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Iraqi Kurds rejoice at Chemical Ali's
death sentence
25.6.2007
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"Chemical Ali” – one of Iraq's most-hated figures
June
25, 2007
Sulaimaniyah, Kurdistan region (Iraq), --
Kurds flocked into the streets in northern Iraq on
Sunday, cheering, honking horns, waving banners and
dancing after three of Saddam Hussein's former
cohorts
were sentenced to death
for the mass killing of their people two decades
ago.
"Today I was born again after I witnessed the
defendant Chemical Ali in the cage, terrified as he
heard the sentence," said Fatima Rasul, 45, who lost
her father and 20 relatives in the brutal 1988
campaign known as Anfal.
Ali Hassan al-Majid, known as Chemical Ali for
orchestrating the gassing of the Kurds, was
sentenced to hang for genocide, war crimes, and
crimes against humanity, along with former defence
minister Sultan Hashim al-Tai and former army
commander Hussein Rashid al-Tikriti.
"I demand that Ali be transported to Halabja or any
Kurdish town to be hanged," Rasul said, referring to
the village where Majid's forces killed 5,000 Kurds
in 1988 in what is believed to have been the worst
gas attack ever against civilians. |

Ali Hassan al-Majid, first cousin of executed
dictator Saddam Hussein and also known as 'Chemical
Ali' sentenced to death over Kurdish genocide, AP |
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In all, an estimated 182,000 people were killed by
Iraqi forces in the Anfal campaign, where whole
villages were wiped out in waves of bombing raids,
gas attacks and mass deportations.
"I was very happy when I saw Ali Hassan al-Majid
sentenced," said Nergis Aziz, 57, who lost three
brothers and her husband. Her son later died of
starvation in a detention camp.
"I would have loved to dance today, but for those of
us who lost our brothers and our loved ones, our
sadness will not end with their execution," she told
AFP in the northern Kurdish city of Erbil.
"The contrast between the methods used by these
Saddam loyalists to carry out 'justice' and the
legal way they have been prosecuted could not be
more stark," the Kurdish regional government said in
a statement.
"These men, who arbitrarily and extra-judicially
kidnapped and killed, have been afforded the right
to defend themselves in a court of law. Their
prosecution in this way is a triumph for the rule of
law."
Some raised fears that the verdicts could further
divide the country, engulfed in a deadly insurgency
and sectarian bloodshed more than four years after
the US-led invasion that ousted Saddam.
Others felt the investigation should have gone
deeper.
"I do not want Ali to be executed," said Ari Hearson,
40, a former Kurdish guerilla wounded in the
fighting.
"He should be kept in solitary confinement to write
his memories about the Anfal crimes and how he
committed them, crimes against children and unarmed
citizens."
Mahmud Othman, a Kurdish MP and physician who
treated victims of the first Anfal operation in the
countryside north of the Kurdish city of
Sulaimaniyah, said the trial was incomplete.
"In the whole trial nothing was mentioned about who
helped Saddam make the chemical weapons, which
countries and which companies helped him to use them
against us," he said.
"I think that was deliberate. Those who helped
Saddam make chemical weapons are responsible for
what happened and so they should pay compensation to
those families."
Others looked forward to future investigations that
would reveal the assistance some of their fellow
Kurds provided to the regime.
"I want all those who have the blood of the victims
of Anfal on their hands and who evaded their
responsibility to be judged," said Rizkar Sherif,
18, who was born in a detention camp near the end of
the campaign.
"Those who were sentenced today are the main
perpetrators, but we also know that there were
others from among us, and we want those who helped
the regime in the Anfal campaign to be punished as
well," he told AFP in Erbil.
Othman voiced fear the verdict could further divide
the country in the same way the execution of Saddam
in December brought rejoicing from his victims and
anger from many of the country's Sunnis.
"I'm afraid something similar will happen on a
smaller scale," Othman said. "These steps do not
help the process of national reconciliation, even
though they are just and should be done."
Ayad al-Samarrai, a Sunni MP, said he supported the
decision to hang Chemical Ali but felt it was unfair
to punish former army officers for following orders.
"For Ali Hassan al-Majid it is just, but I don't
think the army officers should have been punished.
Every army officer in Iraq has to obey orders,"
Samarrai said.
AFP
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