Iraq moves to appease some Saddam backers
Baath Party members
could get jobs back; Baghdad curfew easing
Associated Press, Updated: 2:01 p.m. ET Nov. 6,
2006
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A day after Saddam Hussein was
sentenced to hang, the country’s
Shiite-dominated government declared a major
concession to his Sunni Muslim backers that
could see thousands of purged Baath Party
members reinstated to their jobs.
The Supreme National Commission for
de-Baathification has prepared a draft law with
the amendments and will soon send it to
parliament for ratification, the commission’s
executive director, Ali al-Lami told The
Associated Press Monday.
“We decided to make the announcement after the
Saddam verdict so that the de-Baathification
commission would not be accused of bias,”
al-Lami said.
Iraq’s appeals court was expected to rule on the
verdict and sentence by mid-January, the chief
prosecutor said Monday. Should the court uphold
the death penalty, the Associated Press has
learned that Iraq’s three-man presidential
council agreed previously not to block Saddam’s
hanging, which must be carried out within 30
days.
The announcement came as a round-the clock
curfew imposed for the Saddam verdict was
gradually easing Monday in Baghdad, with
pedestrians allowed back on the streets as a
surge in violence expected after the court’s
decision did not materialize.
Vehicle traffic in Baghdad would be permitted
beginning at 6:00 a.m. Tuesday, according to
police Lt. Mohammed Khayoun and an aide to Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
A U.S. helicopter also crashed north of the
Iraqi capital on Monday, killing two American
soldiers on board, and two Marines and a soldier
were killed in fighting in the country’s restive
Anbar province.
The military said no gunfire was reported in the
area at the time of the helicopter crash. The
incident occurred in Salahuddin province, which
includes Saddam’s hometown of Tikrit and also
was under curfew.
With the helicopter crash and the Anbar deaths,
the number of U.S. troops killed this month in
Iraq rose to 18 and follow a particularly
violent month for the American military in Iraq,
which saw 105 deaths in October.
Names and numbers
The amendments are in harmony with a 24-point
national reconciliation plan that was announced
in June by the Shiite prime minister in which he
called for reviewing the de-Baathification
program, al-Lami said. Al-Maliki’s
reconciliation plan aims to end an insurgency
that has killed tens of thousands of Iraqis
since the March 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Before the amendments were drawn up, the
organization listed names of 10,302 senior Baath
Party members who were to be fired, but the new
proposed law includes only 1,500 names, al-Lami
said.
Those who will lose their jobs will get
retirement pensions, he said, adding that 7,688
have been fired since the organization was
established in January 2004.
Members of Saddam’s elite dissolved security
agencies as well as members of the paramilitary
Saddam’s Fedayeen that were run by the former
president’s late son, Odai, were not under the
scrutiny of the commission but were handled by
the prime minister’s office, al-Lami said.
Many Sunni Arabs here say the de-Baathification
process was aimed at removing members of their
minority sect — which ruled Iraq for decades
until the fall of Saddam — from state
institutions. Al-Lami strongly denied such
accusations saying that more Baathists from the
predominantly Shiite southern Iraq lost their
jobs than in Sunni areas in the center.
The United States dissolved and banned the
formerly ruling Baath party in May 2003, a month
after toppling Saddam, but later softened its
stance, inviting former high-level officers from
the disbanded military to join the security
forces. The former top U.S. administrator in
Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, also allowed thousands of
teachers who were Baathists to return to work.
Since it was founded, the de-Baathification
committee vetted thousands of former Baathists
who returned to work while others who proved to
be senior Baath Party members were sacked.
Kidnapped soldier
In another development, the uncle of a U.S.
soldier kidnapped last month in Baghdad said
Monday he believed his nephew’s abductors belong
to a “well organized” rogue cell from the Shiite
Mahdi Army militia of the anti-U.S. cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr.
Entifadh Qanbar, the uncle, said he had received
a $250,000-ransom demand from the kidnappers,
through an intermediary. He had in turn demanded
proof that his nephew was alive and well before
entering negotiations.
The U.S. military said last week that that there
was “an ongoing dialogue” to win the release of
Ahmed Qusai al-Taayie, a 41-year-old reserve
soldier from Ann Arbor, Mich. Al-Taayie was
visiting his Iraqi wife when he was handcuffed
and taken away by gunmen during a visit to the
woman’s family.
U.S. officials, like Qanbar, said there had been
no news of the missing soldier.
“We continue to conduct operations based on
actionable intelligence to find our soldier,”
Lt. Col. Christopher Garver said Monday. “His
safe return is obviously a top priority.”
Qanbar, a former spokesman for the National
Congress Party of senior Iraqi politician Ahmad
Chalabi, said he had contact with the kidnappers
through an intermediary in Baghdad, but had not
heard from them since Saturday when he demanded
that he be shown proof that al-Taayie was alive.
“I want to see him next to the same day
newspaper or in a video. I want him to answer
certain questions. Any proof that he is still
alive,” Qanbar told The Associated Press by
telephone from Amman, in neighboring Jordan.
Qanbar said he believed a man he identified as
Majid al-Qais Omran, also known by his nickname
Abu Rami, is responsible for the kidnapping and
said he believed he was the leader of an
experienced gang.
“It is a very capable gang with a great deal of
resources,” said Qanbar, “They identified
themselves as Mahdi Army members, but I believe
they belong to a breakaway cell of the Mahdi
Army. Their conduct suggest they have experience
in this line of work.”
The soldier’s wife and two of her siblings have
been taken by American troops to the Green Zone,
where they were being kept for their safety.
The military was withholding the names of the
latest fatalities pending notification of their
families, but it identified both Marines as
having been assigned to Regimental Combat Team
5. A brief statement from the military said one
Marine died on Saturday from wounds received in
combat, while the other was wounded in fighting
on Saturday and died Monday.
The statement said the soldier had been assigned
to 1st Brigade, 1st Armored Division, and died
on Monday from wounds received in combat. The
statement didn’t say when he was wounded.
The relentless death toll continued among Iraqis
as well. Despite the curfew, the bodies of 50
murder victims were discovered Sunday, the bulk
of them in Baghdad, police said. Mortars also
slammed into a Sunni neighborhood in northern
Baghdad on Monday, although no damage or
casualties were reported.
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