Saddam Hussein is Dead.

  • Thread starter Thread starter karisrou
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
K

karisrou

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Three years after he was hauled from a hole in the ground by pursuing U.S. forces, Saddam Hussein was hanged Saturday under a sentence imposed by an Iraqi court, al-Hurra TV, al-Arabiya and Sky News TV reported.

The deposed president was found guilty over the killing of 148 members of the Shiite population of the town of Dujail after militants tried to assassinate him there in 1982, during Iraq’s war with Shiite Iran.

The official witnesses to his execution gathered Friday in Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone in final preparation for his hanging, as state television broadcast footage of his regime’s atrocities.

The Pentagon said U.S. forces, always on high alert in Iraq, were braced for any upsurge in violence from Sunni insurgents loyal to Saddam.

A U.S. judge refused late Friday to stop the execution, rejecting a last-minute court challenge by the former Iraqi president.

"Petitioner Hussein's application for immediate, temporary stay of execution is denied," U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said in Washington after a hearing over the telephone with attorneys.

An Iraqi appeals court upheld Saddam’s death sentence Tuesday for the killing of 148 people who were detained and tortured after the attempt on his life.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said in statements released Friday that those who opposed the execution of Saddam were insulting the honor of his victims. His office said he made the remarks in a meeting with families of people who died during Saddam’s rule.

“Our respect for human rights requires us to execute him, and there will be no review or delay in carrying out the sentence,†al-Maliki said.

‘God’s gift to Iraqis’
In his Friday sermon, a mosque preacher in the Shiite holy city of Najaf called Saddam’s execution “God’s gift to Iraqis.â€

“Oh, God, you know what Saddam has done! He killed millions of Iraqis in prisons, in wars with neighboring countries and he is responsible for mass graves. Oh God, we ask you to take revenge on Saddam,†said Sheik Sadralddin al-Qubanji, a member of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, known as SCIRI.

Rumors and reports swirled Friday over when the execution would take place and whether U.S. forces had handed Saddam over to Iraqi custody, presumably the last step before the execution.

Earlier reports said al-Maliki feared fueling religious tensions if Saddam were executed during Eid al-Adha, a Muslim holiday that starts at sundown Saturday.

An execution during Eid carries great symbolism. The feast marks the sacrifice the prophet Abraham was prepared to make when God ordered him to kill his son, and many Shiites could regard Saddam’s death as a gift from God. Such symbolism could further anger Sunnis, who are resentful of new Shiite power.

Najeeb al-Nueimi, a member of Saddam’s legal team, said U.S. authorities were maintaining physical custody of Saddam until the time of the execution to prevent him from being humiliated beforehand. He said the Americans also want to prevent the mutilation of his corpse, as has happened to other deposed Iraqi leaders.

Saddam has been held at a U.S. base near Baghdad airport, but the place of execution has been kept secret.

Meeting with half-brothers
Saddam, who said in court he had no fear of dying, had a farewell meeting with two of his half-brothers on Thursday, his lawyers said, adding the fallen dictator was in high spirits and ready to die a “martyr.†A third half-brother and another aide are also condemned to die for crimes against humanity.

Saddam’s conviction was hailed by President Bush as a triumph for the democracy he promised to foster in Iraq after the 2003 invasion.

International human rights groups criticized the year-long trial, during which three defense lawyers were killed and a chief judge resigned complaining of political interference.

-MSNBC.com
 
you live by the sword you die by the sword thank heavens justice has been done, i can still remember the village he gassed poor kids and animals as well died because of him, pure evil another Hitler, now for Bin Laden ( or bin bag as we call him) dont believe he has already died as some people say .
 
nope I think hes creeping around too
I cant believe they havent got him yet either
 
The hanging was filmed as well, will no doubt be on youtube soon ::)

Michelle, we call him bin bag or bin liner as well ;D

Kat
 
I am not for capital punishment at all, as there are people that have died in the past that were innocent.

But This couldn't have happened to a more EVIL man,and with out sounding hypocritical it should have been a public hanging although I wouldn't of been able to watch myself.

At least the Iracqi people have got some kind of Justice for what he did. I still can see the pictures in my mind of all of those innocent people that he murdered.

karen
 
I think it shouldve been a public hanging too although ive seen some of it on the news,it seemed kinda creepy watching them put the rope around his neck and I wondered what was going thru his mind when they did that,he totally deserved what he got and I hope theyll get all the other and hang them too
 
I'm sorry but capital punishment does not sit well with me, though I'm not sure what the answer is :-\
I am inclined to leave retribution to the "Lords of karma" who I feel that in one way or another or one lifetime or another are maybe able to dispense a more fitting punishment. All that has happened now is that this guy has died a martyr...

Just my very personal thoughts...
 
I believe in Karma but this man did it so publically and was so proud of himself there really was no other way and if you had a relative who he had killed or tortured bet you would'nt want to wait for Karma to hit back I know i would'nt ,and to be honest in that part of the world it is normal for them to hang criminals, I dont normally agree with hanging etc but in cases like this what else could have been done, I dont believe he died a martyr he died an evil man who got off by killing innocent people and i hope he rots in hell, some might say he got what he dished out by losing his sons, but some how I dont think it bothered him that much,
one down now Bin bag to get his ,
 
michellemuffin said:
I believe in Karma but this man did it so publically and was so proud of himself there really was no other way and if you had a relative who he had killed or tortured bet you would'nt want to wait for Karma to hit back I know i would'nt ,and to be honest in that part of the world it is normal for them to hang criminals, I dont normally agree with hanging etc but in cases like this what else could have been done, I dont believe he died a martyr he died an evil man who got off by killing innocent people and i hope he rots in hell, some might say he got what he dished out by losing his sons, but some how I dont think it bothered him that much,
one down now Bin bag to get his ,

totally seconded ;)
 
I think the death penalty debases those who perform the act, and those countries who have the policy.

For those people who have lost loved ones at the hands of SH, this cannot even come near providing a closure for their grief. It does not bring their loved ones back.

By going along with this we have laid ourselves open for all kinds of trouble.

You may be wondering what I think should have been done. The answer is- I don't know, but for sure this was not it.

I read a letter in today's paper. The writer used the example of Nelson Mandela - when he was released he immediately abolished the death penalty instead of using it for retribution killings. This is a man we all admire as a great leader and politician. He got it right.
 
just knowing this evil person was breathing the same air as me makes me vomit, sorry but i remember the village he gassed too well and if I could have pulled the rope i would have done so just to avenged those poor kids he gassed little babies, no way should he be allowed a luxury called life, yes there will be retributions but equally those affected know he would never escape and manage to do his evil crimes again I know if i was there and he was alive i would always be thinking he will get out some way and back to square one,
what maybe is being forgotten is its their way of life like in Saudi where they cut your hands off for theiving no way would that sit well with us British but some one who there was no doubt of his crimes of being responsible for millions of deaths torture and rape, no worrys could'nt have happened to a more evil person, hope he meet Hitler down there,
but it was the Iraqis who decieded his fate not the US or us and its their way of dealing with it, us softys would have put him in an open prison and let out after a few years on good behaviour, now who do you think has got it right?
 
There was no way he should have been put in a prison, he had to face the death penalty and I'm so sick of hearing about his human rights.As far as i was concerned any man who did what he did when in power , he had no rights.Thank god hes gone and if there is a heaven and a hell i hope hes been torched down there too.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top