The National - News

Son of Saddam’s top general elected in Nineveh poll

▶ Voters in the northern Iraqi governorat­e remove stalwarts and send new faces to Parliament

- GARETH BROWNE

The office of Khaled Sultan Hashem in Mosul’s Al Ziraai neighbourh­ood is a throwback to the Baath era of the Saddam Hussein regime.

Moustachio­ed men in leather jackets with Uzis tucked into their belts usher dignitarie­s in to meet the newly elected MP.

Mr Hashem’s father, Ahmed Sultan Hashem Al Tai, was known as Saddam’s top general and was the man who signed the surrender agreement with the US in the First Gulf War in 1991, before going on to serve as minister of defence.

When the US invaded in 2003, Hashem Al Tai was in the highest echelons of the regime. He featured as the eight of hearts on the US’s deck of playing cards, which listed Iraq’s most wanted.

Now, his son has been elected to Iraq’s Parliament as an MP for Nineveh governorat­e, a radical progressio­n for a family once so close to Saddam.

Though Mr Hashem was initially barred from standing, the election commission reversed the decision, allowing him to run for the Iraqi National Project list. As the results stand, he is their only MP in Nineveh.

Although Mr Hashem would not grant any interviews, he was happy to pose for a photo for The National.

Mr Hashem’s victory was something of an outlier in a governorat­e that largely turned its back on establishe­d names in the October 10 election.

While stalwarts of the past two decades – such as former prime minister Nouri Al Maliki and the populist cleric Moqtada Al Sadr – performed well down south, in the northern city that was occupied by ISIS extremists barely five years ago, the story was quite different.

The Nujaifi family, one of the biggest landowners in Nineveh, was wiped out electorall­y – with former vice president Osama Al Nujaifi losing his seat. His brother Atheel, who was governor when the city fell to ISIS, remains in exile in Erbil, capital of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.

Several other stalwarts of the governorat­e’s politics in recent years also lost their seats.

One of the winners in Nineveh was the Taqadum movement, a new list led by Mohammed Al Halbousi, the former Parliament­ary speaker.

Mr Al Halbousi borrowed a tactic employed by former prime minister Haider Al Abadi’s Nasr coalition at the last election. This involved inviting popular local figures to run on his list and relying on them to bring in votes from their communitie­s. Among them is Muzahim Al Khayat, a former chancellor of the University of Mosul, who was elected in Nineveh’s second district.

Ahmed Al Jabouri, a shopkeeper in the eastern Mosul neighbourh­ood of Karama, said though he felt there was little hope of change, he voted for a new candidate after a lifetime of supporting Al Nujaifis.

Another of Saddam’s former associates, cigarette mogul Khamis Khanjar failed to perform, despite pouring vast sums of money into the governorat­e. Mr Khanjar’s Azm movement picked up only one seat in Nineveh, mirroring a disastrous performanc­e across the country.

“There were many independen­t candidates to choose from and even many bigger parties gave us new faces to vote for.

There was more choice in this election,” Mr Al Jabouri said.

The Kurdish Democratic Party performed strongly, taking nine of the governorat­e’s 31 seats. This was due largely to a strong showing among minority groups in the rural areas outside of Mosul, said Vian Dakhil, a Yazidi MP who was re-elected.

“We got a lot of support from minorities – there are many minority supporters of the KDP in Mosul among the Christians and the Shabak,” she told The National.

“I think some people have changed their minds about those big leaders, especially since ISIS in 2014. People in Nineveh know who the right people are to go to the Parliament.”

Despite Nineveh’s Sunni majority, Iran-backed groups managed to make notable inroads through minority and independen­t candidates.

Waad Qado, the former head of the Hashed Al Shaabi’s 30th brigade, was elected as an independen­t. The Hashed Al Shaabi, or Popular Mobilisati­on Forces, are a militia

umbrella organisati­on, comprising a variety of paramilita­ry groups mainly backed by Iran.

Though a Shabak, Mr Qado is widely regarded as being close to the Iran-backed groups which dominate the PMF.

Posters on the motorway to Mosul from Erbil show him next to Abu Mahdi Al Muhandis, the former de facto head of the PMF, and Iranian

general Qassem Suleimani. Both men were killed in a US drone strike near Baghdad airport in January 2020.

The governorat­e’s Christian quota seat went to the Babylon Movement, a group seen as a proxy of the Iran-backed Badr organisati­on headed by Hadi Al Amiri.

Even in the north, Iran’s reach can be felt.

Despite Nineveh’s Sunni majority, Iran-backed groups made inroads through minority and independen­t candidates

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 ?? AFP; Gareth Browne / The National ?? Top, Saddam Hussein with military chiefs, including Ahmed Sultan Hashem Al Tai, left, in 2000. Above, newly elected Khaled Sultan Hashem, Hashem Al Tai’s son
AFP; Gareth Browne / The National Top, Saddam Hussein with military chiefs, including Ahmed Sultan Hashem Al Tai, left, in 2000. Above, newly elected Khaled Sultan Hashem, Hashem Al Tai’s son

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