New Graphic Saddam Video

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>New video of Saddam's corpse on Internet</font size></center>


By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA Associated Press Writer
© 2007 The Associated Press
January 8, 2007 1 hour ago


BAGHDAD, Iraq — A new video of Saddam Hussein's corpse, with a gaping neck wound, was posted on the Internet early Tuesday, the second leaked release of clandestine pictures from the former leader's hanging.

The video appeared to have been taken with a camera phone, like the graphic video of the hanging which showed guards taunting Saddam in the final moments of his life.

The footage pans up the shrouded body of the former leader from the feet. It apparently was taken shortly after Saddam was executed and placed on a gurney. He was hanged shortly before dawn on Dec. 30.

As the panning shot reaches the head region, the white shroud is pulled back and reveals Saddam's head and neck.

His head is unnaturally twisted at a 90 degree angle to his right. It shows a gaping bloody wound, circular in shape, about an inch below his jaw line on the left side of his neck. His left cheek is marked with red blotches, and there is blood on the shroud where it covered his head.

The newest video leak was likely to increase the angry reaction over the way the execution was carried out. There already has been a global outcry about the undignified manner in which the Shiite-dominated government hanged Saddam, a Sunni.

The 27-second video was posted on an Iraqi news Web site that is known to support Saddam's outlawed Baath Party.

"A new film of the late immortal martyr, President Saddam Hussein," the web site said in a headline over a link to the video.

Voices could be heard on the video. As the shroud is pulled back, one voice says, "Hurry up, hurry up. I'm going to count from one to four. One, two ... . Hurry up you're going to get us into a catastrophe."

Then another voice, apparently the man taking the pictures, says, "Just one second, just one second, Abu Ali. I'm about finished."

Then a third voice says, "Abu Ali, you take care of this."

It was the second clandestine video to have leaked, the first showing Saddam being taunted in his final moments. That clandestine video showed the former leader dropping through the gallows floor as he offered chanted prayers. It ends with his dead body swinging at the end of a rope.

The hanging video was in sharp contrast with an official video that was broadcast not long after Saddam's execution which showed him standing silently on the gallows as the noose was put around his neck. The official video was muted.

The leaked hanging video, however, was shot from the floor of the gallows chamber, looking up at Saddam. Voices could be heard taunting him with cries of "Muqtada, Muqtada, Muqtada," referring to radical anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, the leader of the Shiite Mahdi Army militia and a key support of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

The prime minister pushed for Saddam to be executed before the end of 2006 and just four days after the death sentence was upheld by the appeals court. U.S. official sought to delay the execution.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/4455547.html
 
[frame]http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-233844812484249985[/frame]
 
Re: Looking for saddem "merced out " video

peterpiper1978 said:
why u wanna see that sick shit. sad how bloodthirsty we are huh?
... and all the time I thought the Iraqi's hung him ...

QueEx
 
Re: Looking for saddem "merced out " video

QueEx said:
... and all the time I thought the Iraqi's hung him ...QueEx

<font face="arial black" size="5" color="#d90000">
Rice 'Gave Green Light' to Hand Over Saddam To Hang</font><font face="tahoma" size="4" color="#0000ff" size="4"><b>
- Despite objections of military commanders -</b></font>
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<h4>01/07/2007 @ 7:11 am</h4>
<br>Filed by RAW STORY - www.rawstory.com </b>
<br>A lengthy front page article in Sunday's <strong><em>New York Times</em></strong> reports that after a &quot;sequence that [US] commanders saw as motivated less by a concern for justice than for revenge,&quot; <strong>Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice &quot;gave the green light&quot; for Saddam Hussein to be turned over to Iraq, so that prime minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki could hang the ousted ruler before the year&rsquo;s end.<div align="right">
<!-- MSTableType="layout" --><img src="http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/photo/2006/01/18/PH2006011802718.jpg" align="right"></div></strong>
<br>Maliki had been sentenced to death by Hussein's government in 1980, forcing the Shi'a Muslim to live in exile in Iran and Syria before returning to Iraq shortly after the invasion in April of 2003 to help lead the De-Baathification Commission of the Iraqi Interim Government. After being elected to the transitional National Assembly in January of 2005 and serving as the senior Shi'ite member of Iraq's constitutional drafting committee, Maliki was named prime minister-designate by President Jalal Talabani last April.
<br>&quot;But for Mr. Maliki&rsquo;s inner circle, the hanging was a moment to avenge decades of brutal repression by Mr. Hussein, as well as a moment to drive home to Iraq&rsquo;s five million Sunnis that after centuries of subjugation, Shiites were in power to stay,&quot; John F. Burns writes for <em>The Times</em>.
<br>According to Burns &ndash; the only Western print reporter allowed to witness the start of the former dictator's trial &ndash; Hussein knew he was to be executed early last Saturday as he was flown by helicopter &quot;over Baghdad&rsquo;s darkened suburbs,&quot; but could &quot;have known little of the last-minute battle waged between top Iraqi and American officials &ndash; and among the Americans themselves &ndash; over whether the execution, fraught with legal ambiguities and Islamic religious sensitivities, should go ahead.&quot;
<br>Maliki had attempted to &quot;coerce second-tier American military and diplomatic officials into handing over Mr. Hussein, first on Thursday night, then again on Friday,&quot; but the &quot;American push back was complicated by the absences of Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and the top American military commander, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., who were both out of Iraq on leave.&quot;
<br>&quot;Even before a smuggled cellphone camera recording revealed the derision Mr. Hussein faced on the gallows, the hanging had become a metaphor, among Mr. Maliki&rsquo;s critics, for how the 'new Iraq' is starting to resemble the repressive, vengeful place it was under Mr. Hussein, albeit in a paler shade,&quot; Burns writes.
<br>Excerpts from <a title="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/world/middleeast/07ticktock.html?pagewanted=1&amp;ei=5094&amp;en=b0246e2cd77524e9&amp;hp&amp;ex=1168232400&amp;partner=homepage" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/world/middleeast/07ticktock.html?pagewanted=1&amp;ei=5094&amp;en=b0246e2cd77524e9&amp;hp&amp;ex=1168232400&amp;partner=homepage"><em>Before Hanging, a Push for Revenge and a Push Back</em></a>:
<br>The hanging spread wide dismay among the Americans. Aides said American commanders were deeply upset by the way they were forced to hand Mr. Hussein over, a sequence commanders saw as motivated less by a concern for justice than for revenge. In the days following the hanging, recriminations flowed between the military command and the United States Embassy, accused by some officers of abandoning American interests at midnight Friday in favor of placating Mr. Maliki and hard-line Shiites.
<br>....
<br>At 10:30 p.m., Ambassador Khalilzad made a last-ditch call to Mr. Maliki asking him not to proceed with the hanging. When the Iraqi leader remained adamant, an American official said, the ambassador made a second call to Washington conveying &ldquo;the determination of the Iraqi prime minister to go forward,&rdquo; and his conclusion that there was nothing more, consistent with respect for Iraqi sovereignty, that the United States could do.
<br><strong>Senior Bush administration officials in Washington said that Mr. Khalilzad&rsquo;s principal contact in Washington was Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and that she gave the green light for Mr. Hussein to be turned over, despite the reservations of the military commanders in Baghdad. One official said that Ms. Rice was supported in that view by Stephen J. Hadley, Mr. Bush&rsquo;s national security adviser.</strong>
<br>&ldquo;It literally came down to the Iraqis interpreting their law, and our looking at their law and interpreting it differently,&rdquo; the official said. &ldquo;Finally, it was decided we are not the court of last appeal for Iraqi law here. The president of their country says it meets their procedures. We are not going to be their legal nannies.&rdquo;....
<br>The Americans suggested that foreign reporters be invited to the hanging, along with United Nations observers. American commanders feared the concern for procedure might be swept away by the urge for revenge. &ldquo;Anybody who&rsquo;s been involved in a firefight will tell you there&rsquo;s a moment when rage takes over,&rdquo; an American official said. The Iraqis dismissed the idea of outside observers and assembled an execution party of 14 Shiite officials and a Sunni cleric invited to help Mr. Hussein with his prayers.


<font size="4" color="#ff0000"><b>FULL NEW YORK TIMES ARTICLE CAN BE READ AT THIS LINK</b></font>
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