Saddam's sadistic mass executioner, Ali Hassan al-Majid,
has been sentenced to death for the genocide of
Kurds, including the gassing of 5,000 men, women and
childrens
June
25, 2007
Ali Hassan al-Majid was the Heinrich Himmler of
Iraq. After Saddam Hussein appointed him the
all-powerful overlord of northern Iraq in March 1987
he oversaw the murder of more than 180,000 Kurds in
just over a year. "The armed forces must kill any
human being or animal present," he decreed.
It was for this crime of genocide against the Kurds
that Majid, also known as "Chemical Ali", and two
other defendants were yesterday sentenced to death
by hanging by a court in Baghdad. A cousin of Saddam
Hussein who had been a motorcycle dispatch rider,
Majid acted as the zealous henchman of the Iraqi
leader in many of his most notorious acts of cruelty
and repression.
"You gave orders to the troops to kill Kurdish
civilians and put them in severe conditions," said
the judge, Mohammed Oreibi al-Khalifa, as he passed
sentence on Majid. "You subjected them to wide and
systematic attacks using chemical weapons and
artillery. You led the killing of Iraqi villagers.
You restricted them to their areas, burned their
orchards, killed their animals. You committed
genocide." |

Ali Hassan al-Majid, first cousin of executed
dictator Saddam Hussein and also known as 'Chemical
Ali' sentenced to death over Kurdish genocide, AP |
|
Sinister heaps of broken stones and bricks dot the
Kurdish countryside marking the places where
villages and hamlets were destroyed and 1.5 million
Kurds killed or deported. Less easy to find are the
mass graves all over Iraq filled with the bodies of
men, women and children who were lined up and
machine-gunned. The slaughter was not as
all-embracing as Hitler's onslaught on Jews but it
was comparable to mass killings of civilians
committed by the Nazis in Poland, Ukraine and Russia
or by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia.
There is no doubt about Majid's responsibility for
the massacres before and during the notorious
"Operation Anfal" in 1987. Many of his telephone
calls and meetings with senior officers were
recorded by the participants and the tapes
discovered by Kurdish resistance forces when they
captured Kirkuk in the uprising of 1991. In one
meeting with leading Iraqi officials in 1988, he
vows in his distinctive, high-pitched, whiny voice:
"I will kill them all [Kurds] with chemical
weapons," he says. " Who is going to say anything?
Fuck them! The international community, and those
who listen them."
On 16 March 1988, Iraqi forces fired poison gas
shells into Halabja, a town that had been captured
by Kurdish and Iranian forces. Its unsuspecting
people began to smell the odour of apples and
garlic. Human Rights Watch reported: 'Dead bodies -
human and animal - littered the streets, huddled in
doorways, slumped over the steering wheels of their
cars. Survivors stumbled around, laughing
hysterically before collapsing ... Those who has
been directly exposed to the gas found their
symptoms worsened as the night wore on. Many
children died along the way and were abandoned where
they fell."
In village after village gas was used to kill
Kurdish civilians. In Halabja alone 5,000 people
died. But Majid had over-rated the revulsion over
these mass killings among leaders of the
international community. Britain expressed anxiety
and grave concern about allegations over the use of
chemical weapons but promptly doubled the export
credit facility available to Iraq.
The US sought to implicate Iran in the use of poison
gas. Kurdish claims that they were the victims of
genocide were dismissed as exaggerated or
politically inconvenient by Western governments. It
was several years before Human Rights Watch was able
to confirm that the mass killings were just as
extensive as the Kurds said they were.
Torture, massacre and deportations had been used
against the Kurds since Saddam came to power and
before, but Ali Hassan al-Majid set up a
several-stage system of genocide. District by
district, people were subjected to heavy artillery
fire and poison-gas attacks. When males were rounded
up they were killed either immediately or later.
Those who disappeared were executed. In some cases,
the civilian population was promised a pardon to
lure them to their deaths Survivors were forced to
live in specially built villages and towns where
they could be watched by the secret police.
Majid, gloried in his reputation for merciless
brutality. He once quoted Saddam Hussein as
counselling him to assist the families of insurgents
but said: "No, I will bury them with bulldozers."
In his defence at his trial, Majid said that tape
recordings of him speaking of deporting and
exterminating the Kurds was exaggerated language to
intimidate them into giving up their resistance.
"All the words used by me, such as 'deport them' or
'wipe them out', were only for psychological
effect," he claimed. When Kurdish emissaries spoke
to him in 1991 of killing 180,000 Kurds he bridled
at the allegation and said the real figure was
closer to 100,000.
His defence, and that of his co-defendants, was that
Anfal started during the Iran-Iraq war and the
Kurdish resistance was allied to Iran. Along with
Majid the former defence minister General Sultan
Hashim Ahmad al-Tai was also sentenced to death for
using of chemical weapons against civilians. The
deputy director of operations for the Iraqi army,
Hussein Rashid Mohammed, was also sentenced to be
hanged. "God bless our martyrs," he said. Long live
the brave Iraqi army. Long live Iraq. Long live the
Baath party and long live Arab nations."
Majid was always the ever-loyal and obsequious
lieutenant of the Iraqi leader whose paternal cousin
he was. Born in Tikrit in 1941, he was a member,
like Saddam, of the Bejat clan of the Albu Nasir
tribe whose members filled the crucial security
posts of the Baath regime. He was wholly dependant
on the leader and his evident viciousness made him
useful in jobs in which unrelenting and merciless
cruelty were considered an asset.
Having been a motorcycle messenger, Majid started
his political career as head of the Security Office
in the mid-1970s.
When Saddam presided over a famous meeting of the
Baath party in 1979 during which he had senior party
members dragged off to their deaths Majid is seen on
a video film standing behind him. "What you have
done in the past was good," he says unctuously.
"What you will do in the future is good. But there's
this one small point. You have been too gentle, too
merciful."
Majid was effectively the family enforcer for
Saddam's inner circle though there were other
well-qualified contenders for this position. A
diabetic with a menacing-rodent like face and a
straggly moustache, he suffered from hypertension
and spinal infections. He was reliant on Saddam but
was never a rival for the leadership himself.
Though a cousin of Saddam, he was out-ranked in the
family hierarchy by the half-brothers of the leader
up to their fall from grace in 1986. In the 1990s,
it was Saddam's sons Uday and Qusay who were next in
line to Saddam.
After giving up the leadership of the Northern
Bureau of the Baath in 1988, Majid was made governor
of Kuwait after its conquest by Iraq in August 1990.
Though Iraq claimed Kuwait was its long-lost 19th
province, the Iraqi forces under Majid behaved as if
they were on a Bedouin raid, sending hundreds of
millions of dollars worth of loot to Baghdad.
After Saddam Hussein's catastrophic defeat in Kuwait
in 1991 Majid showed his real talents again. As
rebellions exploded in Kurdistan and Shia southern
Iraq, Saddam turned to him and his nephew Hussein
Kamel who was also Saddam son-in-law. On 5 March he
made the 50-year-old Majid his interior minister.
A captured video film shows Majid in action against
Shia rebels. It appears to have been made to
intimidate anybody contemplating resistance to the
regime by showing the fate of those who did. Majid
is seen upbraiding a helicopter pilot going to
attack a bridge saying: "Don't come back until you
are able to tell me that you have burnt them; and if
you haven't burnt them, don't come back."
Joined by a Baathist leader called Mohammed Hamza
al-Zubeidi, later prime minister of Iraq, who also
had an unsavoury reputation for brutality, they kick
and slap prisoners lying on he ground. Majid smokes
as he interrogates the prisoners saying of one man:
"Don't execute this one. He will be useful to us."
Beside him soldiers, from an elite unit, shouted
"pimp" and "son of a whore" at another prisoner.
Not even members of Majid's family were safe from
him. In 1995, his nephews Hussein and Saddam Kamel
fled to Jordan. King Hussein granted them political
asylum. Suddenly Uday and Ali Hassan al-Majid
arrived in Amman to see King Hussein who felt he had
no choice but to meet them. Hussein Kamel warned the
Jordanians of the murderous proclivities of his
relatives, particularly his uncle Ali. He said:
"Don't let his majesty shake hands with this man. He
might have something in his hand that might kill
him."
After failing to get King Hussein to agree to
extradite the men, Uday and Majid demanded that
their wives, both daughters of Saddam, be allowed to
return to Baghdad with them. Again they were turned
down.
When the two exiles unwisely returned to Baghdad the
following year, Ali Hassan al-Majid is said to have
led the assault on their house and killed them.
Hussein Kamel, who had been wounded, staggered out
of the house, shouting: "Kill me but not them." He
was promptly shot, then Majid stood over the body of
his nephew and shot him once in the head, saying:
"This is what happens to all who deal with the
midget [a reference to the diminutive King Hussein].
In the last years of Saddam's regime, Majid was
eclipsed by Qusay until before the US-led invasion
of 2003. The British claimed to have killed him in
an air strike in Basra but it turned out to be
untrue. He was arrested on 21 August 2003.
Majid was silent as his sentence was read out,
saying only: "Thanks be to God." In Kurdistan people
rejoiced. "I would never miss this," said Peshtiwan
Kamal. "I always heard from my family what these
criminals did to my people so I just wanted to see
how they would take the verdict and punishment."
independent co.uk
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