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Uday, Qusai Hussein killed after six-hour fight

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  • Uday, Qusai Hussein killed after six-hour fight

    Odai Hussein, the murderous and erratic oldest son of Saddam Hussein and the former head of the country's Olympic committee, was killed along with his brother Qusai on Tuesday in Iraq.

    Odai controlled propaganda in Iraq and allegedly oversaw the torture of athletes who failed to perform.

    The 39-year-old had a $15 million reward on his head as No. 3 on the list of 55 most-wanted men from the ousted Iraqi regime -- only Saddam and younger brother Qusai ranked higher. The three also were on a U.S. list of former leaders who could be tried for war crimes.

    Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of the U.S.-led coalition troops in Iraq, said Odai and Qusai were killed Tuesday during a gunbattle with American soldiers in northern Iraq.

    Much of Odai's notoriety abroad stemmed from his position as head of the National Iraqi Olympic Committee, which was accused of torturing and jailing athletes.

    The London-based human rights group Indict said the committee once made a group of track athletes crawl on newly poured asphalt while they were beaten and threw some of them off a bridge. Indict also said Odai ran a special prison for athletes who offended him. The International Olympic Committee in Lausanne, Switzerland, said earlier this year that it was investigating the allegations.

    One defector told Indict that jailed soccer players were forced to kick a concrete ball after failing to reach the 1994 World Cup finals. Another defector said athletes were dragged through a gravel pit and then dunked in a sewage tank so infection would set in.

    As head of the Fedayeen Saddam paramilitary force, Odai helped his father eliminate opponents and exert iron-fisted control over Iraq's 25 million people. The eldest of Saddam's five children, Odai was elected to parliament in 1999 with a reported 99 percent of the vote, but he rarely attended parliament sessions.

    Iraqi exiles say Odai murdered at will and tortured with zeal, and routinely ordered his guards to snatch young women off the street so he could rape them. The London-based human-rights group Indict said Odai ordered prisoners to be dropped into acid baths as punishment.

    The Caligula-like Odai seemed proud of his reputation and called himself Abu Sarhan, an Arabic term for "wolf.''

    But his tendency toward erratic brutality even exasperated Saddam, who temporarily banished Odai to Switzerland after the younger Hussein killed one of his father's favorite bodyguards in 1988.

    The bodyguard, a young man named Kamel Gegeo, arranged trysts for the Iraqi president -- notably with one woman who later became Saddam's second wife. Worried that his father's relationship with the woman could threaten his own position as heir, Odai beat Gegeo to death with a club in full view of guests at a high-society party, according to some reports. Other reports said Odai killed Gegeo with an electric carving knife.

    Odai had once been a strong candidate to succeed his father, but he was badly injured in 1996 in an assassination attempt by gunmen who opened fire as he drove his red Porsche through Baghdad. The attack left Odai with a bullet in his spine that forced him to walk with a cane. Younger brother Qusai was instead groomed to succeed Saddam, worsening already uneasy relations between the two brothers.

    Odai owned Iraq's most widely circulated daily newspaper, Babil, which he used as a platform for regime propaganda, publishing signed editorials full of bombastic rhetoric. He also oversaw Al-Zawra, a weekly published by the journalists union that he headed, and owned the popular Youth TV.

    Army officers also were fair game for Odai's outbursts of violence. In 1983, Odai reportedly bashed an army officer unconscious when the man refused to allow Odai to dance with his wife. The officer later died. Odai also shot an army officer who did not salute him.

    Things were hardly better on the family front, where relations between Odai and his uncles were especially bad. Odai reportedly divorced the daughter of one uncle, Barzan Ibrahim Hasan, in 1995 after she complained of being beaten. Odai shot and wounded another uncle, Watban Ibrahim Hasan. Both uncles were captured after the war and are in the custody of U.S. coalition forces.

    While millions of Iraqis suffered dire poverty, Odai lived a life of fast cars, expensive liquor and easy women.

    When U.S. troops captured his mansion in Baghdad, they found a personal zoo with lions and cheetahs, an underground parking garage for his collection of luxury cars, Cuban cigars with his name on the wrapper, and $1 million in fine wines, liquor -- and even heroin.

    Odai's obsession with sex was evident everywhere: The house was adorned with paintings of naked women and photographs of prostitutes taken off the Internet, complete with handwritten ratings of each.

    There were bags and boxes of pills and medicines everywhere -- ginseng sexual fortifiers, heartburn medication, the anti-depressant Prozac -- and an Accu-Rite HIV Antibodies Screening Test Kit was in Odai's office.

    Nearby was a domed house believed to be the residence of Odai's concubines, a bastion of bad taste with statuettes of couples in foreplay, couches with fluffy pillows and a swimming pool with a bar.

  • #2
    Bush Comments

    President Bush on Wednesday hailed the deaths of Saddam Hussein`s two sons as the clearest sign yet that "the former regime is gone and will not be coming back."

    Bush called Odai and Qusai Hussein, who were both killed on Tuesday during a firefight with U.S. forces, "two of the regime`s chief henchmen ... responsible for torture, maiming and murder of countless Iraqis."

    Still, in a Rose Garden appearance with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and L. Paul Bremer, the U.S. occupation governor for Iraq, Bush said that "a few remaining holdouts" loyal to Saddam`s government are complicating efforts to stabilize Iraq and advance freedom.

    "These killers are the enemies of Iraq`s people. They operate mainly in a few areas of the country. And wherever they operate, they`re being hunted and they will be defeated," Bush said in brief remarks. He did not respond to questions shouted by reporters.

    Even as officials confirmed that Saddam`s two sons were killed Tuesday in a firefight with U.S. troops, a soldier with the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment died when his convoy driving between Balad and Ar Ramadi was ambushed and two more were killed Wednesday in separate attacks on convoys.

    The president sought to present a progress report on Iraq since he declared major combat over nearly three months ago. "We are determined to help build a free and sovereign democratic nation," he said.

    While the White House was exhibiting obvious pleasure in deaths of the two Saddam sons, questions continued to dog the administration over the president`s use of discredited intelligence to bolster his case for war with Iraq.

    On Tuesday, the top aide to National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice took the blame for allowing a tainted report suggesting Iraq was trying to buy uranium in Africa to find its way into Bush`s January State of the Union address.

    Deputy national security adviser Stephen Hadley said two CIA memos and a call from CIA Director George Tenet had persuaded him to take a similar passage out of a presidential speech in October — and that he should have done likewise when it turned up again in State of the Union drafts.

    "We have made progress, steady progress, in restoring hope in a nation beaten down by decades of tyranny," Bush said. He said that 19 nations were providing more than 13,000 troops "to help stabilize Iraq" and that additional help "will soon arrive."

    "More than two dozen nations have pledged funds that will go directly toward relief and reconstruction efforts. Every day we`re renovating schools for the new school year. We`re restoring the damaged water, electrical and communication systems. And when we introduce a new Iraqi currency later this year, it will be the first time in 12 years that the whole country is using the same currency," Bush said.

    And, with the deaths of Odai and Qusai Hussein, "Now, more than ever, all Iraqis can know that the former regime is gone and will not be coming back," the president added.

    "Rebuilding Iraq will require a sustained commitment. America and our partners kept our promise to remove the dictator and the threat he posed — not only to the Iraqi people but to the world," he added.

    Before walking out into the Rose Garden, Bush convened an informal gathering of his war council in the Oval Office.

    Bush aides said the president was upset by Hadley`s failure to come forward with the CIA objections, but turned down what amounted to an offer by Hadley to resign. Bush "has full confidence" in his national security team, including Hadley and Tenet, White House communications director Dan Bartlett said.

    "The process failed," Bartlett said.

    It came as the White House pressed a full-scale damage control effort in an attempt to divert attention away from Bush`s State of the Union comments on Iraq and Africa.

    But critics suggested the administration`s campaign to come clean has raised more questions than it has answered.

    And Democrats were quick to criticize Bush over the latest twist in the saga, which earlier this month saw Tenet offer a public apology for not flagging the Iraq-Africa sentence when the CIA reviewed a draft of Bush`s Jan. 28 State of the Union address.

    In his State of the Union address, Bush said: "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa."

    Those 16 words have come back to haunt him as details surfaced suggesting that U.S. intelligence agencies did not agree with the British assessment. White House officials have said the language never should have made it into Bush`s speech.

    But Bush himself has sidestepped the question of whether he takes personal responsibility for the words, saying only that he takes personal responsibility for his decisions to commit U.S. forces to topple Saddam`s regime.

    Hadley, in a rare hour-long, on-the-record session with reporters, said he had received two memos from the CIA and a phone call from Tenet raising objections to a section in a speech Bush was to give in Cincinnati on Oct. 7.

    As a result, he had the statement — an allegation that Iraq was seeking to buy uranium ore in Africa to use in building nuclear weapons — removed from the draft.

    But he suggested the entire episode slipped his mind when Bush`s State of the Union speech was being vetted.

    The memos, dated Oct. 5 and Oct. 7, were discovered over the weekend.

    Both were addressed to Hadley and to presidential speechwriter Michael Gerson.

    Gerson "had no recollections" of details contained in the memos or of the controversy itself, Bartlett said.

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