-year war with neighboring Iran that killed hundreds of thousands of people on both sides and wrecked Iraq's economy.

When the U.S. invaded in 2003, Iraqis had been transformed from among the region's most prosperous people to some of its most impoverished.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=2760640& ;page=1
Patty

I don't know what the future holds....but I know who holds the future.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Duende Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 01 January 2007 at 12:10pm
I agree with Niqab ummi, this was a terrible mistake to hang him
exactly on Eid. But it was probably a mistake to hang him, period.

Take a look at Riverbend's last blog ("Baghdad Burning", just google
Riverbend) Bush went out of his way to make it look as though he
had nothing to do with the final outcome for Saddam, quite
ridiculous.

So, Saddam gets what the majority feel he deserved, unfortunately
Bush, Blair, Rumsfeld, Aznar, Barroso and Howard will never see the
kind of justice they deserve.

That NYTimes piece reeks of romance. How come it doesn't mention
the final sound of Hussein's vertebra cracking? The romancing of
Saddam Hussein begins. Once, they shook his hand and sold him
weapons, but in the end, they hung him like a dog, after a show trial
lacking all manner of legal guarrantees. History is being written
exactly as they want it.

Edited by Duende
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote alibeta Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 January 2007 at 1:31am
Malaysian Former PM says Saddam murdered and read why OIC is so complacent on that matter!

http://www.worldfutures.info/portal/index.php?option=com_con tent&task=view&id=93&Itemid=2
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Duende Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 January 2007 at 3:42am
Americans in particular must make an effort to find the facts about
events caused or sponsored by their own administration. The way
this officially sanctioned revenge lynching has been reported is
another example of the way English language media is controlled in
order to send a particular message, and ultimately twist history.

The NY Times piece reads like a short movie script, the events
'Hollywoodised' for the easy digestion of an audience accustomed to
'facts' in the form of a movie script. The official version of things has
already been cooked to add an additional flavour which will seep into
the general consciousness: specifically claiming Saddam cursed
Moqtada Al Sadr with his last breath. How better to fan the flames of
sectarian fighting and ensure Iraqi civilians, too busy surviving or
attacking one another to notice, allow the Bush administration to
finalise its deals with the Iraqi puppet government and proceed to
suck the oil fields dry? But wait, what am I saying, it is of course
aimed at the American public, so that THEY continue to watch their
young men and women sacrificed for the sake of their country's
economic and strategic hegemony.

This is from Riverbend, who also says there were few real
celebrations over the 'sacrifice' of Saddam:
"Now we come to CNN. Shame on you CNN journalists- you're
getting lazy. The least you can do is get the last words correct when
you write a story about an execution. Your articles are read the world
over and will go down in history as references. You people are the
biggest news network in the world- the least you can do is spend
some money on a decent translator. Saddam's last words were NOT
"Muqtada Al Sadr" as Munir Haddad claimed, according to the article
below. If anyone had seen at least part of the video they showed on
TV, you'd know that.

"A witness, Iraqi Judge Munir Haddad, said that one of the
executioners told Hussein that the former dictator had destroyed
Iraq, which sparked an argument that was joined by several
government officials in the room.

As a noose was tightened around Hussein's neck, one of the
executioners yelled "long live Muqtada al-Sadr," Haddad said,
referring to the powerful anti-American Shiite religious leader.

Hussein, a Sunni, uttered one last phrase before he died, saying
"Muqtada al-Sadr" in a mocking tone, according to Haddad's
account."

From the video that was leaked, it was not an executioner who yelled
"long live Muqtada al-Sadr". See, this is another low the Maliki
government sunk to- they had some hecklers conveniently standing
by during the execution. Maliki claimed they were "some witnesses
from the trial", but they were, very obviously, hecklers. The moment
the noose was around Saddam's neck, they began chanting, in
unison, "God's prayers be on Mohamed and on Mohamed's family�"
Something else I didn't quite catch (but it was very coordinated), and
then "Muqtada, Muqtada, Muqtada!" One of them called out to
Saddam, "Go to hell�" (in Arabic). Saddam looked down disdainfully
and answered "Heya hay il marjala�?" which is basically saying, "Is
this your manhood�?".

Someone half-heartedly called out to the hecklers, "I beg you, I beg
you- the man is being executed!" They were slightly quieter and then
Saddam stood and said, "Ashadu an la ilaha ila Allah, wa ashhadu
ana Mohammedun rasool Allah�" Which means, "I witness there is
no god but Allah and that Mohammed is His messenger." These are
the words a Muslim (Sunnis and Shia alike) should say on their
deathbed. He repeated this one more time, very clearly, but before
he could finish it, he was lynched.

So, no, CNN, his last words were not "Muqtada Al Sadr" in a mocking
tone- just thought someone should clear that up. (Really people, six
of you contributed to that article!)"


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote alibeta Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 January 2007 at 4:08am
Salaamm

Exactly. He said the kalimah shahada when he was dying. A priviledge not many Muslim can get in this fast life of ours. Saddam was actually given the chance to die as a true Muslim. May Allah bless his soul!

Ameen

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Duende Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 January 2007 at 4:33am
Saddam showed considerable bravery, integrity and dignity in his last
hours, can any one imagine facing their executioner, looking him in
the eye, refusing the hood?

Bravery, integrity and dignity. Traits few indeed of his adversaries
today, share.

In his last moments, Saddam has proven himself a formidable
adversary, his attitude in the face of death is worthy of admiration, I
share your sentiments, alibeta.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Seeking Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 January 2007 at 7:19am

Originally posted by alibeta alibeta wrote:

Salaamm

Exactly. He said the kalimah shahada when he was dying. A priviledge not many Muslim can get in this fast life of ours. Saddam was actually given the chance to die as a true Muslim. May Allah bless his soul!

Ameen

Saddam is not unique in "finding God." I am sure a lot of condemned people, i.e. in the US prisons' death rows, having gotten a chance to do soul searching, go through similar transformation when they know they're going to die sooner. 

I was opposed Saddam's hanging and am disturbed by the manner in which it was carried out. However, it is important to keep in mind that he wasn't an innocent victim. He was a secular man that employed ruthless actions to maintain his power as a dictator. Just ask his victims.

In conclusion, only Allah knows best and will judge him accordingly.    

Salaam

 

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hanan Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 January 2007 at 9:25am

Hold fast to the rope of Allah, and be not divided



Edited by Hanan
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