Re: Hussein Gets ICRC Visit
Date: February 21, 2004
45 pages of news stories about Hussein's ICRC visit. Pity the media isn't as prolific on news of American POWs and MIAs.
"Saddam
Gets Red Cross Visit, Writes Family Letter
By Michael Georgy
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Red Cross officials visited Saddam Hussein on Saturday for
the first time since U.S. forces captured him in December and said they would
pass on a letter he wrote for his daughters.
But the InternationaI Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) declined to give any
details on the health or detention conditions of the former Iraqi president
in keeping with its usual practice when visiting prisoners.
"He's detained in Iraq," the ICRC's spokesman in neighboring Jordan,
Muin Kassis, said after the visit by a team that included a doctor and an Arabic
speaker.
"(The team) spent enough time with the former Iraqi president where they
were able to have a good comprehensive idea about the material conditions of
the detention place and also about his health condition," said Kassis.
He said the meeting with Saddam, 66, took place in private and no representative
from the U.S.-led administration in Iraq was present.
"We insist on having a meeting in privacy," said Kassis, adding there
would be more visits to Saddam but no date had been set for the next one.
SADDAM LETTER
He said Saddam, who has three daughters, wrote to them on a "special form...used
everywhere by prisoners of war and detained persons, where the person could
write...news to reassure family members of his health condition, of his situation."
"Our delegates will definitely make sure that the family of the former
president will receive the Red Cross message as soon as possible," said
Kassis.
Under the terms of the Geneva Convention covering prisoners of war, which Washington
has said applies to Saddam, U.S. forces were obliged to give the ICRC access
to the former president.
Saddam has been held by U.S. forces since his widely publicized capture on December
13.
After he was deposed in April in the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, Saddam went
on the run for eight months before his capture in a pit near his home town of
Tikrit.
Despite his capture, U.S.-led forces still face daily and often deadly guerrilla
attacks which Washington blames on Saddam supporters and foreign Islamic militants.
Four U.S. soldiers were wounded and their Iraqi translator was killed on Saturday
when gunmen ambushed their convoy south of Baghdad, the U.S. army said.
Guerrilla bombings and shootings have killed 378 U.S. troops since the war that
toppled Saddam began in March.
ELECTION DEBATE
Iraq's U.S. governor Paul Bremer suggested in remarks broadcast on Saturday
it could take up to 15 months to hold elections, risking a collision course
with the country's most powerful religious leader who wants only a brief delay
in polls.
A U.S. timetable envisages handing over sovereignty to Iraqis by the end of
June without full elections being held.
Bremer said in an interview with the Dubai-based Al Arabiya television channel
that Iraq needed time to prepare for elections due to technical problems and
other issues.
"These technical problems will take time to fix. The U.N. estimates somewhere
between a year and 15 months," said Bremer.
"There are real important technical problems...and elections are not possible
as (U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan) announced yesterday."
Annan, who sent a fact-finding mission to Iraq this month, has backed the U.S.
position that it would not be feasible to hold elections before June 30.
Bush on Saturday reaffirmed U.S. strategic interests in helping Iraq become
a sovereign nation.
"The establishment of a free Iraq will be a watershed event in the history
of the Middle East, helping to advance the spread of liberty throughout that
vital region," Bush said in his weekly radio address.
Iraq's top Shi'ite cleric Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, widely seen as holding the
key to the country's political future, said on Friday any delay in arranging
an election "should not last long."
Sistani had demanded direct elections before June 30 but recently agreed that
polls required adequate preparations.
Iraq's majority Shi'ites had protested in their tens of thousands in support
of Sistani's call for early elections, and they could take to the streets again
if he expresses opposition to any of Bremer's decisions. (Additional reporting
by Richard Waddington in Geneva and Andrew Hammond in Dubai)
© 2002-2004 My Way "
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