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Izzat Ibrahim Al Duri Izzat Ibrahim Al Duri Iraqi Baath Party Iraq-Jordan 20040210  

Iraq
40 killed in Iraq attacks
2008-07-16
Bombers killed around 40 people and wounded scores in several attacks in northern Iraq yesterday. In the worst attack, two suicide bombers killed 27 people and wounded 68 when they blew themselves up outside an army recruitment centre in Baquba, 65km northeast of Baghdad.

Hours later, three bomb blasts hit Mosul, capital of Nineveh province.

The latest attacks came as executed dictator Saddam Hussein's fugitive deputy Izzat Ibrahim Al Duri urged Iraqis to "strike the enemy everywhere... to make this year... decisive for victory". Saddam's number two in the decision-making Revolutionary Command Council, has had a $10 million (BD3.78m) US bounty on his head since November 2003.

In the capital, Electricity Minister Karim Wahid escaped unharmed when a roadside bomb exploded in east Baghdad, wounding three of his bodyguards.
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Iraq
Four years on, House of Saddam lies in ruins
2007-04-08
BAGHDAD -- Four years after Saddam Hussein's ouster, Iraq's new judiciary is dismantling piece by piece the remnants of the dictator's ruthless regime built up over a quarter of a century. The executed president's inner circle of family members and many of his cronies - mostly Sunni Arabs from the Tikrit region of northern Iraq - have been hunted down and are being sent to the gallows one by one.

Former vice-president Taha Yassin Ramadan, like Saddam, convicted for crimes against humanity over the killing of 148 Shiites in the 1980s, was hanged last month on the anniversary of the start of the 2003 invasion.

Even ordinary Iraqis who despised Saddam were surprised by the sudden December 30 hanging of the man who ruled Iraq with an iron fist - although thousands took to the streets to noisily celebrate his downfall. Footage of Saddam being taunted and then executed was circulated on the Internet, to the delight of many Shiite Iraqis who suffered under his regime, but was widely seen internationally as a public relations blunder.
We rather enjoyed it.
The masked executioners and their sectarian chants were seen as undermining the legitimacy of the process - but this did not unnerve the Iraqi government. Calling Saddam's execution a "gift to Iraq," Bassem Ridha, advisor to Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki, said Iraq was determined to hunt other followers of Saddam. "Definitely this was historic for us. Nobody believed Saddam would be executed. Now that it is done, it has given us a boost, courage despite the mistakes we made," he said.

Barzan Ibrahim Hassan Al Tikriti, a half-brother and former chief of the dreaded Mukhabarat intelligence service, followed Saddam to the gallows January 15. His head was ripped from his body by the rope.
As someone said here at the time, the drop table is in feet, not meters.
Uday and Qusay, Saddam's two sons who were pillars of the regime, were killed in a fierce gunbattle with US troops backed by air power in the northern city of Mosul in July 2003.
Over three and a half years since Uday last raped an Iraqi woman. Thank you American soldiers.
All four have been buried in their home village of Awjah near Tikrit, along with Awad Ahmed Al Bandar, the executed chief judge of Saddam's disbanded Revolutionary Court.

Days ahead of the anniversary of the fall of Saddam's regime April 9, 2003, prosecutors Monday demanded death in the Kurdish genocide trial of Ali Hassan Al Majid, also known as "Chemical Ali." A defiant Majid has been appearing in court with a copy of the Koran holy book, which Saddam had also carried almost up to the gallows, and sits in the same front row seat that had been used by Iraq's fallen leader.
He'll be defiant right up to the moment he's hanged. Then he'll be dead.
Among those closest to Saddam's seat of power only Izzat Ibrahim Al Duri, who has a $10 million bounty on his head, has escaped capture, amid frequent unconfirmed reports of his death. He was Saddam's number two in the decision-making Revolutionary Command Council, having stood by his side ever since the 1968 coup that brought their Baath party to power.

Former deputy prime minister Tareq Aziz, who represented the acceptable face of Saddam's Iraq on the international scene, appeared in court earlier this month to heap praise on the executed dictator. "I had the honor to work with the former regime and with the hero Saddam Hussein," Aziz said from the witness stand in the Anfal genocide trial. "He is the hero behind the unity of Iraq and its sovereignty."
I'm going to enjoy his hanging also.
Saddam's wife Sajida Khairallah Tulfah Hussein, and his eldest daughter Raghad, are among the women and children in the former ruler's family who fled abroad before the US occupation, and remain on a US wanted list.
Living a life of ease in Amman. I'd remind King Abdullah that if he wants to have continued access to American military equipment, we want Raghad in our custody.
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Iraq-Jordan
New bounties on suspects
2004-02-10
What we are willing to pay provides a look into who we think is the most dangerous:
The US army placed new bounties on the heads of suspected insurgent leaders yesterday amid warnings that Islamist militants were poised to unleash a new wave of attacks in northern Iraq. The US army distributed a new poster offering a total of $16.5 million for the capture of the five most wanted men. It maintained at $10m the bounty on the head of Saddam Hussein’s right-hand man, Izzat Ibrahim Al Duri, but added $5m to that on alleged Islamist militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Zarqawi, whose real name is Fadel Nazzal Al Khalayleh, is accused by the US-led coalition of acting as intermediary between Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda network and Ansar Al-Islam, a militant group operating in northern Iraq. The poster, published in Arabic by the US 1st Armoured Division which patrols the Baghdad region, also offered $1m for a member of Saddam’s outlawed Baath party command, Mohammed Yunes Al Ahmad.
Moving up, his mom will be proud.
Numbers four and five on the list each have $250,000 bounties. They are Abdulbaki Abdulkarim Abdullah Al Saadun, the head of the Baath party military bureau in Diyala province, northeast of Baghdad, and Moamar Ahmad Yussef Al Jaber, of unspecified nationality, who is described as "the deputy of a terrorist chief."
Zarqawi’s deputy, perhaps?
The announcement of the new bounties came as the New York Times reported that Zarqawi might be deliberately fanning communal tensions between Iraq’s long oppressed Shiite majority and the ousted Sunni Arab elite in a bid to derail the coalition’s plans to hand over sovereignty by June 30.
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