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Confusion over arrest of Saddam's aide
Izzat Ibrahim
Pakistan
Times Monitoring Desk
TIKRIT (Iraq): The fate of
Saddam Hussein’s right-hand man Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri was shrouded in
confusion Sunday, as Iraqi officials appeared to backtrack on earlier claims
he had been captured.
Despite abundant details provided by the Iraqi national guard on the
circumstances of his capture in his hometown of Ad-Dawr, near Tikrit, there
was little or no evidence to support the claim.
The US military stressed it was unlikely such an operation would have been
carried out without its knowledge, and even top Iraqi officials denied the
most wanted fugitive from the former regime had been netted.
“Iraqi national guards and US forces obtained intelligence that Ibrahim was
in Ad-Dawr clinic,” guard commander, Colonel Abdullah Juburi, had informed
in Tikrit. “They surrounded the area and, as he was leaving the clinic, they
arrested him.”
Several Iraqi officials, including an interior ministry spokesman and
minister without portfolio Qassem Daoud, confirmed the reports, elaborating
on the deadly clashes which reportedly pitted the national guard against
armed supporters of the loyal Saddam henchman.
But the announcements which appeared to bring an 18-month manhunt to a
glorious end for Iraq’s fledgling security forces took a farcical twist when
the same Iraqi officials abruptly stopped answering their phones.
“Our forces did not take part in any operation and did not capture Izzat
Ibrahim al-Duri and we do not have any information concerning the subject,”
said Major General Ahmed Khalaf Salman, who is national guard commander for
the central region where the capture reportedly took place. “No division
took part,” he added.
Another national guard commander in Tikrit earlier told AFP that Ibrahim had
been captured in the clinic where the leukemic 62-year-old was supposed to
have had a blood transfusion.
For his part, Doctor Nashwan Mohammed Sabar at the Tikrit General hospital
said the ailing Ibrahim had not been brought there.
At the Ad Dawr clinic, nurses Hassan Mohammed al-Duri and Shema Kazem Alwan
said: “We have never seen Izzat Ibrahim.”
Asked about the flurry of denials, interior ministry spokesman Colonel Adnan
Abdelrahman, who had previously confirmed the arrest and provided abundant
details about its circumstances, said: “Call the defense ministry because
these are the people who told us this story.”
The US military said it did not have custody of Ibrahim, adding its troops
were not involved in any such operation and no Iraqi official had informed
any American officials of his arrest.
Rear Admiral Greg Slavonic said this would have been unusual if he had been
captured due to the high degree of cooperation between US and Iraqi forces.
He said there was no record of any US tanks or aircraft supporting the Iraqi
operation to capture Ibrahim, despite claims by an interior ministry
spokesman and a national guard commander that US forces had taken part.
Several Iraqi officials quoted by AFP and appearing on Arab television
networks had insisted Ibrahim was in the custody of the national guard,
claiming this operation was a huge boost for the country’s embattled
security apparatus.
Saddam’s longtime deputy, Ibrahim is ranked number six in the deck of cards
of most wanted officials issued after last year’s US-led invasion.
His capture would have been the most high-profile coup for the coalition in
Iraq since the announcement on December 13 of the capture of Saddam, who was
found hiding in a hole on a farm in the same village of Ad-Dawr.
Washington has accused him of using Saddam’s hidden stashes of hard currency
to buy jobless Iraqis to serve as the insurgency’s footsoldiers, although
top US brass has since reckoned his illness was incompatible with a lead
role in the insurgency.●
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