On this date (25 January 2010), Ali Hassan al-Majid A.K.A Chemical Ali was executed by hanging in Iraq. I got the information about him from Wikipedia.
Director of the Iraqi Intelligence
Service
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In office
1995–2003 |
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President
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Defence Minister of Iraq
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In office
1991–1995 |
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President
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Saddam
Hussein
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Interior Minister of Iraq
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In office
March 1991 – April 1991 |
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President
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Saddam
Hussein
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Governor of Governor of Kuwait
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In office
28 August 1990 – 26 February 1991 |
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President
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Saddam
Hussein
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Minister of Local Government of Iraq
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In office
August 1988 – August 1990 |
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President
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Saddam
Hussein
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Secretary General of the Northern
Bureau of the Ba'ath Party
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In office
March 1987 – April 1989 |
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President
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Saddam
Hussein
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Personal details
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Born
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علي
حسن عبد المجيد التكريتي
30 November 1941 Tikrit, Kingdom of Iraq |
Died
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25 January
2010 (aged 68)
Kadhimiya, Baghdad, Republic of Iraq |
Citizenship
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Iraq
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Political
party
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Ba'ath
Party
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Relations
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Saddam
Hussein (first cousin)
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Occupation
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Iraqi Defense
Minister, Interior Minister, military commander and chief of the Iraqi
Intelligence Service
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Religion
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Sunni Islam
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Military service
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Nickname(s)
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Chemical
Ali
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Allegiance
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Service/branch
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Iraqi Army
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Years of
service
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~1966 -
2003
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Battles/wars
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Ali Hassan Abd al-Majid
al-Tikriti ʿAlī Ḥasan ʿAbd al-Majīd al-Tikrītī, Arabic: 30 ) ,علي حسن عبد المجيد التكريتي (30
November 1941] – 25 January 2010) was a Ba'athist Iraqi Defense Minister,
Interior Minister, military commander and chief of the Iraqi Intelligence
Service. He was also the governor of annexed Kuwait during the Gulf War.
A first cousin of former President of Iraq Saddam
Hussein, he became notorious in the 1980s and 1990s for his role in the Iraqi
government's campaigns against internal opposition forces, namely the ethnic
Kurdish rebels of the north, and the Shia religious dissidents of the south.
Repressive measures included deportations and mass killings; al-Majid was
dubbed "Chemical Ali" by Iraqi Kurds for his use of chemical
weapons in attacks against them.
Al-Majid was captured following the 2003 invasion
of Iraq and was charged with war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.
He was convicted in June 2007 and was sentenced to death for crimes of genocide against the Kurds committed in the al-Anfal campaign of the 1980s. His
appeal of the death sentence was rejected on 4 September 2007, and he was
sentenced to death for the fourth time on 17 January 2010 and was hanged eight
days later, on 25 January 2010.
Early life
Ali Hassan al-Majid is thought to have been born in
1941 in al-Awja near Tikrit, though he claimed in court that he was born three
years later in 1944. The U.S., the United Nations and the Bank of England have
also listed an alternative birth year of 1943. 1939 and 1940 have also emerged
as possible birth years. Still, official Iraqi court documents and the vast
majority of journalistic obituaries cite 1941 as his approximate year of birth.
He was a member of the Bejat clan of the al-Bu Nasir tribe, to which his elder
cousin Saddam Hussein also belonged; Saddam later relied heavily on the clan to
fill senior posts in his government. Like Saddam, al-Majid was a Sunni Muslim
who came from a poor family and had very little formal education. He worked as
a motorcycle messenger and driver in the Iraqi Army until the Ba'ath Party
seized power in 1968.
His rise thereafter, aided by his cousin Saddam,
was swift. He initially became an aide to Iraqi defence minister Hammadi Shihab
in the early 1970s after joining the Ba'ath party. He then became head of the government's Security Office, serving as an
enforcer for the increasingly powerful Saddam. In 1979 Saddam seized power,
pushing aside President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr. At a videotaped assembly of
Ba'ath party officials in July 1979, Saddam read out the names of political
opponents, denouncing them as "traitors", and ordering that they be
removed one by one from the room; many were later executed. Al-Majid could be
seen in the background telling Saddam, "What you have done in the past was
good. What you will do in the future is good. But there's this one small point.
You have been too gentle, too merciful."
Al-Majid became one of Saddam's closest military
advisors and head of the Iraqi Intelligence Service, Iraqi secret police known
as the Mukhabarat. Following an unsuccessful assassination attempt on
Saddam in 1983 in the town of Dujail, north of Baghdad, al-Majid directed the
subsequent collective punishment operations in which scores of local men were
killed, thousands more inhabitants were deported and the entire town was razed
to the ground.
Al-Anfal campaign
Main
article: Al-Anfal Campaign
During the late stages of the Iran–Iraq War al-Majid
was given the post of Secretary General of the Northern Bureau of the Ba'ath
Party, in which capacity he served from March 1987 to April 1989. This
effectively made him Saddam's proconsul in the north of the country, commanding
all state agencies in the rebellious Kurdish-populated region of the country.
He was known for his ruthlessness, ordering the indiscriminate use of chemical
weapons such as mustard gas, sarin, tabun and VX against Kurdish targets during
a genocidal campaign dubbed Al-Anfal or "The Spoils of War". The
first such attacks occurred as early as April 1987 and continued into 1988,
culminating in the notorious attack on Halabja in which over 5,000 people were
killed.
With Kurdish resistance continuing, al-Majid
decided to cripple the rebellion by eradicating the civilian population of the
Kurdish regions. His forces embarked on a systematic campaign of mass killings,
property destruction and forced population transfer (called
"Arabization") in which thousands of Kurdish villages were razed and
their inhabitants either killed or deported to the south of Iraq. He signed a
decree in June 1987 stating that "Within their jurisdiction, the armed
forces must kill any human being or animal present in these areas." By 1988, some 4,000 villages had been destroyed, an estimated 180,000
Kurds had been killed and some 1.5 million had been deported. The Kurds called him Chemical Ali ("Ali Kimyawi") for his role
in the campaign; according to Iraqi Kurdish sources, Ali Hassan openly boasted
of this nickname. Others dubbed him the "Butcher of
Kurdistan".
Persian Gulf War and Iraq War
He was appointed Minister of Local Government
following the war's end in 1988, with responsibility for the repopulation of
the Kurdish region with Arab settlers relocated from elsewhere in Iraq. Two
years later, after the invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, he became the
military governor of the occupied emirate. He instituted a violent regime under
which Kuwait was systematically looted and purged of "disloyal elements".
In November 1990, he was recalled to Baghdad and was appointed Interior
Minister in March 1991. Following the Iraqi defeat in the war, he was given the
task of quelling the uprisings in the Shi'ite south of Iraq as well as the
Kurdish north. Both revolts were crushed with great brutality, with many
thousands killed.
He was subsequently given the post of Defense
Minister, though he briefly fell from grace in 1995 when Saddam dismissed him
after it was discovered that al-Majid was involved in illegally smuggling grain
to Iran. In December 1998, however, Saddam recalled him and appointed him
commander of the southern region of Iraq, where the United States was
increasingly carrying out air strikes in the southern no-fly zone. Al-Majid was
re-appointed to this post in March 2003, immediately before the start of the
Iraq War. He based himself in the southern port city of Basra and in April 2003
he was mistakenly reported to have been killed there in a U.S. air strike.
He survived the April 2003 attack but was arrested
by United States forces on 17 August 2003. He had been listed as the fifth
most-wanted man in Iraq, shown as the King of Spades in the deck of most-wanted
Iraqi playing cards. In 2006 he was charged with genocide and crimes against
humanity for his part in the Anfal campaign and was transferred to the Iraq
Special Tribunal for trial. He received four death sentences for his role in
killing Shia Muslims in 1991 and 1999, the genocide of the Kurds in the 1980s,
and ordering the gassing of Kurds at Halabja.
Trial and execution
The
trial began on 21 August 2006, in acrimonious circumstances when al-Majid
refused to enter a plea. He subsequently had a not guilty plea entered on his
behalf by the court.
He
was unapologetic about his actions, telling the court that he had ordered the
destruction of Kurdish villages because they were "full of Iranian
agents". At one hearing, he declared: "I am the one who gave orders
to the army to demolish villages and relocate the villagers. The army was
responsible to carry out those orders. I am not defending myself. I am not
apologizing. I did not make a mistake."
During
the trial, the court heard tape-recorded conversations between al-Majid and
senior Ba'ath party officials regarding the use of chemical weapons. Responding
to a question about the success of the deportation campaign, Ali Hassan told
his interlocutors:
... I went to Sulaymaniyah and hit them with the special ammunition [i.e. chemical weapons]. That was my answer. We continued the deportations. I told the mustashars [village heads] that they might say that they like their villages and that they won't leave. I said I cannot let your village stay because I will attack it with chemical weapons. Then you and your family will die. You must leave right now. Because I cannot tell you the same day that I am going to attack with chemical weapons. I will kill them all with chemical weapons! Who is going to sayanything? The international community? Fuck them! The international community and those who listen to them.... This is my intention, and I want you to take serious note of it. As soon as we complete the deportations, we will start attacking them everywhere according to a systematic military plan. Even their strongholds. In our attacks we will take back one third or one half of what is under their control. If we can try to take two-thirds, then we will surround them in a small pocket and attack them with chemical weapons. I will not attack them with chemicals just one day, but I will continue to attack them with chemicals for fifteen days. Then I will announce that anyone who wishes to surrender with his gun will be allowed to do so. Anyone willing to come back is welcome, and those who do not return will be attacked again with new, destructive chemicals. I will not mention the name of the chemical because that is classified information. But I will say with new destructive weapons that will destroy you. So I will threaten them and motivate them to surrender.
During the next few days of the trial, more
recordings of al-Majid were heard in which he once again discussed the
government's goals in dealing with the Iraqi Kurds. In the recordings, Ali
Hassan calls the Iraqi Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani "wicked and a
pimp," and promises not to leave alive anyone who speaks the Kurdish
language. Ali Hassan's defense claimed that he used such language as
"psychological and propaganda" tools against the Kurds, to prevent
them from fighting government forces. "All the words used by me, such as
'deport them' or 'wipe them out,' were only for psychological effect," Ali
Hassan said.
On 24 June 2007, the court returned a verdict of
guilty on all counts. The presiding judge, Mohamed Oreibi al-Khalifa, told
al-Majid: "You had all the civil and military authority for northern Iraq.
You gave orders to the troops to kill Kurdish civilians and put them in severe
conditions. You subjected them to wide and systematic attacks using chemical
weapons and artillery. You led the killing of villagers. You ... committed
genocide. There are enough documents against you."
He received five death sentences for genocide,
crimes against humanity (specifically willful killing, forced disappearances
and extermination), and war crimes (intentionally directing attacks against a
civilian population). He was also sentenced to multiple prison terms ranging
from seven years to life for other crimes. As his sentences were upheld, under
Iraqi law, sentence was to be carried out by hanging, subject to the
convictions being upheld following an automatic appeal, and he was to be
executed in the following 30 days along with two others – Sultan Hashim Ahmad
al-Tai, military commander of the Anfal campaign; and Hussein Rashid Mohammed,
deputy general commander of the Iraqi armed force, assistant chief of staff for
military operations, and former Republican Guard commander. However, the
executions were postponed to 16 October, because of the arrival of the holy
month of Ramadan. He was supposed to be executed 16 October 2007, but the
execution was delayed when Iraqi President Jalal Talabani expressed opposition
to the sentences and refused to sign the execution orders. He then entered into
a legal row with Nouri al-Maliki, and as a result the Americans refused to hand
any of the condemned prisoners over until the issue was resolved.
In February 2008 an anonymous informant stated that
Ali Hassan al-Majid's execution was finally approved by Talabani and the two
Vice-Presidents; this was the final hurdle in the way of the execution.
On 2 December 2008, al-Majid was once again
sentenced to death, but this time for playing a role in killing between 20,000
and 100,000 Shi'ite Muslims during the revolt in southern Iraq that followed
the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
On 2 March 2009, al-Majid was sentenced to death
for the third time, this for the assassination of Grand-Ayatollah Mohammad
al-Sadr in 1999.
The Iraqi Cabinet put pressure on the Presidential
council on 17 March 2009 for Al-Majid's execution.
The situation was similar on 17 January 2010 prior
to 9 am (GMT); a fourth death penalty was issued against him in response to his
acts of genocide against Kurds in the 1980s. He was also convicted of killing
Shia Muslims in 1991 and 1999. Alongside him in the trial was former defense
minister Sultan Hashem, who was also found guilty by The Iraqi High Tribunal
for the Halabja attack and sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment. Al-Majid was
executed by hanging on 25 January 2010. He was buried in Saddam's family
cemetery in al-Awja the next day; near Saddam's sons, half-brother and the former
vice president, but outside the mosque housing the marble tomb of Saddam
himself. While he was sentenced to death on four separate
occasions, the original 2007 verdict sentenced him to five death sentences, and
so the combined tally of death sentences handed out was eight.
Amnesty International's Middle East and North
Africa Director Malcolm Smart later criticized the execution as "only the
latest of a mounting number of executions, some of whom did not receive fair
trials, in gross violation of human rights..."
Kurds celebrate in a street in Arbil, the
capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, 24 June, 2007.
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Watch
these videos to see Chemical Ali in court:
Watch
these videos to hear from the Kurdish people:
Watch
this video to see Chemical Ali’s Profile:
MY
THOUGHTS:
When
I heard that this mass murderer, war criminal and genocide maniac was executed
by hanging in Iraq, I immediately got reminded of Adolf Eichmann the Exterminator. I noticed that their crimes and lifestyle were very similar in many ways. In May this year, I
will blog about them to compare the similarities between these two mass
murderers.
Chemical
Ali was executed by hanging in public, many Kurdish celebrated by dancing on
the streets. I did not see any abolitionist doing any candlelight vigil at the
Iraqi embassy in their various countries to protest his execution. Indeed,
could any abolitionist stand at the Halabja Memorial Monument and preached to any Kurdish (who was either a survivor or had lost a family member in the killing fields) that
it was ‘cruel and unusual’ or ‘barbaric’ to execute Saddam Hussein, Chemical
Ali and their henchmen for the mass murder?
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