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Execution Of Saddam Hussein (articles from around the world, Cox & Forkum Cartoon)
Compilation of articles from SkyNews,Arab News,Khaleej Times,Intern. Herald Trib.,Cox & Forkum, etc. ^ | December 30, 2006 | Compilation by Gabrielle Cusumano

Posted on 12/30/2006 12:49:55 PM PST by WmShirerAdmirer

"We heard his neck snap," Sami Al-Askari, a political ally of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, told the media after the execution."

Saddam Hussein Hanged

(From Arab News )

BAGHDAD, 30 December 2006 - Ousted Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was hanged at dawn for crimes against humanity specifically for his involvement in the Dujail case in which he was charged with genocide. The hanging, which took place at a Justice Ministry facility in northern Baghdad, closes the book on legal proceedings against Saddam who was toppled by a U.S. invasion in 2003. Iraqi State television aired film of Saddam, looking composed and talking with the masked hangman as he placed the noose around his neck on the gallows. It did not show the death or the body.

According to an official witness the ousted president, who was bound but wore no blindfold, had said a brief prayer.

"We heard his neck snap," Sami Al-Askari, a political ally of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, told the media after the execution.

The prime minister called on Saddam's Sunni Baathist followers to end their insurgency. The state television showed him signing the order for a hanging whose swiftness following the rejection of an appeal has delighted Shi'ites who suffered under Saddam.

Arab News

http://www.arabnews.com/?page=4&section=0&article=90519&d=30&m=12&y=2006

______________________________________________________________________________________

Saddam Hussein executed in Baghdad 30/12/2006 16h11

Saddam Hussein moments before being hanged ©AFP/Al Iraqyia TV BAGHDAD (AFP) - Ousted Iraqi despot Saddam Hussein has been hanged inside one of his former torture centres Saturday in the final act of a brutal 30-year tragedy that left the stage strewn with tens of thousands of corpses.

Officials who witnessed the execution said the 69-year-old former strongman remained defiant to the last, railing against his Iranian and American enemies and praising the rebels who have pushed Iraq to the brink of civil war.

A grainy video showing his corpse draped in a white shroud was shown on private television after the state network broadcast a clip of masked hangmen placing a noose around his neck, cutting away just before his execution Saturday.

In the hours after his death, car bombs exploded in the Shiite town of Kufa and a street in northern Baghdad, killing more than 50 people, as post-Saddam Iraq continued its headlong plunge into the abyss of civil strife.

Iraqi Shiites, persecuted during Saddam's 24-year rule, feted his demise, dancing and cracking off bursts of automatic fire, while Sunni extremists slammed the US-backed government for hanging their hero.

In the video footage, the ousted despot appeared calm, exchanging words with his burly, leather-jacketed executioners as they wrapped his neck first in black cloth then a thick hemp rope and steered him onto a metal platform.

Saddam was manoeuvred forward firmly but not aggressively by the guards wearing black balaclava-style hoods, the grey-bearded prisoner looking thin inside a dark overcoat over a pressed white shirt but no tie.

"He said he was not afraid of anyone," said Judge Moneer Haddad, a member of the panel of appeal court judges who had confirmed Saddam's conviction for crimes against humanity and who attended the pre-dawn execution.

"It was a terrifying scene. Saddam was in self-control. I was not expecting him to be like that," Haddad told AFP.

"One of the attendants asked him 'are you afraid?' He said 'I have never been afraid as long as I lived. I lived as a mujahedeen and expected death any moment,'" he described.

"We heard the cracks of his neck. It was a horrendous scene," he added. After the execution an ambulance took the body to the heavily fortified Green Zone, the seat of the Iraqi government and US embassy, Haddad said.

With that Saddam -- the swaggering sadist who slaughtered Iraq's Kurdish minority, invaded Iran and Kuwait and fought two disastrous wars with the United States -- stepped off Iraq's political stage for good.

Images of Saddam Hussein being prepared for his execution. Duration 1:14 ©Iraqiya TV, Biladi TVNational Security Adviser Mowaffaq al-Rubaie said in a series of broadcast interviews that the late strongman's final minutes were lived in the same spirit as his grandstanding appearances in an Iraqi court.

"One thing I can't explain, I have never seen any repentance, never seen any remorse there," Rubaie told CNN.

Rubaie said officials and executioners had danced around the body afterwards. "This is a natural reaction. These people have lost loved ones."

Sami al-Askari, a Shiite lawmaker close to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki who also saw the hanging, said it had taken place in an old Saddam-era military intelligence headquarters in the Kadhimiyah district of northern Baghdad.

He said the location had symbolic value, because it had been a centre of torture and execution under Saddam.

Within hours, a car bomb exploded in a fish market in the central city of Kufa, killing at least 31 people, but it was not immediately clear whether the attack represented the first reprisal from his supporters.

Later, a triple car bombing ripped through a mixed area of northern Baghdad, adding another 15 corpses to the grim daily toll.

Iraqi police cheer ©AFP - Essam Al-Sudani Saddam's and two co-accused -- his half brother and intelligence chief Barzan Hassan al-Tikriti and revolutionary court judge Awad Ahmed al-Bandar -- were sentenced to death by an Iraqi court on November 5.

Officials said that the execution of Saddam's aides had been postponed until after the Eid al-Adha religious holiday, which ends on Thursday.

Over several months, the Iraqi High Tribunal heard how they oversaw a campaign of collective punishment against the Shiite village of Dujail, north of Baghdad, where Saddam escaped an assassination bid in 1982.

Dujail's orchards were torn up and 148 men and boys were executed after being dragged through Bandar's kangaroo court.

More than 20 years later, Saddam was overthrown by a US-led invasion and later put on trial by a new Shiite-led government. The trio's death sentences were confirmed by a panel of appeal court judges on December 26.

The hangings then became inevitable, with Maliki's government determined to avenge Saddam's brutal 24-year reign and to strike a blow against a violent Sunni insurgency that still honours his name.

"Bringing Saddam Hussein to justice will not end the violence in Iraq, but it is an important milestone on Iraq's course to becoming a democracy that can govern, sustain, and defend itself," said US President George W. Bush.

Maliki urged Iraqis not to see the execution as an attack on one community or another.

Iraqis in the southern port city of Basra celebrate ©AFP - Essam Al-Sudani "The door is still open for everyone whose hands are not stained with the blood of innocents to take part in the building of Iraq. New Iraq shall not be ruled by one party or sect," he declared.

But Saddam's end was vigorously denounced by Sunni Iraqis, who mourned in their hundreds in the area around his home town of Tikrit and the insurgent bastion of Samarra.

Human Rights Watch complained that Maliki's administration had pressured the judge to return guilty verdicts, and was quick to attack the execution.

"The test of a government's commitment to human rights is measured by the way it treats its worst offenders. History will judge the deeply flawed Dujail trial and this execution harshly," said the watchdog's Richard Dicker.

All Credit Given To Agence France Presse http://www.afp.com/english/news/stories/061230160938.39mzy7jv.html ___________________________________________________________________________ From REUTERS UK

Execution of a subdued Saddam was quick - witnesses Sat Dec 30, 2006 11:02 AM GMT

By Mussab Al-Khairalla

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - A subdued Saddam Hussein was led shackled into a hall early on Saturday in Baghdad, a noose was placed around his neck and a guard pulled a lever that swiftly ended his life and a chapter of Iraq's history.

Sami al-Askari, a prominent Shi'ite politician close to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, witnessed the event and told Reuters the process of Saddam's execution lasted about 25 minutes but once he was dropped through a trap door his death was very quick.

"One of the guards pulled a lever and he dropped half a metre into a trap door. We heard his neck snap instantly and we even saw a small amount of blood around the rope," Askari told Reuters.

"They left him hanging for around 10 minutes before a doctor confirmed his death and they untied him and placed him in a white bodybag," he added.

State-funded television channel Iraqiya showed the final moments of Saddam's life but stopped short of broadcasting the actual hanging or his corpse.

The footage showed a group of guards dressed in civilian clothes and wearing ski masks helping Saddam up a small metal staircase where a cloth was put around his neck before stepping onto the trap door. A red metal barrier, like a witness box, surrounded the trap door in the low-ceilinged, grey concrete, cell-like room.

The hangman, wearing a beige leather jacket, placed the thick rope over Saddam's head and tightened the noose on the left side of his neck. The hangman exchanged a few words with Saddam, who nodded in return.

Saddam wore a black coat over a black V-neck jumper and a white shirt and had black trousers and black shoes. Askari said he was told to take off a woolly black hat before his execution.

EXECUTED AT DAWN

Another official witness confirmed Saddam died instantly.

"He seemed very calm. He did not tremble," said the official, adding Saddam, 69, recited the Muslim profession of faith before he died: "There is no God but God and Mohammed is his prophet."

Askari said Saddam, executed for his role in the killing of 148 men and boys from the Shi'ite town of Dujail after a failed attempt on his life in 1982, was executed at 6:10 am (3:10 a.m. British Time) according to his watch at an Iraqi army base in Kadhimiya.

The base was the former headquarters of Saddam's military intelligence where many of his victims were tortured and executed in the same dark gallows. The northern Baghdad district is also home to one of Shi'ite Islam's holiest shrines.

"After he entered the small hall, Saddam had a seat as a judge read him the details of the sentence. But as he saw the camera come in to record, he began shouting the same rubbish we have seen in court. Long live Palestine and other slogans," he said.

He said Saddam's hand-cuffs that tied his arms in front of his body when he came in were reversed when he was led to the noose with his arms tied behind his body.

Askari said about 15 people were present, including government ministers, members of parliament, relatives of victims and representatives from the special court and Justice Ministry. U.S. military and embassy officials declined to comment on whether any U.S. representative was present.

Askari said no cleric was present as Saddam had not requested one and that he had no final requests. Askari said those present remained silent during the execution, but congratulated each other after Saddam was confirmed dead.

An Iraqi television channel later showed footage of Saddam's body in a white shroud. The low-quality footage on Biladi, a Shi'ite-run channel, showed Saddam lying with his neck twisted at an awkward angle, with what appeared to be blood or a bruise on his left cheek.

The short clip appeared to have been filmed on a mobile phone or small camera by a visitor invited to view the corpse.

Jawad al-Zubaidi, a victim who testified at Saddam's trial and who was allowed to view the corpse during a private reception at Maliki's office, said: "When I saw the body in the coffin, I cried. I remembered my three brothers and my father who he had killed. I approached the body and told him: 'This is the well-deserved punishment of every tyrant',".

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny)

All Credit Given To: Reuters UK

(Excerpt ) To Continue Go To: http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?type=topNews&storyid=2006-12-30T110239Z_01_KHA021421_RTRUKOT_0_TEXT0.xml&WTmodLoc=NewsArt-R3-RelatedNews-2 ___________________________________________________________________________

Nothing about Saddam Huseein's Execution in The Yemen Times (yementimes.com) __________________________________________________________________________

Nothing From the UN Secretary General on the Execution of Saddam Hussein 30 December 2006

New York - Statement Attributable to the Spokesman for the Secretary-General on the sinking of an Indonesian passenger ferry http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp __________________________________________________________________

Nothing Written in the Riyadh Daily either. ______________________________________________

Khaleej Times Online >> News >> FOCUS ON IRAQ

Saddam’s enemies rejoice, many Arabs angry (Reuters)

30 December 2006

BEIRUT - Saddam Hussein’s enemies rejoiced, his supporters seethed with anger and many Arabs felt outraged at his hanging on the holiest day of the Muslim year.

Sympathisers with the former president painted him as the victim of a vengeful Iraqi trial sponsored by the United States. Some in Kuwait and non-Arab Iran complained that Saddam had not been brought to account for the wars he launched against them.

Leading Sunni Muslim Arab power Saudi Arabia criticised Iraq’s Shia leaders for executing Saddam, also a Sunni, during the Eid Al Adha and said his trial had been politicised.

“There is a feeling of surprise and disapproval that the verdict has been applied during the holy months and the first days of Eid Al Adha,” a presenter on the official al-Ikhbariya TV said after programming was broken to read a statement.

“Leaders of Islamic countries should show respect for this blessed occasion ... not demean it,” said the statement, which was attributed to official news agency SPA’s political analyst.

The drama of Saddam’s violent end on Saturday was brought into living rooms across the Arab world with television pictures of masked hangmen tightening the noose around his neck. Separate film of Saddam’s body in a white shroud also upset many viewers.

Many Arabs said his hanging for crimes against humanity was provocatively timed to coincide with Eid Al Adha and would worsen violence in Iraq.

“This is the worst Eid ever witnessed by Muslims. I had goosebumps when I saw the footage,” said Jordanian woman Rana Abdullah, 30, who works in the private sector.

Hesham Kassem, an Egyptian newspaper publisher and human rights activist, said airing the images was controversial, but added: “This man was one of the most brutal mass murderers in the history of mankind. He stands alongside Hitler and Stalin.”

But in the impoverished Iraqi village where Saddam was born, residents vowed revenge. “We will all become a bomb,” said one young man in Awja, 150 km (90 miles) north of Baghdad.

Libya, the only state to show solidarity with Saddam in his death, declared three days of mourning and cancelled public Eid celebrations. Flags on government buildings flew at half-mast.

While many Arab governments refrained from comment, a senior aide to Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa called the execution “a tragic end to a sad phase in Iraq’s history”.

“We hope that the Iraqi people would focus on the future to be able to pass this stage, stop the violence and achieve reconciliation,” Hesham Youssef told Reuters in Cairo.

The government of Iraqi neighbour Jordan said it hoped the execution would not have “any negative repercussions”.

Abdel-Bari Atwan, editor of the London-based Al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper, said Arabs wondered who most deserved to face trial: “Saddam Hussein, who preserved the unity of Iraq, ... or those who engulfed the country in this bloody civil war?”

No street unrest was reported in Arab capitals, where Muslims were preoccupied with the Eid al-Adha holiday, but thousands of Indians, mostly Muslims, staged anti-US protests.

Risk to US interests?

Tajeddine El Husseini, a Moroccan international economic law professor, said Saddam’s “symbolic sacrifice” on a religious day when Muslims slaughter animals would make things worse.

In Afghanistan, the first target before Iraq in the US-declared “war on terror”, a Taleban commander said Saddam’s demise would galvanise Muslim opposition to the United States.

“His death will boost the morale of Muslims. The jihad in Iraq will be intensified and attacks on invader forces will increase,” Mullah Obaidullah Akhund told Reuters by telephone.

News of Saddam’s death shocked Palestinians, many of whom had seen him as an Arab hero for his missile attacks on Israel during the 1991 Gulf War that ended Iraq’s occupation of Kuwait.

“The Americans wanted to tell all Arab leaders who are their servants that they are like Saddam, nothing but a sheep slaughtered on Eid,” said Abu Mohammad Salama at a Gaza mosque.

Hamas lawmaker Mushir al-Masri said Saddam’s execution was a ”proof of the criminal and terrorist American policy and its war against all forces of resistance in the world”.

In Kuwait, where Saddam is reviled for his 1990 invasion, parliament speaker Jasim Mohammad al-Kharafi hailed the execution, saying it had brought the country “two Eids”.

But Ahmed al-Shatti, a Health Ministry official, said Saddam had not answered for the “atrocities” he committed in Kuwait.

In Shia non-Arab Iran, Deputy Foreign Minister Hamid Reza Asefi said the hanging of the man who led Iraq into a costly war with the Islamic Republic in the 1980s was a victory for Iraqis.

But Yousef Molaee, an Iranian international law expert, also took the view that the dawn execution was a failure for justice.

“Saddam’s crimes in the eight-year war against Iran, such as chemical bombardments, remained unanswered because of the hasty and unfair trial,” state news agency IRNA quoted him as saying.

In Mecca, Sunni Arab pilgrims voiced outrage that Iraqi authorities had executed Saddam on a major religious holiday

Khaleej Times http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/focusoniraq/2006/December/focusoniraq_December201.xml&section=focusoniraq ___________________________________________________________________________

From: Sky News UK http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30000-13559626,00.html

Saddam Body Flown Home Updated: 19:40, Saturday December 30, 2006

The body of Saddam Hussein has been flown onboard a US plane to his hometown of Tikrit hours after the former Iraqi dictator was executed, a defence lawyer said.

Lebanese lawyer Bushra al-Khalil told the Reuters news agency the body was handed over to tribal leaders for burial in Tikrit.

Saddam was hanged on Saturday morning in Baghdad after being found guilty of committing crimes against humanity in what the US said was a fair and just trial.

His execution took place around 6am local time (3am GMT).

Extraordinary footage of Saddam walking to the gallows and having the rope noose put around his neck was released by the Iraqi government.

The video showed documents being checked before showing Saddam being led to the gallows by men wearing balaclavas.

The camera is then lowered to show a noose and a small trap door in the floor surrounded by red railings.

Saddam, 69, was shown silently looking down at the floor before he said a few words and stepped forward to have the noose placed around his neck.

No further footage of the execution was broadcast, though low-quality pictures did emerge later of Saddam's body wrapped in a white shroud.

Following his death, state-run Iraqiya television said: "Criminal Saddam was hanged to death", and played patriotic music, while showing images of national monuments and other landmarks.

The station also reported that Saddam's half-brother Barzan al Tikriti and Awad al Bander, the former chief justice of the Revolutionary Court, were hanged.

Pictures of Saddam's body were broadcast However, officials said that only Saddam was hanged and the other two would be executed after this weekend's Islamic religious holiday.

Saddam's death sentence was carried out in northern Baghdad following hours of confusion over whether he was to be executed or not.

US President George Bush called the execution an "important milestone" for Iraq.

British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said Saddam had been held to account for some of his crimes.

She added: "The British Government does not support the use of the death penalty, in Iraq or anywhere else. We advocate an end to the death penalty worldwide, regardless of the individual or the crime.

"We have made our position very clear to the Iraqi authorities, but we respect their decision as that of a sovereign nation."

Saddam was sentenced to death by an Iraqi court on November 5 after a trial lasting more than a year.

He was found guilty of ordering the murder of 148 people in the village of Dujail following a failed assassination attempt against him in 1982.

The Iraqi government had made it clear it wanted the sentence carried out as quickly as possible, even though Saddam faced a series of other charges.

Saddam was captured in December 2003, nine months after a US-led coalition invaded Iraq.

His lawyers made a last-ditch legal bid in Washington DC to prevent him being handed over to Iraqi authorities for execution. However, the judge turned down the request.

Saddam's daughter Raghd, in Jordan, "is asking that his body be buried in Yemen temporarily until Iraq is liberated and it can be reburied in Iraq."

More on This Story: (All Credit Given To Sky News UK)

(Excerpted)

Cox & Forkum Editorial Cartoon on Saddam's hanging, titled "Old Acquaintance" is at the end of the Townhall.com article.

Go to http://gabriellecusumano.townhall.com/Default.aspx) to see cartoon.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: execution; saddamhussein

1 posted on 12/30/2006 12:49:57 PM PST by WmShirerAdmirer
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To: WmShirerAdmirer
This is truly Bush`s fault!
2 posted on 12/30/2006 12:52:19 PM PST by neverhillorat (IF THE RATS WIN, WE ALL LOSE)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer
"who was toppled by a U.S. invasion in 2003."

Thank you Mr. President and our wonderful Military men and women!!

God Bless all of you!

3 posted on 12/30/2006 12:54:45 PM PST by Nancee ((Nancee Lynn Cheney))
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To: WmShirerAdmirer
Hesham Kassem, an Egyptian newspaper publisher and human rights activist, said airing the images was controversial, but added: “This man was one of the most brutal mass murderers in the history of mankind. He stands alongside Hitler and Stalin.”

This guy got it exactly right. Maybe the socialist dimocrats should have this shoved up their noses and asses so they will know it also.

4 posted on 12/30/2006 12:55:10 PM PST by RetiredArmy (I don't march to other people's opinion of me or my beliefs. I march to my beliefs and heart.)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer

5 posted on 12/30/2006 12:55:44 PM PST by Petronski (I just love that woman.)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer
They didn't say anything about a last meal. Jimmy Dean?
6 posted on 12/30/2006 12:57:40 PM PST by samtheman
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To: WmShirerAdmirer

FORKUM: He's done.


7 posted on 12/30/2006 1:02:51 PM PST by Enterprise (Let's not enforce laws that are already on the books, let's just write new laws we won't enforce.)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer

Look, if they can fake our moon landings, planes hitting the WTC and Pentagon, and the death of Elvis, they can certainly fake this.


8 posted on 12/30/2006 1:05:05 PM PST by doug from upland (Stopping Hillary should be a FreeRepublic Manhattan Project)
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To: Petronski

Thanks for posting the cartoon, I had a lot of trouble trying to do it myself and eventually just gave up. Thanks again!


9 posted on 12/30/2006 1:07:45 PM PST by WmShirerAdmirer
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To: WmShirerAdmirer

Michael Ramirez Cartoon

10 posted on 12/30/2006 1:11:51 PM PST by radar101 (LIBERALS = Hypocrisy and Fantasy)
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To: Petronski
Killed by the baby new year?

Nah! He should've been killed by a woman in a bikini. With her head covered, of course.

11 posted on 12/30/2006 1:28:12 PM PST by Tanniker Smith (I didn't know she was a liberal when I married her.)
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To: neverhillorat

Finally, something we can actually hold Bush responsible for.


12 posted on 12/30/2006 4:26:36 PM PST by SoldierDad (Proud Father of a 2nd BCT 10th Mountain Soldier fighting the terrorists in Iraq)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer

Bump


13 posted on 12/30/2006 5:00:37 PM PST by B.O. Plenty (liberalism, abortions and islam are terminal)
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To: Tanniker Smith; SoldierDad

The very concept of rights is founded in religion.

Since the enlightened person is freed from any superstitions about some "God," they are free from having to worry about "rights." Only raw power counts and humans are just meat puppets for the powerful.

Look at this puppet on a string...

http://pandachute.com/videos/leaked_saddam_being_hung_video


14 posted on 12/30/2006 5:08:11 PM PST by Sir Francis Dashwood (LET'S ROLL!)
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To: Sir Francis Dashwood

Your word ring only too true. Thanks for the link, but I had already visited that site earlier. Let's hope that Iraq can avoid putting another "enlightened" ruler into power.


15 posted on 12/30/2006 5:20:26 PM PST by SoldierDad (Proud Father of a 2nd BCT 10th Mountain Soldier fighting the terrorists in Iraq)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer
I listened to our local talk radio station on my way home from babysitting my granddaughter today. It's about a 45 minute drive, and I sure got an earful! The talkshow mod. was really livid about the way Reuters, etc., have decided to spin this. Every article he quoted was virtually sympathetic to this monster. He played a sound bite from some obvious pro-terrorist "journalist" nut from the UK, who conceded that Saddam had committed some "mistakes".

Too bad the media in our country aren't reporting the reactions from the oppressed and tortured who suffered from this despicable person's acts over the years.
16 posted on 12/30/2006 5:33:34 PM PST by LisaMalia (God Bless President Bush and our Troops....and GO BUCKEYES!....)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer; Tanniker Smith

A better cartoon: a figure of Blind Justice (a classically-drawn robed woman) holding the Baby New Near as Baby pushes the lever.


17 posted on 12/30/2006 6:43:08 PM PST by Petronski (I just love that woman.)
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