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Iraq
Saddam’s half-brother can offer insight
2003-04-14
A Kurdish official said Monday Saddam Hussein's half-brother Watban Ibrahim al-Tikriti would disclose the fate of more than 180,000 Kurds who went missing in the 1980s when the regime undertook a campaign of ethnic cleansing. Kosert Rasul, a politburo member of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan told United Press International, that al-Tikriti, arrested by U.S. forces on Sunday, was minister of interior and highly placed in the security apparatus when the ethnic-cleansing operations against Kurds were launched.
He'd since left that job and spent his time recently laundering the Saddam family fortune...
"Al-Tikriti is supposed to have information about those operations and the location of mass graves of their victims," Rasul said. He said the Iraqi regime never gave a hint about the fate of 10,000 members of al-Barzan tribe who were rounded up in 1982 and some 182,000 other Kurds who were the victims of the campaign in 1988. "Watban al-Tikriti was in the inner circle of the regime and held high-ranking security positions in the 1980s ... That is why it is possible that he has answers to the queries of the families of those victims," Rasul said. The Kurdish official said he hoped al-Tikriti's arrest will be followed by similar arrests of Iraqi officials "who committed crimes against humanity." He also urged Iraqis to inform humanitarian organizations and U.S. and British forces about the hideouts of Saddam's aides who vanished after Baghdad's fall to coalition troops.
Some are doing that. That part of it's starting to come together nicely, in fact...
Al-Tikriti was arrested in the region of Rabia'near the Syrian border after residents told U.S. forces of his whereabouts. He was taken by a U.S. helicopter to an undisclosed destination to be interrogated.
Ah, yes, the world famous "Undisclosed Location". Now he has a very short time to make a deal before we don't need him. Life in a U.S. prison vs dancing at the end of a rope.
Posted by:Steve

#3  Squeeze that lemon. boys. Remind him that truncheon island would love to see him. Tatoo has a new pair of pliers, I hear...
Posted by: mojo   2003-04-14 21:18:03  

#2  Encyclopaedia Britannica (CD 1997):  'Alawite

Arabic 'ALAWI, plural 'ALAWIYAH, also called NUSAYRI, plural NUSAYRIYAH, or NAMIRI, plural NAMIRIYAH, or ANSARI, plural ANSARIYAH, any member of a minority sect of Shi'ite Muslims living chiefly in Syria.

The roots of 'Alawism lie in the teachings of Muhammad ibn Nusayr an-Namiri (fl. 850), a Basran contemporary of the 10th Shi'ite imam, and the sect was chiefly established by Husayn ibn Hamdan al-Khasibi (d. 957 or 968) during the period of the Hamdanid dynasty (905-1004), at which time the 'Alawites had great influence in Aleppo. With the fall of Shi'ite rule, however, the 'Alawites, with other Shi'ites, became the victims of persecution. They were ill-treated by waves of Crusaders, by Mamluks, and by Ottoman conquerors, in addition to fighting a number of internecine wars.

Considered by many Muslims to be heretics, the present-day 'Alawites obtained a legal decision about their status as Muslims from the Lebanese leader of the Ithna 'Ashariyah (Twelver) sect of Shi'ite Islam. The 'Alawite sect has become politically dominant in Syria, particularly since 1971, when Hafiz al-Assad, an 'Alawite, was elected president of the country. The sect is predominant in the Latakia region of Syria, and it extends north to Antioch (Antakya), Turkey. Many 'Alawites also live around or in Hims and Hamah. They are second in number within Syria to the Sunnite sect, which makes up about three-fourths of the Muslim population of mostly Muslim Syria.

The name 'Alawi is more generally used to refer to all the groups affiliated with one of the 'Alis; thus the Muslims usually refer to the Syrian 'Alawites as Nusayriyah, or Namiriyah. Though well established in Syria since the 12th century, the 'Alawites were not able to fully adopt the name 'Alawi until 1920, the time of French occupation of the area.

The basic doctrine of 'Alawite faith is the deification of 'Ali. He is one member of a trinity corresponding roughly to the Christian Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. 'Alawites interpret the Pillars of Islam (the five duties required of every Muslim) as symbols and thus do not practice the Islamic duties. They celebrate an eclectic group of holidays, some Islamic, some Christian, and many 'Alawite practices are secret. They consider themselves to be moderate Shi'ites, not much different from the Twelvers.

Posted by: Encyclopaediaman   2003-04-14 15:33:30  

#1  "You have your choice of retirement facilities. If you cooperate, it will be on the shores of the Carribean. If not, it will be Halabja."
Posted by: Dishman   2003-04-14 10:51:33  

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