Posted on 12/19/2006 8:38:59 PM PST by jdm
Iraqi authorities executed 13 men by hanging Tuesday after they were convicted of murder and kidnapping, lining them up in hoods and green jumpsuits with their hands bound behind their backs.
In a rare move that came amid chaotic violence sweeping the capital, the Iraqi government recorded and distributed graphic television footage of the convicts in the moments before they were put to death. The footage was given to both Iraqi and foreign media.
The images showed two men standing together on a gallows with nooses around their necks. Several of them stooped, and one had his arm around the shoulder of another as the hooded men stood in a row shortly before they were hanged.
The footage also showed a bearded man without a hood as he listened to an official tell him his appeal had been rejected and the sentence was death. "OK," the prisoner said impassively.
Iraqi TV has rarely aired such pictures since Saddam Hussein's 2003 ouster. Even under Saddam, executions were common but rarely made public.
Iraq hanged three convicted murderers on Sept. 1, 2005 in the first executions since Saddam's ouster. There may have been more executions since, but they have not been publicized.
U.S. military officials who oversee the Iraqi justice system said they keep records of the number of Iraqis who have been executed since Sept. 2005. But they could not immediately provide those figures.
The government executed the men after an appeals court and the presidency approved the verdict, said Busho Ibrahim, undersecretary of the Justice Ministry.
"They included terrorists and other criminals convicted of abduction and murder as well as assassination plots in several provinces," he said.
After the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003, American officials deemed the Iraqi court system incapable of rendering a fair decision, and banned the death penalty. Iraqi authorities reinstated the death penalty after the transfer of sovereignty in June 2004 so they would have the option of executing Saddam for crimes committed by his regime.
The former Iraqi president was convicted last month of crimes against humanity and sentenced to hang. His lawyers have appealed the verdict and sentence, and an appeals court is expected to rule early next year.
Elsewhere in the Iraqi capital, gunmen in military uniforms robbed government accountants as they left a bank with bags of cash. It was the second major robbery in Baghdad in eight days.
Assailants in four vehicles drove up to the Zuwiyah Bank in the Karradah neighborhood and fired automatic weapons in the air, then handcuffed guards and robbed accountants of 1 billion Iraqi dinars ($709,000), police said.
On Dec. 11, gunmen in Iraqi army uniforms stole $1 million from a bank truck.
Iraq has seen much other spectacular bank robberies in recent years. Shortly before the United States began bombing Baghdad in 2003, roughly $900 million in U.S. currency was taken from the central bank a sum that amounted to about a quarter of Iraq's hard currency reserves.
Some news reports said Saddam Hussein ordered the money taken and sent his son Qusai to grab the cash in the middle of the night. The take was so large it reportedly had to be hauled away in three tractor trailers.
Hours after the accountants were robbed on Tuesday, guards at another downtown bank fired on a funeral procession, wounding a mourner. Police said the guards thought the coffin was fake, and that criminals were masquerading as mourners as part of an elaborate robbery attempt. Police intervened and found the mourners to be genuine.
Also Tuesday, the U.S. military announced the death of a Marine in the insurgent stronghold of Anbar province, bringing to 61 the number of American military personnel killed in December. Some 2,950 U.S. troops have been killed since the U.S.-led 2003 invasion of Iraq.
Ayham al-Samaraie, a former electricity minister who escaped from police custody inside the heavily fortified Green Zone, remained at large. Al-Samaraie, a dual U.S.-Iraqi citizen who was being held on corruption charges, walked out of a police station Sunday with the help of private guards, officials said.
His escape left "more question marks," said Ali al-Shabout, spokesman for the Public Integrity Commission, which brought charges against al-Samaraie. "Why did the police only inform us after 12 hours?"
Al-Samaraie is the only Iraqi official to have been convicted and jailed on corruption charges, although arrest warrants have been issued for about 90 former officials, including 15 ex-Cabinet ministers, according to the anti-corruption commission. His conviction was thrown out on appeal, but he faced a dozen other charges.
The Iraqi Red Crescent said the total number of people seized in a kidnapping at the aid group's Baghdad office on Sunday was 42, and that 26 had been released. The agency's Baghdad branches remained shut, but offices elsewhere in Iraq were open.
"The closure of Baghdad offices will continue until all the kidnapped people are released," Red Crescent spokesman Abdel-Hamid Salim said.
The U.S. military said insurgents detonated a bomb at a medical facility flying a Red Crescent flag in western Iraq, but there were no reports of casualties.
A Red Crescent spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity for safety reasons, said the facility did not belong to the agency. Red Crescent flags are often posted outside medical facilities that may not have a direct link with the aid group.
Residents said armed insurgents in black masks had left a bomb at the clinic, and an explosion shortly after their departure destroyed part of the building, the U.S. military said.
Police said they found 53 bodies around Baghdad on Tuesday, apparent victims of violence between Sunnis and Shiites. Many of the bodies showed signs of torture.
The morgue in the city of Baqouba north of Baghdad said it received 15 bodies of people who died violently, including those of two women and an Iraqi soldier. The morgue in Kut, southeast of Baghdad, received the bodies of seven people.
In other violence Tuesday:
In southern Baghdad, two civilians were killed and seven wounded by mortar rounds, and a roadside bomb killed two civilians and wounded nine near an electricity plant, police said. In the city's western Yarmouk district, a bomb narrowly missed a police patrol, wounding four civilians and setting several vehicles ablaze.
Three children were killed when mortar rounds hit their village near Baqouba, and seven civilians were wounded in a mortar attack nearby, police said. North of the city, five insurgents were killed in clashes with U.S. and Iraqi forces, Iraqi officials said. Also in Baqouba, insurgents attacked a police patrol, killing two officers.
An Iraqi army captain was killed outside his home in Diwaniyah, south of the capital, according to police.
U.S.-led forces killed two insurgents in Fallujah and another in eastern Baghdad, the U.S. military said.
A suicide bomber blew up near an American convoy in Mosul, wounding two civilians, police said. A Shiite university student was killed in a drive-by shooting in the city.
It's a start. Saddam needs to be next.
Hang every terrorist you can get your hands on. Its the only thing they understand.
We should be doing the same at GITMO.
What, no 15 years of appeals?
"We should be doing the same at GITMO
Damn right, both of you;
what will it take for our leaders to realize these aren't criminals, and no amount of prison time will "rehabilitate" them!
"Also Tuesday, the U.S. military announced the death of a Marine in the insurgent stronghold of Anbar province, bringing to 61 the number of American military personnel killed in December."
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1755258/posts
Prayer please for yet another hurting family
AIKEN, S.C. - Funeral services for Marine Cpl. Matthew Dillon will be held at 12pm on Wednesday, December 20, 2006 at Millbrook Baptist Church. Interment will follow in Sunset Memorial Gardens, Graniteville. The family will receive friends Tuesday, December 19, 2006 from 6-8pm at Millbrook Baptist Church. George Funeral Home & Cremation Center, Aiken is assisting the family. Memorial contributions may be directed to www.operation-helmet.org .
I am convinced that much of this Sunni-Bathist violence would have subsided by now if we (or the Iraqi's) had executed Saddam two years ago, right after he was pulled from that spider hole.
Many of the insurgent terrorists who continue to fight in Iraq are STILL under the delusion that Saddam will somehow make a miraculous escape or comeback, and return to power.
Saddam, after all, was the all-mighty strongman dictator for the past 30 years, and was all the 'leadership' many Iraqi citizens knew.
This trial of Saddam was supposed to be a 'lesson in justice' but in reality was a huge waste of time. It made the US and the new Iraqi government look weak and inneffectual.
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