Iraq | |
Life imprisonment for former Baath Regime officials | |
2011-03-17 | |
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The said Court, the Channel added, had dropped charges against Sabaawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, half-brother of Iraqs former President Saddam Hussein, in the same case. The Supreme Criminal Court has charged member of Iraqs former ruling Revolution Command Council (RCC), Ali Hassan al-Majid, with having been behind the annihilation of the secular parties, who was executed. Abed Hamid Hmoud, the Secretary of Saddam Hussein, Ahmed Hassan Khidher al-Samarrae, the Chairman of Saddams office, along with Sabaawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, Farouq Mohammed Ali Ahmed, Ghazaal Hammouda Saeed and Karim Radhi Abed al-Itaby, were also charged with similar accusations by the same court. | |
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Iraq |
Citizens agree on hanging Chemical Ali, differ on rest of defendants |
2008-12-07 |
Aswat al-Iraq: A number of citizens from Basra, Tikrit, and Missan expressed belief that sentences issued by the Supreme Criminal Court against suspects in the 1991 al-Intifada al-Shaabaniya case are 'just', others considered them as 'political', and most of them agreed that Ali Hassan al-Majid, otherwise known as Chemical Ali, deserves the death sentence. "The death sentence issued against Ali Hassan al-Majid is considered as a strong slap on the face of those who perpetrated crimes against the Iraqi people. He was like Hitler and this is a just sentence," Mustafa Karim, a Basrian citizen, told Aswat al-Iraq. Another citizen from Basra, Ali Salman, agreed with Karim, saying "it was a just sentence for what al-Majid perpetrated against hundreds of Iraqi people. Everyone watched him on television beating and killing citizens during al-Intifada." For his part, Abdullah al-Jasem, retired brigadier from Tikrit, told Aswat al-Iraq, "the sentences have political aim to retaliate from the former army leaders." Hussein al-Ubeid, a professor at the Tikrit University, said "we expect the sentences, however some sentences were surprise." He pointed out that al-Tikriti deserves to die for killing hundreds of Iraqis. "Most of the suspects are military officers who implement orders and it is not logic to convict them for crimes made by politicians," he explained. Udai Abdul Khaleq, a teacher from Missan, told Aswat al-Iraq "television helped citizens to follow the case," noting that the case proved that Chemical Ali was the mastermind if several violations and killing operations against innocent Iraqis. "He deserves the life sentence," he asserted. "This was a day of justice," Abbas Fakher from Missan said. "Those who killed innocent people must be killed," Fakher underlined. "It is a day of joy and victory for all Iraqis," he pointed out. Last Tuesday, the Supreme Criminal Court sentenced to death Ali Hassan al-Majid, otherwise known as Chemical Ali; and Abdul Ghani Abdul Ghafour, a former Baath Party official, after found guilty in the 1991 al-Intifada al-Shaabaniya case. Life sentences were handed down against Ibrahim Abdelsattar Mohammed; Iyad Fatieh al-Rawi, former chief of staff and a Republican Guard commander; Hussein Rashid al-Tikriti, former assistant chief of staff; and Saber Abdul-Aziz al-Dori, the former chief of military intelligence. Other defendants in the case are Abad Hamid Mahmud, Saddam's personal secretary; Sabaawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, former President Saddam Hussein's half brother; Iyad Taha Shehab, a former intelligence chief; Latif Mahal Hamoud, former Basra governor; Walied Hamid Tawfiq al-Naseri; Sufyan Maher al-Tikriti, a former Republican Guard commander; Saadi Taama Abbas, the former minister of defense; Saber Abdul-Aziz al-Dori, the former chief of military intelligence; and Qays Abdul Razzaq Mohammed al-Adhami, the commander of the Republican Guard Hamourabi forces. The 1991 incidents, known in Arabic as the al-Intifada al-Shaabaniya, or the Shaaban uprising, were a series of rebellions in southern and northern Iraq in the aftermath of the Gulf War. The revolts in the predominantly Shiite cities of Basra and al-Nassiriya broke out in March 1991, sparked by demoralized Iraqi army troops returning from Iraq's defeat in the Gulf War. Another uprising in the Kurdish areas of northern Iraq broke out shortly thereafter. Although they represented a serious threat to his regime, former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was able to suppress the rebellions with massive force and maintain power, as the expected United States intervention never materialized. The uprisings were eventually crushed by the Iraqi Republican Guard, which was followed by mass reprisals and intensified forced relocations. In few weeks, tens of thousands of civilians were allegedly killed. |
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Iraq |
Former int. chief reveals Iranian handover deal |
2008-07-03 |
(VOI) Iraq's former intelligence chief on Wednesday revealed during a court session on the 1991 al-Intifada al-Shaabaniya case an alleged 1990 Iranian intelligence proposal to hand over Iraqi opposition leaders in return for leaders of the Iranian Mujahideen Khalq (People's Mujahideen) opposition group. "In October 1990, the then Iranian intelligence deputy chief visited Iraq and personally met me to offer the proposal on behalf of the Iranian government," Sabaawi Ibrahim al-Hassan said after meeting separately with Judge Mohammed Araibi al-Khalifa. According to al-Hassan, who is also a half-brother of former President Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi government rejected the proposal on "religious and tribal grounds." Established in 1965, the organization is based in Camp Ashraf near al-Adheem area, Diala province (57km northeast of Baghdad), and close to the Iraqi-Iranian borders. Earlier today, the Iraqi Supreme Criminal Court, headed by Justice al-Khalifa, resumed sessions on the 1991 al-Intifada al-Shaabaniya case. The 1991 incidents, known in Arabic as the al-Intifada al-Shaabaniya, or the Shaaban uprising, were a series of rebellions in southern and northern Iraq in the aftermath of the Gulf War. The revolts in the predominantly Shiite cities of Basra and al-Nassiriya broke out in March 1991, sparked by demoralized Iraqi army troops returning from Iraq's defeat in the Gulf War. Another uprising in the Kurdish areas of northern Iraq broke out shortly thereafter. All of the 15 defendants in the case, who are former Iraqi regime officials, attended the session. |
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Iraq |
Uprising court dismisses defendant, another apologizes to victims' families |
2008-07-01 |
(VOI) Iraq's Supreme Criminal Court undertaking the 1991 Shaaban Uprising in Basra and Missan on Monday dismissed defendant Abdul Ghani al-Ani from the courtroom, after a debate between the two sides. Defendant Iyad Shehab, a former high ranking intelligence member, apologized to those whom he called "the families of innocent victims," who were executed during the events of the uprising. The court session was held today, headed by Justice Mohammed Uraiby, and was attended by the case's 15 defendants. At the beginning of today's session, Justice Uraiby dismissed defendant Abdul Ghani Abdul Ghafour al-Ani, former member of Iraq's dissolved Baath party command Basra branch, due to a debate between them. The judge then requested that a defense attorney leave the courtroom, to hear a defendant's testimony. The court committee was left alone in the courtroom with defendant Iyad Taha Shehab, the former security director of the Iraqi secret services (the Mukhabarat under Saddam Hussein), during the uprising's events. At the beginning of his testimony, Shehab apologized to "innocent victims' families," for being a defendant in this case. "The Mukhabarat's mission was to follow up foreign people and diplomatic delegations in Iraq," he said. "The secrete services consisted of three divisions; individuals' security, information security, and institution's security," he added. "The Mukhabarat had absolutely no relation with average Iraqis, and only Iraqis who deal with foreign embassies and so on were related to the secrete services' field," he explained. "My job was to follow up on the Mukhabarat's personnel themselves," he asserted. Justice Uraiby then addressed a group of questions to defendant Shehab, regarding his carreer during the uprising. He also showed a group of documents that were submitted by the prosecutor to prove Shehab's involvement in the uprising's events. The prime defendant in this case is Ali Hassan al-Majid, alias Chemical Ali, who was condemned to death on charges of crimes against humanity in the al-Anfal case, in his capacity as former commander of the Southern Zone, based in Basra, and member of the dissolved Revolutionary Command Council. Other defendants include Sultan Hashim, the former Iraqi defense minister; Hussein Rashid al-Tikriti, former assistant chief of staff; Saber Abdul-Aziz al-Dori, the former chief of military intelligence; Sabaawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, former President Saddam Hussein's half brother; Abad Hamid Mahmud, Saddam's personal secretary; Abdul Ghani Abdul Ghafour, a former Baath Party official; Saadi Taama Abbas, the former minister of defense; Iyad Fatieh al-Rawi, former chief of staff and a Republican Guard commander; Latif Mahal Hamoud, former Basra governor; Sufyan Maher al-Tikriti, also a former Republican Guard commander; Iyad Taha Shehab, a former intelligence chief and Walied Hamid Tawfiq al-Naseri. |
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