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In a last act of defiance Saddam Hussein
refused to wear a hood
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The
former Iraqi leader, Saddam Hussein, has been hanged in northern
Baghdad for crimes against humanity.
Iraqi state TV showed images of Saddam Hussein going to the
gallows before dawn in a building his intelligence services once
used for executions.
However the moment of his execution was not shown. Pictures of
his body wrapped in a shroud were later broadcast on TV.
A representative of the prime minister and a Sunni Muslim cleric
were among a group of Iraqis present.
Saddam Hussein were sentenced to death by an Iraqi court on 5
November after a year-long trial over the killings of 148 Shias from
the town of Dujail in the 1980s.
In a statement, Iraq's Prime Minister, Nouri Maliki, said the
execution had closed a dark chapter in Iraq's history.
"Justice, in the name of the people, has carried out the death
sentence against the criminal Saddam, who faced his fate like all
tyrants, frightened and terrified during a hard day which he did not
expect," it read.
Holding Koran
A small group of Iraqis witnessed the execution in a spartan
concrete-lined chamber at an Iraqi compound known by the Americans
as Camp Justice in the suburb of Khadimiya.
They watched as a judge read out the sentence to Saddam Hussein,
69. The former Iraqi leader was carrying a copy of the Koran and
asked for it to be given to a friend.
Footage broadcast later on Iraqi state TV showed a subdued Saddam
Hussein being led to gallows by a group of masked men.
He was dressed in a white shirt and dark overcoat, rather than
prison garb.
Saddam Hussein was led up onto the gallows platform and a dark
piece of cloth placed around his neck, followed by the noose.
When the hangman stepped forward to put the hood over his head,
Saddam Hussein made it clear he wanted to die without it.
The hanging itself was not broadcast.
The execution procedure took just a few minutes.
Iraqi National Security Adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie, who witnessed
the execution, told the BBC that the former leader went to the
gallows quietly:
"We took him to the gallows and he was saying some few slogans.
He was very, very, very, broken."
In other developments:
- US troops and Iraqi security forces are put on high alert and
security is increased at US embassies around the world
- Three car bombs go off in quick succession in a mainly Shia
Baghdad district, killing at least 37 people and injuring 76
others, Iraqi officials say
- A bomb explodes in a market place in the mainly Shia city of
Kufa, in southern Iraq, killing at least 31 people and injuring 58
- The US military says that a US soldier was killed by a
roadside bomb in Baghdad on Friday and three marines died from
wounds suffered in combat in Iraq's western Anbar province
Images of Saddam Hussein's body were also broadcast on Iraqi TV,
still dressed in his overcoat and wrapped in a white sheet.
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Saddam Hussein's rule
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His body is reported to have been flown by helicopter to an
unknown location.
Sources close to the Iraqi prime minister said the body would be
buried in Iraq, but would not reveal where.
Saddam Hussein's daughters Raghad and Rana had earlier asked that
their father be buried temporarily in Yemen.
According to their spokeswoman, Rasha Oudeh, the two women
watched their father's final moments on TV.
"They felt very proud as they saw their father facing his
executioners so bravely, standing up," Ms Oudeh said. "They pray
that his soul rests in peace."
Mixed reaction
News of Saddam Hussein's execution was announced on state-run
Iraqiya television, as patriotic music and images of national
monuments were played out.
It initially said his half-brother Barzan al-Tikriti and Iraq's
former chief judge Awad Hamed al-Bandar were also hanged, but Mr
Rubaie later said only Saddam Hussein was hanged.
The others will be executed some time after the Eid festival ends
next week, he said.
Other Arab TV stations aired live footage of the sunrise over
Baghdad's Firdous Square, where US Marines pulled down a statue of
Saddam Hussein, after he was deposed in April 2003.
There were jubilant scenes in the Baghdad Shia stronghold of Sadr
City, with people dancing in the streets and sounding their car
horns, and in the southern city of Basra.
But in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, where a curfew was
imposed, the news sparked protests from supporters.
Protests were also reported in Samarra and Ramadi.
'Held to account'
US President George W Bush hailed the execution as "an important
milestone" on the road to building an Iraqi democracy, but warned it
would not end the deadly violence there.
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I feel saddened by the death of Saddam,
not because he deserved to live but because it is taking place
under US occupation of Iraq
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He said: "It is a testament to the Iraqi people's resolve to move
forward after decades of oppression that, despite his terrible
crimes against his own people, Saddam Hussein received a fair trial.
"It is an important milestone on Iraq's course to becoming a
democracy that can govern, sustain, and defend itself, and be an
ally in the War on Terror."
UK Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett welcomed the fact that
Saddam Hussein had been tried by an Iraqi court "for at least some
of the appalling crimes he committed" and said "he has now been held
to account".
France called on Iraqis to "look towards the future and work
towards reconciliation and national unity".