The Times of India, New Delhi
12 Oct 2008
DUJAIL: Saddam Hussein was hanged for killing 148 Shia men and boys in Dujail in 1982. But today, some people in this town on the
"If someone like Saddam came back, I'd not only support him, I'd invite him to dinner. My uncle was killed in 1982 in the Dujail incident. Still, life then was a million times better than now," said Saad Mukhlif, a Shia. Nostalgia for Saddam and his Sunni-led government in this largely Shia town mirrors a country-wide sense of frustration despite a drop in attacks and killings.
US military officials say violence in Iraq is at four-year lows but militant groups stepped up attacks for the holy month of Ramadan, and the country still suffers chronic shortages of water, power and other basic services. "(Prime Minister) Nuri al-Maliki is sitting in (
"Saddam Hussein is the only noble leader we've had," he added, before shouting "God bless Saddam 1,000 times," within earshot of
A crowd of men and boys gathered to sing Saddam's praises, and boys on their way home from school chanted: "After Saddam, came the destroyers" and complained of a lack of electricity, clean water and money for school books. "Saddam didn't kill anyone without a reason," said 14-year-old Ahmed Ali Ahmed. "Now these bombs just attack everybody. Everyone says it, Sunni or Shia. Life was better under Saddam."
Some residents said such comments did not necessarily indicate admiration for Saddam, who ruthlessly repressed Shias, Kurds and anyone even vaguely related to those who opposed him, as well as conducting a ruinous war with
"They're speaking like that because they're angry. People here haven't seen their lives improve," said Hussein Yassin, an interpreter for the
The
"The people who are here now have not created anything better than Saddam created. In Saddam's time, the best thing we had was security. We don't have that now," said Muthanna Ibrahim, Qaisi's secretary and spokesman. For some people in Dujail, it appears the horrors of the past five years have superseded the atrocities of 1982. After he escaped an assassination attempt that year while driving through the town, Saddam ordered his commanders to hunt down, torture and kill 148 men.
Women and children were allegedly taken and imprisoned and later sent to a desert internment camp where many disappeared. Dujail's farmlands, rich date palm and fruit groves on the banks of the
"Before we could visit any province. Now you could get killed," he said. Asked whether he would want the return of someone like Saddam, he said: "I wish. A leader who could provide security? I wish." New York-based Human Rights Watch estimates some 290,000 people disappeared under Saddam, who ruled
Saddam's campaign against northern
"Who do you think sets these car bombs off? These are all Saddam's people. You think Shia clerics go around blowing themselves up?" said grocer Kadhem Darwish. Many of the bombings in
"Whatever happens in