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Iraq-Jordan
Tariq Aziz pleads for his life
2005-05-29
He was the urbane, English-speaking deputy to Saddam Hussein, the bespectacled face of the former Iraqi dictator's regime, at home on the international stage. Yet nothing had been heard or seen from Tariq Aziz since he surrendered to US forces on 24 April, 2003, as Iraq crumbled around him. Today The Observer publishes several letters from the former cigar-smoking Deputy Prime Minister handwritten from Camp Cropper prison in Baghdad. Aziz scribbled these notes on pages from his lawyer's diary who was with him when he was questioned recently by the CIA and US politicians. Two are in Arabic, the other three in English and addressed to: 'The world public opinion.' Aziz pleads for international help to end his 'dire situation'. He claims he is innocent and is being held unjustly without being allowed contact with his family. One letter reveals questions he had been asked about which politicians benefited from the controversial UN oil-for-food programme.

Although Aziz supporters claim he is a 'political prisoner' who did his best to restrain Saddam, his opponents have little sympathy. They describe him as the dictator's henchman who also bears personal responsibility for crimes committed by the Baathist regime, such as the gassing of Kurds at Halabja.

Aziz's letters are another remarkable snapshot into how Iraqi's former political elite are being held. This month the Sun published photographs of Saddam in his underpants in his Camp Cropper cell and The Observer revealed how prisoners are kept mostly in solitary confinement in tiny cells with no natural daylight. The most recent letters by Aziz were written on 21 April, when he was being interviewed by US senators investigating allegations of corruption surrounding the oil-for-food programme, which allowed Saddam to sell oil in exchange for humanitarian goods and services. Writing in Arabic, Aziz says: 'We are totally isolated from the world. There are 13 other detainees here, but we have no meetings or telephone contacts wth our families. I have been accused unjustly, but to date no proper investigation has taken place. It is imperative that there is intervention into our dire situation and treatment. It is totally in contradiction to international law, the Geneva Convention and Iraqi law as we know it.'
That's right, plead for your life under Iraqi law. Just like the 400,000 plus who were buried in mass graves.
In a letter dated 7 March and written in English, Aziz states: 'We hope that you will help us. We have been in prison for a long time and we have been cut from our families. No contacts, no phones, no letters. Even the parcels sent to us by our families are not given to us. We need a fair treatment, a fair investigation and finally a fair trial. Please help us.' In another letter, written in Arabic and English, he says: 'I haven't been accused of anything,' and 'I have not done anything contrary to law and human behaviour.'

Speaking from Jordan, his son, Ziad Aziz, who was jailed by Saddam, has defended his father's role as the former dictator's deputy, claiming that he was only following orders and would have been killed if he disagreed. 'My father is now in poor health and should be brought to trial or relased,' he added.
How about we bring him to trial and then lock him up like Rudolf Hess? You can have the body when he's dead.
Aziz - the only Christian in Saddam's government - was 43rd in the US 'most wanted' set of 55 playing cards and not considered to be a member of the innermost circle, dominated by the Tikriti clan. However, according to Indict, the committee seeking to prosecute the Iraqi leadership, he was a member of Saddam's Revolutionary Command Council and is therefore complicit in genocide and war crimes against Iran, Kuwait and his own Iraqi people. An Iraqi tribunal has also implicated him in the 1988 gas attack on Kurds in Halabja. There have been unsubstantiated reports that Aziz will be a star witness in any trial of Saddam, providing crucial evidence that Saddam was personally responsible for war crimes.

One of Aziz's roles was as the principal contact for foreign individuals involved in the oil-for-food programme which has been dogged by allegations of corruption. Saddam offered favoured people allocations of oil which they could sell for huge profits. In return, the former Iraqi leader took illegal kickbacks that helped fund his regime. In a note scribbled on his lawyer's diary, Aziz says: 'I was asked if I had recommended giving money or oil to President Chirac [of France], or Petros Gali [former UN general secretary Boutros Boutros-Ghali], Ekius [UN weapons inspector Rolf Ekeus]. My answer is NO. The same to President Megawati [Sukarnoputri of Indonesia]. NO.' Chirac, Boutros-Ghali and Megawati have previously strenuously denied receiving any oil allocations. Ekeus, the Swede who led the UN's efforts to track down WMD from 1991 to 1997, has claimed he was offered a $2 million bribe from Aziz to doctor his reports, but turned it down.
Posted by:Steve White

#21  Why should the Red Cross, et al, complain about TGA's suggested bunking arrangement? These are, after all, comrades in arms, fellow servants of the same government, colleagues of many, many years. It is only right that they be given some private time to commiserate and bolster one another's emotional strength at such a trying time in their lives.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-05-29 22:11  

#20  #18 TGA - No problem.

Put them in there too. ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-05-29 19:27  

#19  One of the many world-views I have had ripped from me since the beginning of this war is any respect for (a) the UN, (b) Amnesty International, (c) MSM, (d) the BBC and (e) the Red Thingy.

I care not a jot about those 'institutions'.

As for Aziz, he's been alive a lot longer than the poor sods he and his overlord killed without a moments thought. Bastard - die already.
Posted by: Tony (UK)   2005-05-29 16:01  

#18  Of course the Red Cross, Amnesty International and Seymour Hersh would protest...
Posted by: True German Ally   2005-05-29 15:34  

#17  LOL, TGA.

I like your thinking. ;-p
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-05-29 15:31  

#16  Put him in a cell with Saddam and tell both that nobody will come to check on them for 24 hours.
Posted by: True German Ally   2005-05-29 13:33  

#15  "He was only following orders."

Yeah, right.

Tariqy-baby should be shown as much mercy as his old boss showed the people of Iraq. And soon, too.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-05-29 12:04  

#14  G.E. - the dim bulb
Posted by: Frank G   2005-05-29 11:56  

#13  Aziz scribbled these notes on pages from his lawyer's diary who was with him when he was questioned recently by the CIA and US politicians.

I don't get it.How can a prisoner like Aziz communicate with the "outside" through his lawyers with CIA and US politicians present?
Posted by: SwissTex   2005-05-29 11:53  

#12  

My Friends, There is no reason to doubt the word of GE, Alan be with him. Further more, my dear friend Tarky is completely innocent. All he did was oversee the production rates of the baby milk factories and baby duck incubaters."
Posted by: Yosemite Sam   2005-05-29 10:52  

#11  Aziz ought to be the very first on the gallows. His westernized, rational appearance was a key factor in keeping Saddam in power. As someone said of one of the Nazis, he is a man "whose honor in dishonor rooted stood."

As for his current living arrnagements, cry me a river. While ordinary Iraqis lived in squalor, Aziz lived in palace earned by doing his master's bidding.
Posted by: Matt   2005-05-29 10:35  

#10  'I have not done anything contrary to law and human behaviour.'

Unfortunately, he's correct here. It was legal under Iraqi law at the time, and it is very human behavior. Of course, so was the Final Solution.
Posted by: xbalanke   2005-05-29 08:04  

#9  The Observer revealed how prisoners are kept mostly in solitary confinement in tiny cells with no natural daylight.

what a bunch of wankers. The average american worker does that for 8+ hours a day - voluntarily.

babies
Posted by: 2b   2005-05-29 07:07  

#8  claiming that he was only following orders and would have been killed if he disagreed

Tariq's son isn't helping him any.
If his boy was a better student of history he would know that many a Nazi was propelled to the hangmans noose by that easy lie.
Posted by: JerseyMike   2005-05-29 06:48  

#7  These nuts love throwing magic words around talismanically.

Dear trolls: repeating "illegal" neither makes it so, nor undoes the overthrow of your Baathist heroes.
Posted by: someone   2005-05-29 06:25  

#6  Uh, GE, "...an illegal invasion..."--"illegal?" Under whose system of laws?
in what court?
Saddam Hussein was behind the first bombing of the WTC, was probably behind the bombing in OKC and had definite links with Al Queda and OBL going back to the early '90s, in addition to invading Kuwait, gassing, torturing and murdering his own people, making war against Iran for 8 years and losing Gulf War I to the Allies, for which he signed a surrender.
Then, he violated 16 (or was it 17?) U.N. resolutions about disarming, which is the basis of your "false intelligence" claim.
There's plenty of evidence to bring Saddam and his henchmen to trial and to a guilty verdict, the only problem being whom to choose to testify from among the tens of thousands of Iraqis who lost loved ones to the régime!
Grow up and get over all the Leftist lies you're hearing from Old Media in the UK (I'm guessing you're British.)
And yes, Israel's fight is our fight: we face the same Islamist enemy.
Posted by: Jennie Taliaferro   2005-05-29 05:09  

#5  Lol! That's, um, fascinating, GE. Are you even remotely connected to reality? Got any relatives on the outside? Just wondering whom we should call when you need changing. Given the post, a "download" is likely imminent. Think of it as a RB courtesy.
Posted by: .com   2005-05-29 04:06  

#4  GE,
Clue 1): Just because you type something on a keyboard dosen't make it true.

Clue 2)Ya know GE, you might save some power and bandwidth if you just left your fingers in your pockets and STFU.

have an nice day in muzzy-wuzzy land.;)
Posted by: AI™®©   2005-05-29 04:04  

#3  there's not actually enough evidence to bring Saddam, Aziz etc to trial. If 400,000 victims is not enough. Care to suggest a number that would constitute enough? One million? Two million?
Posted by: phil_b   2005-05-29 04:01  

#2  After WW11 the Nuremberg trials started within 6 months. What's becoming clear in Iraq is that although an illegal invasion was initiated on false intelligence, thanks mainly to Tel Aviv, there's not actually enough evidence to bring Saddam, Aziz etc to trial.
Posted by: Grearong Elmurong9235   2005-05-29 03:51  

#1  DON’T CRY FOR ME MESOPOTAMIA
Posted by: Fatima Peron   2005-05-29 03:32  

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