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The eldest daughter of Saddam joins Iraq’s most wanted list

▶ Government says Raghad Saddam Hussein is one of dozens of suspects who support acts of terrorison

- MINA ALDROUBI

The exiled daughter of the late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein is among dozens named on Iraq’s “most wanted” list of people accused of supporting acts of terrorism.

Those on the list are wanted for belonging to or having an affiliatio­n with ISIL, Al Qaeda or Saddam’s Baath Party regime.

Raghad Saddam Hussein responded yesterday by pledging to take legal action against those who have “insulted her”.

Iraq’s government has been seeking to prosecute Ms Hussein since 2006 for allegedly supporting violence in the country.

The list echoes the US’s set of 55 playing cards, released in 2003, that depicted the most wanted members of Saddam’s former government.

The cards were given to troops when they invaded Iraq to help soldiers identify prominent fugitives after Saddam’s ousting in the US-led invasion.

“I didn’t have any role in the Baathist system, even when the US occupied Iraq in 2003,” Ms Hussein told Al Arabiya. Although reported to be living in Jordan, she denied being there but did not elaborate on her whereabout­s.

Some of the names mentioned on the list are included in the US’s most wanted file, and the document purports to provide detail on the scale of involvemen­t of Baath party officials in terrorist activities since the end of Saddam’s government.

“These are the terrorists most wanted by the judicial authoritie­s and the security services,” a security official said. “This is the first time we publish these names.”

The government has sent the list to Interpol, the official said.

The list contains names of 28 people suspected of belonging to ISIL, 12 from Al Qaeda and 20 from the Baathist party. It provides details of the roles they allegedly play in their organisati­ons, crimes of which they are suspected and in most cases, photograph­s.

But the name of ISIL leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi is absent from the list.

The document includes senior members of ISIL, among them Fawaz Mohammad Mutlaq, a former officer in Saddam’s Fedayeen paramilita­ry organisati­on who later became a member of ISIL’s military council.

The fighters named in the document are accused of fighting in Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, and the surroundin­g province of Nineveh, as well as in the provinces of Kirkuk, Diyala and Anbar. They are also accused of murder, attacks on security forces and for the financing and transport of weapons.

Maan Bashour, a Lebanese man accused of recruiting fellow citizens to fight in Iraq, is the only non-Iraqi listed.

In 2014, at the height of the militant group’s power, ISIL controlled nearly a third of Iraqi territory, before being beaten back by security forces backed by a US-led coalition.

The list was released three months ahead of national elections in Iraq, where Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi is hoping to remain in office for another term.

Mr Al Abadi replaced Nouri Al Maliki, a fellow Shiite, after the collapse of Iraqi security forces when ISIL took Mosul and other cities. The group’s push south at one point threatened the outskirts of Baghdad.

Although Mr Al Abadi is considered likely to be re-elected after what the government says is the military defeat of ISIL and the federal government’s recapture of Kirkuk from Kurdish forces, his prospects have been set back by an attempt at a grand political alliance, through his so-called Victory Coalition, that he hoped would deliver the decisive support of the country’s major Shiite bloc.

Criticism began to mount after Mr Al Abadi, who has largely preached a non-sectarian vision of Iraq, entered into an electoral pact last month with some of Iraq’s most controvers­ial Shiite militias.

In the Victory Coalition, Mr Al Abadi aligned himself with, among others, the Badr Organisati­on and Asaib Ahl Al Haq – both widely seen as strongly sectarian, and Iran’s most powerful allies in Iraq.

These are the terrorists most wanted by the judicial authoritie­s. This is the first time we publish these names IRAQI SECURITY SERVICES OFFICIAL

 ??  ?? Raghad Saddam Hussein and her father in the 1980s, above, at a social gathering in Baghdad. By January 2007, she was in Jordan, left, and joined protests against the hanging of her father in Iraq on December 30, 2006, for crimes against humanity
Raghad Saddam Hussein and her father in the 1980s, above, at a social gathering in Baghdad. By January 2007, she was in Jordan, left, and joined protests against the hanging of her father in Iraq on December 30, 2006, for crimes against humanity
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Getty

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