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IRAQ WARS
Iraq electoral officials jailed until Sunday
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) April 13, 2012


A judge from Iraq's anti-corruption watchdog has ordered the head of the nation's electoral commission and another member of the panel to be jailed until Sunday, a fellow commission member told AFP.

Faraj al-Haidari, the head of the Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) and member Karim al-Tamimi are jailed "until Sunday due to a decision taken by a judge from the integrity commission," a member of IHEC said Friday on condition of anonymity.

The judge could also order an extension of their custody.

Asked about the matter, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's spokesman Ali Mussawi said only that "it is a judicial issue related to the integrity commission and the judiciary."

Haidari and Tamimi were arrested on Thursday for paying a bonus of 150,000 dinars ($130) to an IHEC employee, Judge Qassem Abboudi, also a member of the commission, told AFP.

Karima al-Assadi, a spokeswoman for IHEC, said Thursday that "an investigation of the integrity committee (Iraq's anti-corruption watchdog) was underway within the electoral commission."

There is bad blood between Haidari, a 64-year-old Shiite Kurd, and Iraqi Maliki's State of Law list over the former's refusal to carry out a national recount after 2010 parliamentary polls, in which the premier's list came in second to rival Iyad Allawi's Iraqiya list.

Haidari only recounted the votes in Baghdad province.

The State of Law list sought a no-confidence vote on Haidari for alleged corruption, but failed because other parties opposed the move.

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Iraq's Saddam-era culture minister released
Baghdad (AFP) April 13, 2012 - Hamed Yussef Hamadi, who was a culture minister under Saddam Hussein, has been released after over six years in prison and has left Iraq, a justice ministry spokesman and a lawyer said on Friday.

Justice ministry spokesman Haidar al-Saadi said that Hamadi had been released, but provided no further details.

Lawyer Badie Aref, who represented 17 Saddam-era officials, including former deputy prime minister Tareq Aziz, said that Hamadi was released from detention in Kadhimiyah prison in Baghdad on Thursday, and has left the country.

Hamadi, 72, was arrested on January 24, 2006. During Saddam's rule, he served as information and culture minister, then culture minister after the two ministries were split, and also as secretary of the presidency.

Deputy Justice Minister Busho Ibrahim said that Hamadi was charged in the course of several trials of former Iraqi officials, but was acquitted.

Hamadi was the secretary of Saddam at the time of the massacre of 148 villagers in Dujail in 1982 after an attack on the presidential motorcade.

He testified on February 14, 2006 that "I know nothing about this incident," adding he had never been privy to any of the security-related communiques directed to Saddam, something the former Iraqi president had confirmed.



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IRAQ WARS
Cockfighting in Iraq: a different kind of battle
Baghdad (AFP) April 11, 2012
Iraq is no stranger to battles, but this is not one fought with rifles and rockets: when the bell sounds, trainers release cocks Daqduqa and Sammam into the ring. The crowd, scattered across the makeshift stands in a dank Baghdad house, erupts into cheers, baying for blood. Welcome to cockfighting in Iraq. The matches, illegal in Iraq but still widespread, consistently see dozens of ... read more


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