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Saddam Hussein - Biography (Full Documentary)
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (28 April 1937[4] – 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003. A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organisation Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region—which espoused ba'athism,
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The Arab Socialist Baath Party
I put some sort of translation for the anthem (it is a poem and not that easy to be translated).
Press the cc button on the player to view the translation. See the photo:
http://truthsyria.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/how-to-view-translation.png
Make sure that the annotation button is activated (red for instance)
http://truthsyria.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/show-annotations.png
On 07.Apri
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Anthem of Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party
Anthem of the Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. Long Live Socialism! Down with Muslim Brotherhood!
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What the Baath Party is - Part 1
The Baath Party was founded by a Christian who wanted to see a Pan Arab nationalism.
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History of the post-war Syria: the Baath
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2011/06/the_baby_and_the_baath_water.html
Here is some footage - beginning with the celebration from the early days of the revolution among the urban poor - as the Baath party free them from the old bosses. Followed by images of the strange Baath state that Assad then created in Syria. It was centred round countless images of Assad as a the heroic leader of t
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Iraq's 1979 Fascist Coup, Narrated by Christopher Hitchens
Archival footage married with part of a Christopher Hitchens speech, showing Saddam Hussein's final purge of the Iraqi Baath Party leadership. You'll notice ...
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Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party Anthem
Yes they are using the same flag as Palestine, it represents the arab revolution.
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The Ba'ath Party and the Hawza of Najaf
"At the height of the Iran-Iraq War, between 1983 and 1987, the highest echelons of the leadership of the Ba'th party of Iraq engaged in a comprehensive seri...
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George Galloway - Arab Socialist Baath Party is not socialist
George Galloway argues that Sadam Hussein's Arab Socialist Baath Party was not socialist at all, other than nominally. From Talksport radio show, January 21s...
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Bring Back the Ba'ath Party!
Thom Hartmann says the Ba'ath Party is the best thing for Iraq. If you liked this clip of The Thom Hartmann Program, please do us a big favor and share it wi...
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Arab Baath Socialist 1980s Military Propaganda
رباب صادگ ياصدام
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Girl Syria - Arab Baath Party Anthem البنت السورية - نشيد حزب البعث العربي الأشتراكي
حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي: تأسس في دمشق، سوريا في بداية الأربعينات يدعو إلى الوحدة العربية ويبشر بالفكر القومي. وهو الحزب الحاكم في الجمهورية العربية السوري...
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صدام
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd al-Tikrītī;[1] 28 April 1937[2] -- 30 December 2006)[3] was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003.[4][5] A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organisati
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Syrian Ba'ath Party Anthem - Live Damascus
This is a live rendition of the anthem of the Ba'ath Party. The Ba'ath Party is the party of Syria's Bashar Assad. The Ba'ath Party formerly ruled Saddam's I...
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GWT: Raid on Ba'ath party hq, Saddam statue crashes down, plus POW camp
Day shots, 4 April 2003
1. Wide shot of Saddam statue crashing down at the gates of Basra
2. Various of British troops walking along the road
3. Various troops controlling the traffic
4. British soldiers checking truck at checkpoint
Night shots 4 April 2003
5. Close up soldier crashing the gate
6. Various of US soldiers at raid on the houses of the alleged Baat'h party members
7. Vario
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Flashpoint Golan: Baath Party Unification 1a
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Baath Party
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Baath Party Official attacks Saida Pharmacy
Baath Party Official attacks Saida Pharmacy.
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Syria's Assad faces major challenge as unrest grows
In the Syrian city of Deraa crowds have set fire to a building housing the local headquarters of the ruling Baath party. They also torched the main courts co...
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Baath Party Leadership Reshuffle, SNC President Hitto Resigns, Syrian Army Advances in Homs
Syria's Baath Party announced on Monday it has replaced its top leadership, including Vice President Farouq al-Sharaa.The party's central committee "held a l...
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Syrian Baath Party on FSA Terrorism - CPGB-ML interview
The head of the Syrian delegation Dr Saleh Al Rashed (President of the Syrian Revolutionary Youth Union) speaks at the world festival of youth and students to the British delegation.
Despite the brutal and bloody campaign which has been unleashed against the Syrian people by imperialism the Syrians understand and continue to draw the distinction between the mass of ordinary British workers and th
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Syrian Baath Party Anthem
HANDS OFF SYRIA! Visit my channel for more great communist and anti-imperialist playlists/videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/CommunistWarrior1917?feature=mh...
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GWT: President and son meet top Baath party officials from Basra
1. Various of Saddam Hussein (left) with his son Qusay (civilian clothes) and top Baath Party official from Basra, who is also the Assistant Military commander for Basra - Yahya al-Aboudei to the right of Qusay
STORYLINE:
Iraqi National Television on Monday showed what is said was Saddam Hussein with his son Qusay, meeting Yahya al-Aboudei, a top Baath Party official from Basra.
Al-Abo
Saddam Hussein - Biography (Full Documentary)
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (28 April 1937[4] – 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in thi...
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (28 April 1937[4] – 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003. A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organisation Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region—which espoused ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism—Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup (later referred to as the 17 July Revolution) that brought the party to power in Iraq.
As vice president under the ailing General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, and at a time when many groups were considered capable of overthrowing the government, Saddam created security forces through which he tightly controlled conflict between the government and the armed forces. In the early 1970s, Saddam nationalized oil and other industries. The state-owned banks were put under his control, leaving the system eventually insolvent mostly due to the Iran–Iraq War, the Gulf War, and UN sanctions. Through the 1970s, Saddam cemented his authority over the apparatuses of government as oil money helped Iraq's economy to grow at a rapid pace. Positions of power in the country were mostly filled with Sunnis, a minority that made up only a fifth of the population.
Saddam formally rose to power in 1979, although he had been the de facto head of Iraq for several years prior. He suppressed several movements, particularly Shi'a and Kurdish movements, seeking to overthrow the government or gain independence, and maintained power during the Iran–Iraq War and the Gulf War. Whereas some venerated Saddam for his opposition to Israel—which included the use of military force—he was widely condemned in the west for the brutality of his dictatorship.
In 2003, a coalition led by the U.S. and U.K. invaded Iraq to depose Saddam, in which U.S. President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair accused him of possessing weapons of mass destruction and having ties to al-Qaeda. Saddam's Ba'ath party was disbanded and elections were held. Following his capture on 13 December 2003, the trial of Saddam took place under the Iraqi interim government. On 5 November 2006, Saddam was convicted of charges related to the 1982 killing of 148 Iraqi Shi'ites and was sentenced to death by hanging. His execution was carried out on 30 December 2006.
Saddam Hussein - Biography (Full Documentary)
wn.com/Saddam Hussein Biography (Full Documentary)
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (28 April 1937[4] – 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003. A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organisation Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region—which espoused ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism—Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup (later referred to as the 17 July Revolution) that brought the party to power in Iraq.
As vice president under the ailing General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, and at a time when many groups were considered capable of overthrowing the government, Saddam created security forces through which he tightly controlled conflict between the government and the armed forces. In the early 1970s, Saddam nationalized oil and other industries. The state-owned banks were put under his control, leaving the system eventually insolvent mostly due to the Iran–Iraq War, the Gulf War, and UN sanctions. Through the 1970s, Saddam cemented his authority over the apparatuses of government as oil money helped Iraq's economy to grow at a rapid pace. Positions of power in the country were mostly filled with Sunnis, a minority that made up only a fifth of the population.
Saddam formally rose to power in 1979, although he had been the de facto head of Iraq for several years prior. He suppressed several movements, particularly Shi'a and Kurdish movements, seeking to overthrow the government or gain independence, and maintained power during the Iran–Iraq War and the Gulf War. Whereas some venerated Saddam for his opposition to Israel—which included the use of military force—he was widely condemned in the west for the brutality of his dictatorship.
In 2003, a coalition led by the U.S. and U.K. invaded Iraq to depose Saddam, in which U.S. President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair accused him of possessing weapons of mass destruction and having ties to al-Qaeda. Saddam's Ba'ath party was disbanded and elections were held. Following his capture on 13 December 2003, the trial of Saddam took place under the Iraqi interim government. On 5 November 2006, Saddam was convicted of charges related to the 1982 killing of 148 Iraqi Shi'ites and was sentenced to death by hanging. His execution was carried out on 30 December 2006.
Saddam Hussein - Biography (Full Documentary)
- published: 06 Jan 2015
- views: 0
The Arab Socialist Baath Party
I put some sort of translation for the anthem (it is a poem and not that easy to be translated).
Press the cc button on the player to view the translation. See...
I put some sort of translation for the anthem (it is a poem and not that easy to be translated).
Press the cc button on the player to view the translation. See the photo:
http://truthsyria.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/how-to-view-translation.png
Make sure that the annotation button is activated (red for instance)
http://truthsyria.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/show-annotations.png
On 07.April.1947 the Baath party was established. It started with the ideas of the great Syrian philosopher "Zaki al-Arsuzi" (from Arsuz, a city in the occupied - by Turkey of course - Iskenderun). Later the party comprised the ideas of another philosopher "Michel Aflaq". in 1952 the party united with the socialists led by "Akram Al-Hurani", and took its final name "The Arab Socialist Baath Party".
The Baath members were oppressed by the successive Syrian governments.
In 1958 the party was dissolved along with all other Syrian parties as a condition made by the Egyptian president "Jamal Abdul Nasser" to establish the union between Syria and Egypt. The union lasted for three years in 1961 when a group of corrupted military officers backed by merchants and bankers ended the union.
It was a reign of terror and many key members in the Baath party were sentenced to death by the separation government.
On 08.March.1963 a group of military officers from the Baath party organized a coup against the separation government and succeed. This event is know in Syria as 08.March Revolution. It was really a revolution, a true revolution and not like the crappy terrorist Wahhabi revolution we are witnessing nowadays.
The new Baath government made significant changes in the Syrian society. May be you can say that 08.March revolution set the base of everything good in Syria.
After the revolution "Amin al-Hafiz", a rightist from the city of Hama, became the new president. However his strong ties with the Islamists posed a great danger to the ideas of the Baath, and the revolution was at a crossroad. It was a first tough test for the unity of the party. Amin al-Hafiz had to be removed, which was achieved by general Salah Jadid, a leftist from Lattakia countryside.
Noureddine al-Atassi, a leftist from Homs, became the president.
Salah Jadid led a true social movement in the country. He also led a campaign against corruption in the government and the state apparatuses. Salah Jadid himself was known to be honest and clean (he used to live in a rented house in Damascus, and had no house in his village), this was actually the case of the Baath leaders in that period.
The relationships between Syria and the Gulf states entered its worst stage in history (even worse than now), also the relationships with the US and the NATO-bloc, however more ties were established with the soviet union and its allies.
After the defeat in 1967 war, conflicts started to rise again within the party, this time between Salah Jadid (he left the army to lead the political wing of the party) and the defense minister general Hafiz Al-Assad.
in 1970 Salah Jadid sent Syrian tanks to Jordan in order to defend the Palestinians against the King who was massacring them. The Syrian troops advanced rapidly towards the Jordanian capital.
However the tanks were attacked by the Israeli air force. The increasing conflicts between the political and military leadership doomed the campaign to fail, and the tanks had to be withdrawn. The Palestinians had to leave Jordan after a Gulf-Egyptian initiative.
The Baath party was on fire, and it looked like that there was no way out. General Hafiz Al-Assad stepped and ended the conflict, and he became later the president of Syria.
President Hafiz Al-Assad continued the social movements with more "pragmatic ideology".
Being too long in power without maintenance caused serious problems within the body of the party. Being busy with internal struggles against the Muslim brotherhood, and external struggles against Israel (1973, 1978,1982) and against the US (1982 in Lebanon) also increased the problems.
The Baath party is not that devil that some people try to introduce nowadays. The Baath party itself is a victim of corruption, and it is time for the party to redeem its fine reputation.
wn.com/The Arab Socialist Baath Party
I put some sort of translation for the anthem (it is a poem and not that easy to be translated).
Press the cc button on the player to view the translation. See the photo:
http://truthsyria.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/how-to-view-translation.png
Make sure that the annotation button is activated (red for instance)
http://truthsyria.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/show-annotations.png
On 07.April.1947 the Baath party was established. It started with the ideas of the great Syrian philosopher "Zaki al-Arsuzi" (from Arsuz, a city in the occupied - by Turkey of course - Iskenderun). Later the party comprised the ideas of another philosopher "Michel Aflaq". in 1952 the party united with the socialists led by "Akram Al-Hurani", and took its final name "The Arab Socialist Baath Party".
The Baath members were oppressed by the successive Syrian governments.
In 1958 the party was dissolved along with all other Syrian parties as a condition made by the Egyptian president "Jamal Abdul Nasser" to establish the union between Syria and Egypt. The union lasted for three years in 1961 when a group of corrupted military officers backed by merchants and bankers ended the union.
It was a reign of terror and many key members in the Baath party were sentenced to death by the separation government.
On 08.March.1963 a group of military officers from the Baath party organized a coup against the separation government and succeed. This event is know in Syria as 08.March Revolution. It was really a revolution, a true revolution and not like the crappy terrorist Wahhabi revolution we are witnessing nowadays.
The new Baath government made significant changes in the Syrian society. May be you can say that 08.March revolution set the base of everything good in Syria.
After the revolution "Amin al-Hafiz", a rightist from the city of Hama, became the new president. However his strong ties with the Islamists posed a great danger to the ideas of the Baath, and the revolution was at a crossroad. It was a first tough test for the unity of the party. Amin al-Hafiz had to be removed, which was achieved by general Salah Jadid, a leftist from Lattakia countryside.
Noureddine al-Atassi, a leftist from Homs, became the president.
Salah Jadid led a true social movement in the country. He also led a campaign against corruption in the government and the state apparatuses. Salah Jadid himself was known to be honest and clean (he used to live in a rented house in Damascus, and had no house in his village), this was actually the case of the Baath leaders in that period.
The relationships between Syria and the Gulf states entered its worst stage in history (even worse than now), also the relationships with the US and the NATO-bloc, however more ties were established with the soviet union and its allies.
After the defeat in 1967 war, conflicts started to rise again within the party, this time between Salah Jadid (he left the army to lead the political wing of the party) and the defense minister general Hafiz Al-Assad.
in 1970 Salah Jadid sent Syrian tanks to Jordan in order to defend the Palestinians against the King who was massacring them. The Syrian troops advanced rapidly towards the Jordanian capital.
However the tanks were attacked by the Israeli air force. The increasing conflicts between the political and military leadership doomed the campaign to fail, and the tanks had to be withdrawn. The Palestinians had to leave Jordan after a Gulf-Egyptian initiative.
The Baath party was on fire, and it looked like that there was no way out. General Hafiz Al-Assad stepped and ended the conflict, and he became later the president of Syria.
President Hafiz Al-Assad continued the social movements with more "pragmatic ideology".
Being too long in power without maintenance caused serious problems within the body of the party. Being busy with internal struggles against the Muslim brotherhood, and external struggles against Israel (1973, 1978,1982) and against the US (1982 in Lebanon) also increased the problems.
The Baath party is not that devil that some people try to introduce nowadays. The Baath party itself is a victim of corruption, and it is time for the party to redeem its fine reputation.
- published: 07 Apr 2012
- views: 28083
Anthem of Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party
Anthem of the Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. Long Live Socialism! Down with Muslim Brotherhood!...
Anthem of the Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. Long Live Socialism! Down with Muslim Brotherhood!
wn.com/Anthem Of Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'Ath Party
Anthem of the Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. Long Live Socialism! Down with Muslim Brotherhood!
- published: 21 Sep 2012
- views: 14121
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author: otuzniak
What the Baath Party is - Part 1
The Baath Party was founded by a Christian who wanted to see a Pan Arab nationalism....
The Baath Party was founded by a Christian who wanted to see a Pan Arab nationalism.
wn.com/What The Baath Party Is Part 1
The Baath Party was founded by a Christian who wanted to see a Pan Arab nationalism.
History of the post-war Syria: the Baath
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2011/06/the_baby_and_the_baath_water.html
Here is some footage - beginning with the celebration from the early days of th...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2011/06/the_baby_and_the_baath_water.html
Here is some footage - beginning with the celebration from the early days of the revolution among the urban poor - as the Baath party free them from the old bosses. Followed by images of the strange Baath state that Assad then created in Syria. It was centred round countless images of Assad as a the heroic leader of the nation. It is very odd because, unlike Saddam who was doing the same sort of thing in Iraq, in every image and statue Assad looks like a middle manager.
More information, including more short films,
http://alexsmail.blogspot.com/2011/06/adam-curtis-history-of-post-war-syria.html
wn.com/History Of The Post War Syria The Baath
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/2011/06/the_baby_and_the_baath_water.html
Here is some footage - beginning with the celebration from the early days of the revolution among the urban poor - as the Baath party free them from the old bosses. Followed by images of the strange Baath state that Assad then created in Syria. It was centred round countless images of Assad as a the heroic leader of the nation. It is very odd because, unlike Saddam who was doing the same sort of thing in Iraq, in every image and statue Assad looks like a middle manager.
More information, including more short films,
http://alexsmail.blogspot.com/2011/06/adam-curtis-history-of-post-war-syria.html
- published: 26 Mar 2012
- views: 2382
Iraq's 1979 Fascist Coup, Narrated by Christopher Hitchens
Archival footage married with part of a Christopher Hitchens speech, showing Saddam Hussein's final purge of the Iraqi Baath Party leadership. You'll notice ......
Archival footage married with part of a Christopher Hitchens speech, showing Saddam Hussein's final purge of the Iraqi Baath Party leadership. You'll notice ...
wn.com/Iraq's 1979 Fascist Coup, Narrated By Christopher Hitchens
Archival footage married with part of a Christopher Hitchens speech, showing Saddam Hussein's final purge of the Iraqi Baath Party leadership. You'll notice ...
- published: 19 Jul 2010
- views: 89388
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author: neestle
Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party Anthem
Yes they are using the same flag as Palestine, it represents the arab revolution....
Yes they are using the same flag as Palestine, it represents the arab revolution.
wn.com/Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'Ath Party Anthem
Yes they are using the same flag as Palestine, it represents the arab revolution.
- published: 20 Jul 2015
- views: 6
The Ba'ath Party and the Hawza of Najaf
"At the height of the Iran-Iraq War, between 1983 and 1987, the highest echelons of the leadership of the Ba'th party of Iraq engaged in a comprehensive seri......
"At the height of the Iran-Iraq War, between 1983 and 1987, the highest echelons of the leadership of the Ba'th party of Iraq engaged in a comprehensive seri...
wn.com/The Ba'Ath Party And The Hawza Of Najaf
"At the height of the Iran-Iraq War, between 1983 and 1987, the highest echelons of the leadership of the Ba'th party of Iraq engaged in a comprehensive seri...
George Galloway - Arab Socialist Baath Party is not socialist
George Galloway argues that Sadam Hussein's Arab Socialist Baath Party was not socialist at all, other than nominally. From Talksport radio show, January 21s......
George Galloway argues that Sadam Hussein's Arab Socialist Baath Party was not socialist at all, other than nominally. From Talksport radio show, January 21s...
wn.com/George Galloway Arab Socialist Baath Party Is Not Socialist
George Galloway argues that Sadam Hussein's Arab Socialist Baath Party was not socialist at all, other than nominally. From Talksport radio show, January 21s...
Bring Back the Ba'ath Party!
Thom Hartmann says the Ba'ath Party is the best thing for Iraq. If you liked this clip of The Thom Hartmann Program, please do us a big favor and share it wi......
Thom Hartmann says the Ba'ath Party is the best thing for Iraq. If you liked this clip of The Thom Hartmann Program, please do us a big favor and share it wi...
wn.com/Bring Back The Ba'Ath Party
Thom Hartmann says the Ba'ath Party is the best thing for Iraq. If you liked this clip of The Thom Hartmann Program, please do us a big favor and share it wi...
Girl Syria - Arab Baath Party Anthem البنت السورية - نشيد حزب البعث العربي الأشتراكي
حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي: تأسس في دمشق، سوريا في بداية الأربعينات يدعو إلى الوحدة العربية ويبشر بالفكر القومي. وهو الحزب الحاكم في الجمهورية العربية السوري......
حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي: تأسس في دمشق، سوريا في بداية الأربعينات يدعو إلى الوحدة العربية ويبشر بالفكر القومي. وهو الحزب الحاكم في الجمهورية العربية السوري...
wn.com/Girl Syria Arab Baath Party Anthem البنت السورية نشيد حزب البعث العربي الأشتراكي
حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي: تأسس في دمشق، سوريا في بداية الأربعينات يدعو إلى الوحدة العربية ويبشر بالفكر القومي. وهو الحزب الحاكم في الجمهورية العربية السوري...
صدام
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd al-Tikrītī;[1] 28 April 1937[2] -- 30 December 2006)[3...
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd al-Tikrītī;[1] 28 April 1937[2] -- 30 December 2006)[3] was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003.[4][5] A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organisation Ba'ath Party -- Iraq Region, which espoused ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism, Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup, later referred to as the 17 July Revolution, that brought the party to long-term power of Iraq.
Hafez al-Assad (Arabic: حافظ الأسد Ḥāfiẓ al-ʾAsad, Levantine pronunciation: [ˈħaːfezˤ elˈʔasad]; 6 October 1930 -- 10 June 2000) was a Syrian statesman, politician and general who served as Prime Minister of Syria between 1970 and 1971 and then President between 1971 and 2000. He also served as Secretary of the Syrian Regional Command of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party and Secretary General of the National Command of the Ba'ath Party from 1970 to 2000 and Minister of Defense from 1966 to 1972. Politically a Ba'athist, Assad adhered to the ideologies of Arab nationalism, Arab socialism and secularism. Under his administration the Syria saw increased stabilization, with a program of secularization and industrialization designed to modernize and strengthen the country as a regional power
ولد في مدينة القرداحة بمحافظة اللاذقية لأسرة من الطائفة العلوية كانت تعمل في فلاحة الأرض. أتم تعليمه الأساسي في مدرسة قريته التي أنشأها الفرنسيون عندما أدخلوا التعليم إلى القرى النائية وكان أول من نال تعليمًا رسميًا في عائلته، ثم انتقل إلى مدينة اللاذقية حيث أتم تعليمه الثانوي في مدرسة الشهيد جول جمال ونال شهادة الفرع العلمي، لكنه لم يتمكن من دخول كلية الطب في الجامعة اليسوعية في بيروت كما كان يتمنى لتردي أوضاعه المادية والاجتماعية لذا التحق بالأكاديمية العسكرية في حمص عام 1952، ومن ثم التحق بالكلية الجوية ليتخرج منها برتبة ملازم طيار عام 1955 ليشارك بعدها ببطولة الألعاب الجوية ويفوز بها.
صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي (28 أبريل 1937[2] - 30 ديسمبر 2006)[3] رابع رئيس لجمهورية العراق في الفترة ما بين عام 1979م وحتى 9 أبريل عام 2003م [4], و خامس حاكم جمهوري للجمهورية العراقية . ونائب رئيس الجمهورية العراقية بين 1975 و1979.
سطع نجمه إبان الانقلاب الذي قام به حزب البعث - ثورة 17 تموز 1968 - والذي دعى لتبني الأفكار القومية العربية والتحضر الاقتصادي والاشتراكية. ولعب صدام دوراً رئيسياً في انقلاب عام 1968م والذي وضعه في هرم السلطة كنائب للرئيس اللواء أحمد حسن البكر وأمسك صدام بزمام الأمور في القطاعات الحكومية والقوات المسلحة المتصارعتين في الوقت الذي اعتبرت فيه العديد من المنظمات قادرة على الإطاحة بالحكومة. وقد نمى الاقتصاد العراقي بشكل سريع في السبعينات نتيجة سياسة تطوير ممنهجه للعراق بالإضافة للموارد الناتجة عن الطفرة الكبيرة في أسعار النفط في ذلك الوقت.[5] وصل صدام إلى رأس السلطة في العراق حيث أصبح رئيساً للعراق عام 1979م بعد أن قام بحملة لتصفية معارضيه وخصومه في داخل حزب البعث [6] وفي عام 1980م دخل صدام حرباً مع إيران استمرت 8 سنوات من 22 سبتمبر عام 1980م حتى 8 أغسطس عام 1988م.[7] وقبل أن تمر الذكرى الثانية لانتهاء الحرب مع إيران غزا صدام الكويت في 2 أغسطس عام 1990.[8] والتي أدت إلى نشوب حرب الخليج الثانية عام 1991م.[9]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)
wn.com/صدام
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd al-Tikrītī;[1] 28 April 1937[2] -- 30 December 2006)[3] was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003.[4][5] A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organisation Ba'ath Party -- Iraq Region, which espoused ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism, Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup, later referred to as the 17 July Revolution, that brought the party to long-term power of Iraq.
Hafez al-Assad (Arabic: حافظ الأسد Ḥāfiẓ al-ʾAsad, Levantine pronunciation: [ˈħaːfezˤ elˈʔasad]; 6 October 1930 -- 10 June 2000) was a Syrian statesman, politician and general who served as Prime Minister of Syria between 1970 and 1971 and then President between 1971 and 2000. He also served as Secretary of the Syrian Regional Command of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party and Secretary General of the National Command of the Ba'ath Party from 1970 to 2000 and Minister of Defense from 1966 to 1972. Politically a Ba'athist, Assad adhered to the ideologies of Arab nationalism, Arab socialism and secularism. Under his administration the Syria saw increased stabilization, with a program of secularization and industrialization designed to modernize and strengthen the country as a regional power
ولد في مدينة القرداحة بمحافظة اللاذقية لأسرة من الطائفة العلوية كانت تعمل في فلاحة الأرض. أتم تعليمه الأساسي في مدرسة قريته التي أنشأها الفرنسيون عندما أدخلوا التعليم إلى القرى النائية وكان أول من نال تعليمًا رسميًا في عائلته، ثم انتقل إلى مدينة اللاذقية حيث أتم تعليمه الثانوي في مدرسة الشهيد جول جمال ونال شهادة الفرع العلمي، لكنه لم يتمكن من دخول كلية الطب في الجامعة اليسوعية في بيروت كما كان يتمنى لتردي أوضاعه المادية والاجتماعية لذا التحق بالأكاديمية العسكرية في حمص عام 1952، ومن ثم التحق بالكلية الجوية ليتخرج منها برتبة ملازم طيار عام 1955 ليشارك بعدها ببطولة الألعاب الجوية ويفوز بها.
صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي (28 أبريل 1937[2] - 30 ديسمبر 2006)[3] رابع رئيس لجمهورية العراق في الفترة ما بين عام 1979م وحتى 9 أبريل عام 2003م [4], و خامس حاكم جمهوري للجمهورية العراقية . ونائب رئيس الجمهورية العراقية بين 1975 و1979.
سطع نجمه إبان الانقلاب الذي قام به حزب البعث - ثورة 17 تموز 1968 - والذي دعى لتبني الأفكار القومية العربية والتحضر الاقتصادي والاشتراكية. ولعب صدام دوراً رئيسياً في انقلاب عام 1968م والذي وضعه في هرم السلطة كنائب للرئيس اللواء أحمد حسن البكر وأمسك صدام بزمام الأمور في القطاعات الحكومية والقوات المسلحة المتصارعتين في الوقت الذي اعتبرت فيه العديد من المنظمات قادرة على الإطاحة بالحكومة. وقد نمى الاقتصاد العراقي بشكل سريع في السبعينات نتيجة سياسة تطوير ممنهجه للعراق بالإضافة للموارد الناتجة عن الطفرة الكبيرة في أسعار النفط في ذلك الوقت.[5] وصل صدام إلى رأس السلطة في العراق حيث أصبح رئيساً للعراق عام 1979م بعد أن قام بحملة لتصفية معارضيه وخصومه في داخل حزب البعث [6] وفي عام 1980م دخل صدام حرباً مع إيران استمرت 8 سنوات من 22 سبتمبر عام 1980م حتى 8 أغسطس عام 1988م.[7] وقبل أن تمر الذكرى الثانية لانتهاء الحرب مع إيران غزا صدام الكويت في 2 أغسطس عام 1990.[8] والتي أدت إلى نشوب حرب الخليج الثانية عام 1991م.[9]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor)
- published: 20 Nov 2012
- views: 31597
Syrian Ba'ath Party Anthem - Live Damascus
This is a live rendition of the anthem of the Ba'ath Party. The Ba'ath Party is the party of Syria's Bashar Assad. The Ba'ath Party formerly ruled Saddam's I......
This is a live rendition of the anthem of the Ba'ath Party. The Ba'ath Party is the party of Syria's Bashar Assad. The Ba'ath Party formerly ruled Saddam's I...
wn.com/Syrian Ba'Ath Party Anthem Live Damascus
This is a live rendition of the anthem of the Ba'ath Party. The Ba'ath Party is the party of Syria's Bashar Assad. The Ba'ath Party formerly ruled Saddam's I...
GWT: Raid on Ba'ath party hq, Saddam statue crashes down, plus POW camp
Day shots, 4 April 2003
1. Wide shot of Saddam statue crashing down at the gates of Basra
2. Various of British troops walking along the road
3. Various troo...
Day shots, 4 April 2003
1. Wide shot of Saddam statue crashing down at the gates of Basra
2. Various of British troops walking along the road
3. Various troops controlling the traffic
4. British soldiers checking truck at checkpoint
Night shots 4 April 2003
5. Close up soldier crashing the gate
6. Various of US soldiers at raid on the houses of the alleged Baat'h party members
7. Various of man being arrested and taken away, upsound - female voice in English - "What about my husband."
8. Various of Iraqi POW sitting on the road with hoods on their heads
9. Close up POW's hands shaking in shock
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Major Paul Nanson, UK Army
"There was no shots fired. We gave a good warning before we came in. We have been playing warnings to people to stay in their houses. And we only lifted those people who we have got a very good intelligence on."
11. Various of Iraqi man being taken on trucks
12. Wide shot trucks driving away
Day shots, 5 April 2003
13. Various convoy of Iraqi prisoners
14. Wide shot Pow camp
15. Wide shot prisoners
16. Close-up British soldier with bound hands of prisoner in close-up
17. Mid shot British soldiers with kneeling militia man prisoner
18. Zoom in kneeling militia man with sack over head
19. SOUNDBITE (English) British Army spokesperson:
"We do have something like three to five hundred officers here. The most senior is a brigadier-general and we do have some Ba'ath Party members."
20. Wide shot POW camp
21. Wide shot of Pow camp, With medical unit flag flying
STORYLINE:
British soldiers have pulled down a massive Saddam Hussein statue that was place at the gates of Basra.
Britain's 7th Armored Brigade - the famed Desert Rats - and the Royal Marines are positioned around Basra and awaiting orders to launch a final push into Iraq's second-largest city.
The soldiers have established more checkpoints on the outskirts of Basra, are they say they are taking ever more control of the area.
British forces on Friday stormed into several houses around Basra that they believed to be homes of Ba'ath party members and of Fedayeen militia.
More than 70 suspects were led away after the raids on Friday.
Some of the arrested were singled out by their neighbours, others on the basis of military intelligence.
The British officer in charge of the operation said that army "lifted just those people army have got a very good intelligence on."
Major Paul Nanson said they warned locals of the raid and no shots were fired during the operation.
Over three hundred officers, including a Brigadier general, and thousands of lower rank soldiers are now being held in British POW camps in the desert, near Basra.
The tented camps are filling fast in what is reported by a British journalist embedded with the military to be the biggest war camp in Iraq holding seven-thousand Iraqi prisoners with predictions that it will grow to 10-thousand in a few days.
While the the prison holds Ba'ath Party members and paramilitaries, most of the captured soldiers were conscripts.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f6a0a8b63301bd3181cb9017baa367ab
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Gwt Raid On Ba'Ath Party Hq, Saddam Statue Crashes Down, Plus Pow Camp
Day shots, 4 April 2003
1. Wide shot of Saddam statue crashing down at the gates of Basra
2. Various of British troops walking along the road
3. Various troops controlling the traffic
4. British soldiers checking truck at checkpoint
Night shots 4 April 2003
5. Close up soldier crashing the gate
6. Various of US soldiers at raid on the houses of the alleged Baat'h party members
7. Various of man being arrested and taken away, upsound - female voice in English - "What about my husband."
8. Various of Iraqi POW sitting on the road with hoods on their heads
9. Close up POW's hands shaking in shock
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Major Paul Nanson, UK Army
"There was no shots fired. We gave a good warning before we came in. We have been playing warnings to people to stay in their houses. And we only lifted those people who we have got a very good intelligence on."
11. Various of Iraqi man being taken on trucks
12. Wide shot trucks driving away
Day shots, 5 April 2003
13. Various convoy of Iraqi prisoners
14. Wide shot Pow camp
15. Wide shot prisoners
16. Close-up British soldier with bound hands of prisoner in close-up
17. Mid shot British soldiers with kneeling militia man prisoner
18. Zoom in kneeling militia man with sack over head
19. SOUNDBITE (English) British Army spokesperson:
"We do have something like three to five hundred officers here. The most senior is a brigadier-general and we do have some Ba'ath Party members."
20. Wide shot POW camp
21. Wide shot of Pow camp, With medical unit flag flying
STORYLINE:
British soldiers have pulled down a massive Saddam Hussein statue that was place at the gates of Basra.
Britain's 7th Armored Brigade - the famed Desert Rats - and the Royal Marines are positioned around Basra and awaiting orders to launch a final push into Iraq's second-largest city.
The soldiers have established more checkpoints on the outskirts of Basra, are they say they are taking ever more control of the area.
British forces on Friday stormed into several houses around Basra that they believed to be homes of Ba'ath party members and of Fedayeen militia.
More than 70 suspects were led away after the raids on Friday.
Some of the arrested were singled out by their neighbours, others on the basis of military intelligence.
The British officer in charge of the operation said that army "lifted just those people army have got a very good intelligence on."
Major Paul Nanson said they warned locals of the raid and no shots were fired during the operation.
Over three hundred officers, including a Brigadier general, and thousands of lower rank soldiers are now being held in British POW camps in the desert, near Basra.
The tented camps are filling fast in what is reported by a British journalist embedded with the military to be the biggest war camp in Iraq holding seven-thousand Iraqi prisoners with predictions that it will grow to 10-thousand in a few days.
While the the prison holds Ba'ath Party members and paramilitaries, most of the captured soldiers were conscripts.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f6a0a8b63301bd3181cb9017baa367ab
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Syria's Assad faces major challenge as unrest grows
In the Syrian city of Deraa crowds have set fire to a building housing the local headquarters of the ruling Baath party. They also torched the main courts co......
In the Syrian city of Deraa crowds have set fire to a building housing the local headquarters of the ruling Baath party. They also torched the main courts co...
wn.com/Syria's Assad Faces Major Challenge As Unrest Grows
In the Syrian city of Deraa crowds have set fire to a building housing the local headquarters of the ruling Baath party. They also torched the main courts co...
Baath Party Leadership Reshuffle, SNC President Hitto Resigns, Syrian Army Advances in Homs
Syria's Baath Party announced on Monday it has replaced its top leadership, including Vice President Farouq al-Sharaa.The party's central committee "held a l......
Syria's Baath Party announced on Monday it has replaced its top leadership, including Vice President Farouq al-Sharaa.The party's central committee "held a l...
wn.com/Baath Party Leadership Reshuffle, Snc President Hitto Resigns, Syrian Army Advances In Homs
Syria's Baath Party announced on Monday it has replaced its top leadership, including Vice President Farouq al-Sharaa.The party's central committee "held a l...
- published: 08 Jul 2013
- views: 900
-
author: Eretz Zen
Syrian Baath Party on FSA Terrorism - CPGB-ML interview
The head of the Syrian delegation Dr Saleh Al Rashed (President of the Syrian Revolutionary Youth Union) speaks at the world festival of youth and students to t...
The head of the Syrian delegation Dr Saleh Al Rashed (President of the Syrian Revolutionary Youth Union) speaks at the world festival of youth and students to the British delegation.
Despite the brutal and bloody campaign which has been unleashed against the Syrian people by imperialism the Syrians understand and continue to draw the distinction between the mass of ordinary British workers and the thoroughly corrupt and wicked parasite class that rules on behalf of finance capital.
Since the very first days of this conflict the CPGB-ML were the only organisation in Britain to stand squarely behind the Ba'ath Party, the National Patriotic Front and the Syrian Communist Party (Bagdash), as well as all the other progressive and anti-imperialist organisations united in Syria against the imperialist inspired war of intervention.
As Dr Al Rashed confirms, the Syrian people, much to the dismay of the revisionist and Trotskyite pigs who tie our anti war movement to imperialism, have only strengthened their resolve and friendship during these bleak years. As Mao Zedong said long ago, "the imperialists pick up a rock only to drop it upon their own feet"!
More on Syria:
LALKAR:
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/sep2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/jul2013/qusair.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/may2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/mar2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/jan2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/jan2013/rcgsyria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/nov2012/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/sep2012/syria.html
Proletarian:
http://www.cpgb-ml.org/index.php?secName=proletarian&subName;=results&search;=syria
http://www.cpgb-ml.org
http://www.redyouth.org
http://www.youtube.com/ProletarianCPGBML
Red Youth Education Program: Each one teach one!
http://redyouthuk.wordpress.com/educational-links/
join the struggle!
http://www.cpgb-ml.org/index.php?secName=join
Donate:
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wn.com/Syrian Baath Party On Fsa Terrorism Cpgb Ml Interview
The head of the Syrian delegation Dr Saleh Al Rashed (President of the Syrian Revolutionary Youth Union) speaks at the world festival of youth and students to the British delegation.
Despite the brutal and bloody campaign which has been unleashed against the Syrian people by imperialism the Syrians understand and continue to draw the distinction between the mass of ordinary British workers and the thoroughly corrupt and wicked parasite class that rules on behalf of finance capital.
Since the very first days of this conflict the CPGB-ML were the only organisation in Britain to stand squarely behind the Ba'ath Party, the National Patriotic Front and the Syrian Communist Party (Bagdash), as well as all the other progressive and anti-imperialist organisations united in Syria against the imperialist inspired war of intervention.
As Dr Al Rashed confirms, the Syrian people, much to the dismay of the revisionist and Trotskyite pigs who tie our anti war movement to imperialism, have only strengthened their resolve and friendship during these bleak years. As Mao Zedong said long ago, "the imperialists pick up a rock only to drop it upon their own feet"!
More on Syria:
LALKAR:
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/sep2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/jul2013/qusair.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/may2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/mar2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/jan2013/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/jan2013/rcgsyria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/nov2012/syria.html
http://lalkar.org/issues/contents/sep2012/syria.html
Proletarian:
http://www.cpgb-ml.org/index.php?secName=proletarian&subName;=results&search;=syria
http://www.cpgb-ml.org
http://www.redyouth.org
http://www.youtube.com/ProletarianCPGBML
Red Youth Education Program: Each one teach one!
http://redyouthuk.wordpress.com/educational-links/
join the struggle!
http://www.cpgb-ml.org/index.php?secName=join
Donate:
https://www.paypal.com/uk/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_flow&SESSION;=pkSNE9uKOI-xyZ8AG9U3h99vNTa0GvQCjiQOMAHmdIbdPrlJi-FT6HLPfJ4&dispatch;=5885d80a13c0db1f8e263663d3faee8d0038486cd0d9a2f30f3a21df7b0d0cee
- published: 10 Dec 2013
- views: 630
Syrian Baath Party Anthem
HANDS OFF SYRIA! Visit my channel for more great communist and anti-imperialist playlists/videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/CommunistWarrior1917?feature=mh......
HANDS OFF SYRIA! Visit my channel for more great communist and anti-imperialist playlists/videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/CommunistWarrior1917?feature=mh...
wn.com/Syrian Baath Party Anthem
HANDS OFF SYRIA! Visit my channel for more great communist and anti-imperialist playlists/videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/CommunistWarrior1917?feature=mh...
GWT: President and son meet top Baath party officials from Basra
1. Various of Saddam Hussein (left) with his son Qusay (civilian clothes) and top Baath Party official from Basra, who is also the Assistant Military commander ...
1. Various of Saddam Hussein (left) with his son Qusay (civilian clothes) and top Baath Party official from Basra, who is also the Assistant Military commander for Basra - Yahya al-Aboudei to the right of Qusay
STORYLINE:
Iraqi National Television on Monday showed what is said was Saddam Hussein with his son Qusay, meeting Yahya al-Aboudei, a top Baath Party official from Basra.
Al-Aboudei is also the Assistant Military commander for Basra.
Iraqi TV claims the meeting was filmed on Monday.
US and British-led coalition forces claim to have captured Basra's airport and a bridge.
But Coalition commanders say they are in no rush to storm the city, hoping instead that Iraqi defenders decide to give up.
Earlier on Monday, in an address, Saddam told the people of Basra to be patient because "victory is imminent."
Qusay is a member of the Baath party leadership.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/1ea6c2dc3c7a42de82b895261b6be63c
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Gwt President And Son Meet Top Baath Party Officials From Basra
1. Various of Saddam Hussein (left) with his son Qusay (civilian clothes) and top Baath Party official from Basra, who is also the Assistant Military commander for Basra - Yahya al-Aboudei to the right of Qusay
STORYLINE:
Iraqi National Television on Monday showed what is said was Saddam Hussein with his son Qusay, meeting Yahya al-Aboudei, a top Baath Party official from Basra.
Al-Aboudei is also the Assistant Military commander for Basra.
Iraqi TV claims the meeting was filmed on Monday.
US and British-led coalition forces claim to have captured Basra's airport and a bridge.
But Coalition commanders say they are in no rush to storm the city, hoping instead that Iraqi defenders decide to give up.
Earlier on Monday, in an address, Saddam told the people of Basra to be patient because "victory is imminent."
Qusay is a member of the Baath party leadership.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/1ea6c2dc3c7a42de82b895261b6be63c
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
-
10 Minutes: ISIL and The Baathist Factor
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party. Don't forget to visit our website for more .
A profound analysis of the real role of Daesh in Afghanistan and its connection with the recent terrorist attacks in this country Don't forget to visit our website for .
Libya was supposed to be a safer and freer place in the post-Gaddafi era –
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10 Minutes: ISIL and The Baathist Factor
An amazing analysis of how ISIL bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
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The Arab Socialist Baath Party Anthem
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ISIL and The Baathist Factor - Documentary
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
-
Politik Focus - Syrian Refugees (S3 E1)
Season 3 Episode 1
Corrections:
US has vowed to take in 10,000 refugees, not 100,000
Baath party is socialist, not Shiite
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Mass rally to mark 65 years of ruling Baath party
PLEASE NOTE: THE MATERIAL WAS FILMED BY AN AP TELEVISION CREW UNDER SUPERVISION OF THE SYRIAN AUTHORITIES
1. Zoom out from picture of the Syrian president Bashar Assad in Sabee' Bahrat Square to demonstrators
2. Pan demonstrators gathering in square, holding flags, banners and pictures of Assad
3. Zoom out from pictures of Assad and of his late father former president Hafez Assad (in military
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Iraqi Baath supporters in exile meet after Saddam's execution
1. Man walking across street into headquarters
2. Man enters Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
3. Exterior of Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
4. People enter building
5. Various people inside of the building sitting in meeting room
6. Jordanian writer Insaf Kalaje drinking
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Insaf Kalaje, Jordanian writer:
"His death was a tragedy, but he was a great ma
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Two days after receiving death sentence, Saddam back in court
1. Wide shot of defendants, defendant Sabir Abdul-Aziz al-Douri, former intelligence director, walking to seat
2. Chief Judge Mohammed Oreibi speaking
3. Defendant, Ali Hassan al-Majeed, cousin of Saddam Hussein, senior Baath party member, seated in dock
4. Defendant, former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, seated in dock
5. Various of court session as defendants take their seats
6. Witness Qaha
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IRAQ: SAADOUN HAMMADI ELECTED AS SPEAKER OF RULING BAATH PARTY
Natural Sound
Iraq's newly-elected National Assembly has elected Saadoun Hammadi as the new speaker of the ruling Baath party.
Hammadi, who was prime minister from 1991 to 1993 and parliamentary speaker from 1984 to 1988, is a senior member of the ruling Baath Party.
Speaking after his election, he said United Nations-imposed trade sanctions had thrown many Iraqis into poverty, and he u
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First public comments since weapons inspectors returned
1. Various of Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, smiling and greeting Baath Party leadership
2. Pan along leaders lining up to greet Saddam Hussein
3. Leaders lined up, about to sit down
4. Mid shot Saddam Hussein speaking
5. Leaders listening
6. Wide shot Saddam Hussein speaking
7. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"We will try to avoid bringing harm on the Iraqi people. So
-
GWT: Newreaders reports death of senior Baath party leader
1. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Iraqi TV Presenter:
"We have just received this in the name of Allah the merciful, the compassionate. The leadership of the Baath Arabic Socialist would like to extend its condolences to the brave Iraqi people and to the warriors of the Baath Arabic Socialist Party. The late hero comrade Nayif Shindakh Thamir, official in charge of the Baath Party organisations in Al-Najaf,
-
Protestors attack statue of Baath Party founder
1. Statue of former Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Baqr with a man on top of its head beating it with a stick
2. Demonstrators around statue with banners
3. Long shot of statue's head with a man standing there while hitting it with a shoe
4. Demonstrators holding banners calling for the removal of Ba'ath party members
5. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox pop:
"The person who started the crimes in I
-
FILE Senior Baath Party leader now in US custody
US Pool
1. Playing card King of Diamonds featuring Aziz Saleh al-Numan, Baath Party Regional Chairman responsible for West Baghdad (one of pack of 55 playing cards issued by U.S. Central Command of most wanted Iraqis)
2. Close up of still of al-Numan on card
APTN
FILE: Baghdad, 8 August 2002
3. Pull out Aziz Saleh al-Numan salutes marching volunteers (volunteers to defend Iraq)
4. Close up
-
WRAP Opposition parties meet to discuss future government, reax
1. Exterior of building
2. Jalal Talabani, of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan arrives for meeting
3. Iraqi security
4. Abdul Aziz al-Hakim arrives for meeting
5. Ahmad Chalabi, of the exiled opposition Iraqi National Congress arrives for meeting
6. Various wide shots of conference table with Jay Garner, ORHA's civilian administrator present
7. Wide shot of security men walking towards pod
-
Reaction to US order for Baath party to dissolve
Baghdad - May 9, 2003
1. Wide shot Freedom Square
2. Crowds gather around of what was Saddam's statue - graffiti on base says "All done, go home"
3. Leg of Saddam's statue with people kicking it
4. People beating slipper on leg of Saddam's statue
FILE
5. Various Saddam meeting with senior Baath party members
Baghdad - May 11, 2003
6. Cutaway of Sethny being interviewed
7. SOUNDBITE
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Civilian admin chief on developments in Iraq
1. Wide shot of Bremer entering news journalists
2. Cutaway of journalists
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"Encouraging robust trade between Iraq and the rest of the world will be a key element of our strategy. And so today I want to announce that we will be setting up a new trade credit facility. It will provide trade credit for exports to Iraq within weeks. Suppo
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Thursday is anniversary of 1968 Baath revolution
Baghdad, Iraq - 16 July 2003
1. US soldier on tank in central Baghdad
2. Mid shot tank and soldier
3. Close up of machine gunner on tank
4. Wide of street
5. People in cafe
6. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Mashaad, Vox Pop:
"At night we have to be inside by eight or nine o'clock, there is no security, we don't feel safe. When Saddam was in power it was safe, you could walk around the streets at night
-
Baath party member killed
1. Crime scene with American soldiers, Iraqi police and body on the ground
2. Body on the ground
3. Body with blanket over him
4. Body with police tape blocking the crime scene
5. Prayer beads and blood on the ground
6. Blood on the ground
7. Pan to US Humvee
8. Crowd gathers around the body
9. Dead man's wife identifies him and cries
10. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Victim's Nephew (no name given)
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US announces arrest of highly sought Baath Party official
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt, US Army (partially overlaid with Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad picture):
"As a result of aggressive operations this week, the coalition announces the capture of Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad, number 54 in the coalition 55 deck of cards list. Khamis was captured as a result of a combined operation by the 82nd airborne division, and special operations
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Iraqi police hold senior Baath party member
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL of Abdul Razaq
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"We catch Mohammad, we catch him in one of his house, we watch him 10 days, and now we do it, and we have the team, the command is Dave and Jimm
-
Iraqi police hold senior Baath party member
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL of Abdul Razaq
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"We catch Mohammad, we catch him in one of his house, we watch him 10 days, and now we do it, and we have the team, the command is Dave and Jimmy
-
Baath Party Headquarters On Fire, Interior Of One Of Saddam's Palaces, Us Checkpoint On The Outskirt
APTN
15.4.03 Baghdad
Knocked over sign "Saddam City" outside burning Baath party headquarters
Various of building on fire
15.4.03 Tikrit, Iraq
[Interior of one of Saddam's palaces]
US marine sitting on APC in front of statue of Saddam Hussein on horseback
Statue of Saddam
Wide of part of Saddam's palace complex with US truck in front
Damage to roof
Chandeliers hanging above damaged sta
10 Minutes: ISIL and The Baathist Factor
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party. Don't forget to visit our website for more .
A profo...
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party. Don't forget to visit our website for more .
A profound analysis of the real role of Daesh in Afghanistan and its connection with the recent terrorist attacks in this country Don't forget to visit our website for .
Libya was supposed to be a safer and freer place in the post-Gaddafi era – evidence from different angles points to the contrary. Don't forget to visit our website .
wn.com/10 Minutes ISIL And The Baathist Factor
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party. Don't forget to visit our website for more .
A profound analysis of the real role of Daesh in Afghanistan and its connection with the recent terrorist attacks in this country Don't forget to visit our website for .
Libya was supposed to be a safer and freer place in the post-Gaddafi era – evidence from different angles points to the contrary. Don't forget to visit our website .
- published: 28 Oct 2015
- views: 15
10 Minutes: ISIL and The Baathist Factor
An amazing analysis of how ISIL bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
Live @ http://www.presstv.ir/live.html
Twitter ...
An amazing analysis of how ISIL bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
Live @ http://www.presstv.ir/live.html
Twitter @ http://twitter.com/PressTV
LiveLeak @ http://www.liveleak.com/c/PressTV
Facebook @ http://www.facebook.com/PRESSTV
Google+ @ http://plus.google.com/+VideosPTV
Instagram @ http://instagram.com/presstvchannel
SoundCloud@ https://soundcloud.com/videosptv
wn.com/10 Minutes ISIL And The Baathist Factor
An amazing analysis of how ISIL bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
Live @ http://www.presstv.ir/live.html
Twitter @ http://twitter.com/PressTV
LiveLeak @ http://www.liveleak.com/c/PressTV
Facebook @ http://www.facebook.com/PRESSTV
Google+ @ http://plus.google.com/+VideosPTV
Instagram @ http://instagram.com/presstvchannel
SoundCloud@ https://soundcloud.com/videosptv
- published: 28 Oct 2015
- views: 1024
ISIL and The Baathist Factor - Documentary
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party....
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
wn.com/ISIL And The Baathist Factor Documentary
An amazing analysis of how Daesh bears an uncanny resemblance to the ostensibly now-defunct Baath Party.
- published: 14 Sep 2015
- views: 212
Politik Focus - Syrian Refugees (S3 E1)
Season 3 Episode 1
Corrections:
US has vowed to take in 10,000 refugees, not 100,000
Baath party is socialist, not Shiite...
Season 3 Episode 1
Corrections:
US has vowed to take in 10,000 refugees, not 100,000
Baath party is socialist, not Shiite
wn.com/Politik Focus Syrian Refugees (S3 E1)
Season 3 Episode 1
Corrections:
US has vowed to take in 10,000 refugees, not 100,000
Baath party is socialist, not Shiite
- published: 14 Sep 2015
- views: 93
Mass rally to mark 65 years of ruling Baath party
PLEASE NOTE: THE MATERIAL WAS FILMED BY AN AP TELEVISION CREW UNDER SUPERVISION OF THE SYRIAN AUTHORITIES
1. Zoom out from picture of the Syrian president Bash...
PLEASE NOTE: THE MATERIAL WAS FILMED BY AN AP TELEVISION CREW UNDER SUPERVISION OF THE SYRIAN AUTHORITIES
1. Zoom out from picture of the Syrian president Bashar Assad in Sabee' Bahrat Square to demonstrators
2. Pan demonstrators gathering in square, holding flags, banners and pictures of Assad
3. Zoom out from pictures of Assad and of his late father former president Hafez Assad (in military fatigues) carried by the demonstrators.
4. Zoom out from picture of Bashar Assad to demonstrators
5. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox Pop, no name available:
"We are not against a multi-party system, but we will remain adhered to this party. We are with Syria; with the reforms proposed by the President"
6. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox Pop, no name available
"We are present here to confirm that we are behind the leadership of the Baath Party, and behind the leadership of President Bashar Assad. We are loyal to the party, attached to our leader. We all are gathering, millions of us to confirm our love for the country and the president."
7. Logo of the Baath Party
8. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox Pop, no name available
"Even though they cancelled the Article VIII (of the old 1973 Constitution which referred to the Baath party as the one which "leads the state and society"), we are still committed to our party. This party expresses our reality with the leadership of the president. We are still with him."
9. Wide of demonstration
10. Mid of demonstrators
STORYLINE:
Supporters of Syria's President Bashar Assad rallied in central Damascus on Saturday to commemorate the 65th anniversary of the foundation of his ruling Baath party.
Thousands gathered in the central square of Sabee' Bahrat to express their loyalty to the party led by two generations of the ruling Assad family.
Meanwhile on Saturday a Syrian government military offensive against rebel-held towns killed at least 28 people, according to opposition activists.
Assad's supporters said they remained loyal to the Baath party, which under a new 2012 Constitution will lose its right to single party rule.
Article VIII of the old 1973 Constitution stated that "The leading party in the society and the state is the Socialist Arab Baath Party." The abolition of this artcile is part of a series of recent reforms designed to appease the insurgency.
"We are not against a multi-party system, but we will remain adhered to this party. We are with Syria; with the reforms proposed by the President," one of the demonstrators told an AP crew filming under supervision of the authorities.
As Assad's supporters gathered in Damascus, activists said Syrian army tanks continued to shell northern towns just days ahead of an agreed truce.
President Assad has accepted a cease-fire deadline brokered by international envoy Kofi Annan, which calls for his forces to pull out of towns and cities by Tuesday and for both government and rebels to lay down their arms by 6am local time (0300GMT) Thursday.
However, satellite images of troop deployments posted online by the US have cast doubt on whether he intends to comply with an internationally sponsored peace plan.
The escalating violence of the past few days has fuelled accusations that Assad is rushing to stamp out as much of the year-old uprising against him as he can before next week's cease-fire.
The Syrian government said it has begun to withdraw forces ahead of the cease-fire but activists say no significant pullouts have taken place and troops, checkpoints and snipers remain in almost all major flashpoint towns and cities.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/6429570d4b005df9ed01c48bb6b33cc4
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Mass Rally To Mark 65 Years Of Ruling Baath Party
PLEASE NOTE: THE MATERIAL WAS FILMED BY AN AP TELEVISION CREW UNDER SUPERVISION OF THE SYRIAN AUTHORITIES
1. Zoom out from picture of the Syrian president Bashar Assad in Sabee' Bahrat Square to demonstrators
2. Pan demonstrators gathering in square, holding flags, banners and pictures of Assad
3. Zoom out from pictures of Assad and of his late father former president Hafez Assad (in military fatigues) carried by the demonstrators.
4. Zoom out from picture of Bashar Assad to demonstrators
5. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox Pop, no name available:
"We are not against a multi-party system, but we will remain adhered to this party. We are with Syria; with the reforms proposed by the President"
6. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox Pop, no name available
"We are present here to confirm that we are behind the leadership of the Baath Party, and behind the leadership of President Bashar Assad. We are loyal to the party, attached to our leader. We all are gathering, millions of us to confirm our love for the country and the president."
7. Logo of the Baath Party
8. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox Pop, no name available
"Even though they cancelled the Article VIII (of the old 1973 Constitution which referred to the Baath party as the one which "leads the state and society"), we are still committed to our party. This party expresses our reality with the leadership of the president. We are still with him."
9. Wide of demonstration
10. Mid of demonstrators
STORYLINE:
Supporters of Syria's President Bashar Assad rallied in central Damascus on Saturday to commemorate the 65th anniversary of the foundation of his ruling Baath party.
Thousands gathered in the central square of Sabee' Bahrat to express their loyalty to the party led by two generations of the ruling Assad family.
Meanwhile on Saturday a Syrian government military offensive against rebel-held towns killed at least 28 people, according to opposition activists.
Assad's supporters said they remained loyal to the Baath party, which under a new 2012 Constitution will lose its right to single party rule.
Article VIII of the old 1973 Constitution stated that "The leading party in the society and the state is the Socialist Arab Baath Party." The abolition of this artcile is part of a series of recent reforms designed to appease the insurgency.
"We are not against a multi-party system, but we will remain adhered to this party. We are with Syria; with the reforms proposed by the President," one of the demonstrators told an AP crew filming under supervision of the authorities.
As Assad's supporters gathered in Damascus, activists said Syrian army tanks continued to shell northern towns just days ahead of an agreed truce.
President Assad has accepted a cease-fire deadline brokered by international envoy Kofi Annan, which calls for his forces to pull out of towns and cities by Tuesday and for both government and rebels to lay down their arms by 6am local time (0300GMT) Thursday.
However, satellite images of troop deployments posted online by the US have cast doubt on whether he intends to comply with an internationally sponsored peace plan.
The escalating violence of the past few days has fuelled accusations that Assad is rushing to stamp out as much of the year-old uprising against him as he can before next week's cease-fire.
The Syrian government said it has begun to withdraw forces ahead of the cease-fire but activists say no significant pullouts have taken place and troops, checkpoints and snipers remain in almost all major flashpoint towns and cities.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/6429570d4b005df9ed01c48bb6b33cc4
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 30 Jul 2015
- views: 2
Iraqi Baath supporters in exile meet after Saddam's execution
1. Man walking across street into headquarters
2. Man enters Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
3. Exterior of Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
...
1. Man walking across street into headquarters
2. Man enters Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
3. Exterior of Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
4. People enter building
5. Various people inside of the building sitting in meeting room
6. Jordanian writer Insaf Kalaje drinking
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Insaf Kalaje, Jordanian writer:
"His death was a tragedy, but he was a great man so wish all to die (we all wish to die) the same (way) as him. It means to follow his principles and die the way he died."
8. Dr. Raja'e Naffa'a sat down with others
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Dr. Raja'e Naffa'a, Member of party
"The execution of the brave Arabic leader Saddam Hussein, you know, in this holiday feast and in these months, which is even the heart of any Muslims, it's not allowed in these months. This hurts all the Muslims' feelings and all the Arabic world. Actually this brave end to Saddam Hussein give us a symbol about his struggle against the Americans, against the imperialism, against the Zionism."
10. Pan of room
11. Set up of Ziad Al-Najdawi, one of Saddam's lawyers
12. SOUNDBITE, Ziad Al-Najdawi, one of Saddam's lawyers:
"We hope that the god accept him with the prophets with the good people, who are now in paradise - for the president and for his sons, god may accept them."
13. Various of street with Al-Husseini mosque in Amman
14. Vehicles driving down street
STORYLINE:
Dozens of people in Amman went to pay their condolences at the Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party on Sunday, following the execution of Saddam Hussein.
"His death was a tragedy, but he was a great man so wish all to die (we all wish to die) the same (way) as him. It means to follow his principles and die the way he died," Jordanian writer Insaf Kalaje, who attended the meeting told AP Television news.
"We hope that the god accept him with the prophets with the good people, who are now in paradise - for the president and for his sons, god may accept them," added Ziad Al-Najdawi, one of Saddam's lawyers.
At the meeting, a statement, said to be from previously unknown group of Iraqi Baathists pledging allegiance to Saddam Hussein's fugitive deputy Izzat Ibrahim, was released.
"In the name of Baghdad's Citizens Gathering, we pledge allegiance to General Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri as the legitimate president of Iraq and the chief of the armed forces," the statement read, apparently sent from the Baath party in Baghdad.
Ibrahim, Saddam's former deputy and now a fugitive with a 10 (m) million US dollars (7.59 (m) million euro) bounty on his head, has not been seen since the fall of Saddam's regime in April 2003.
He is believed to be leading Baathists participating in the insurgency which has left thousands of US and allied troops dead.
The Baath party was dissolved after Saddam's regime fell.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d91a4ca17549c753f96761c187228b7b
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Iraqi Baath Supporters In Exile Meet After Saddam's Execution
1. Man walking across street into headquarters
2. Man enters Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
3. Exterior of Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party
4. People enter building
5. Various people inside of the building sitting in meeting room
6. Jordanian writer Insaf Kalaje drinking
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Insaf Kalaje, Jordanian writer:
"His death was a tragedy, but he was a great man so wish all to die (we all wish to die) the same (way) as him. It means to follow his principles and die the way he died."
8. Dr. Raja'e Naffa'a sat down with others
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Dr. Raja'e Naffa'a, Member of party
"The execution of the brave Arabic leader Saddam Hussein, you know, in this holiday feast and in these months, which is even the heart of any Muslims, it's not allowed in these months. This hurts all the Muslims' feelings and all the Arabic world. Actually this brave end to Saddam Hussein give us a symbol about his struggle against the Americans, against the imperialism, against the Zionism."
10. Pan of room
11. Set up of Ziad Al-Najdawi, one of Saddam's lawyers
12. SOUNDBITE, Ziad Al-Najdawi, one of Saddam's lawyers:
"We hope that the god accept him with the prophets with the good people, who are now in paradise - for the president and for his sons, god may accept them."
13. Various of street with Al-Husseini mosque in Amman
14. Vehicles driving down street
STORYLINE:
Dozens of people in Amman went to pay their condolences at the Jordanian branch of Saddam's Baath party on Sunday, following the execution of Saddam Hussein.
"His death was a tragedy, but he was a great man so wish all to die (we all wish to die) the same (way) as him. It means to follow his principles and die the way he died," Jordanian writer Insaf Kalaje, who attended the meeting told AP Television news.
"We hope that the god accept him with the prophets with the good people, who are now in paradise - for the president and for his sons, god may accept them," added Ziad Al-Najdawi, one of Saddam's lawyers.
At the meeting, a statement, said to be from previously unknown group of Iraqi Baathists pledging allegiance to Saddam Hussein's fugitive deputy Izzat Ibrahim, was released.
"In the name of Baghdad's Citizens Gathering, we pledge allegiance to General Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri as the legitimate president of Iraq and the chief of the armed forces," the statement read, apparently sent from the Baath party in Baghdad.
Ibrahim, Saddam's former deputy and now a fugitive with a 10 (m) million US dollars (7.59 (m) million euro) bounty on his head, has not been seen since the fall of Saddam's regime in April 2003.
He is believed to be leading Baathists participating in the insurgency which has left thousands of US and allied troops dead.
The Baath party was dissolved after Saddam's regime fell.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/d91a4ca17549c753f96761c187228b7b
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 23 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Two days after receiving death sentence, Saddam back in court
1. Wide shot of defendants, defendant Sabir Abdul-Aziz al-Douri, former intelligence director, walking to seat
2. Chief Judge Mohammed Oreibi speaking
3. Def...
1. Wide shot of defendants, defendant Sabir Abdul-Aziz al-Douri, former intelligence director, walking to seat
2. Chief Judge Mohammed Oreibi speaking
3. Defendant, Ali Hassan al-Majeed, cousin of Saddam Hussein, senior Baath party member, seated in dock
4. Defendant, former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, seated in dock
5. Various of court session as defendants take their seats
6. Witness Qahar Khalil Mohammed speaking
7. Defendant, Tahir Taufiq, senior Baath party member
8. SOUNDBITE: (Kurdish) Kurdish witness: Qahar Khalil Mohammed:
++NOT VERBATIM - INCLUDES CUTAWAYS++
"When they fired in our direction, we all fell to the ground."
9. Chief Judge giving Saddam permission to talk, saying: "Please."
10. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, defendant and former Iraqi leader:
"All the complainers (witnesses) come to the court and talk freely without any objection and the court starts recording their testimonies. But no one, neither Arabs nor Kurds, uphold their testimonies. Is this the method that will help bring us to truth?"
11. Witness showing signs of torture in his back
12. Prosecutor talking
13. Wide shot of defendants (former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, bottom right; Farhan Mutlaq Saleh, bottom left; former Defence Minister Sultan Hashim, centre right; former senior officer Hussein Rasheed, centre centre; former intelligence director Sabir Abdul-Aziz al-Douri, centre left; senior Baath party member Tahir Taufiq, top right; cousin of Saddam Hussein and senior Baath party member Ali Hassan al-Majeed, top left)
STORYLINE:
Deposed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein returned to court in Baghdad on Tuesday for his genocide trial, two days after another panel convicted him of crimes against humanity and sentenced him to hang.
Saddam found his way quietly to his seat among the other six defendants charged in the Operation Anfal crackdown against Iraqi Kurds in the late 1980s.
The first witness of the day, Qahar Khalil Mohammed, told the court that he and other men from his village surrendered to Iraqi soldiers after being promised that Saddam had issued an amnesty for them.
Instead soldiers opened fire on the 33 men, killing many of them.
Mohammed said he was wounded but survived.
"When they fired in our direction, we all fell to the ground," he testified.
He said an Iraqi medical officer used a broken bottle to clean his wound and showed the court scars he said were caused in the incident.
Saddam complained respectfully to the judge that the witnesses were not giving incriminating testimony, and that they were not being adequately cross-examined.
The prosecution says about 180-thousand Kurds, most of them civilians, were killed in the crackdown in 1987-88.
The Anfal trial will continue while an appeal in the Dujail case is under way.
On Sunday, another five-judge panel convicted Saddam in the deaths of nearly 150 Shiite Muslims following a 1982 assassination attempt against him in the town of Dujail in 1982.
He and two others were sentenced to death by hanging.
Four co-defendants received lesser sentences and one was acquitted.
On Monday, the chief prosecutor in the Dujail case said a nine-judge appeals panel was expected to rule on Saddam's guilty verdict and death sentence by the middle of January.
That could set in motion a possible execution by mid-February.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f42684c6b078dc1e78c551d862e81fe9
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Two Days After Receiving Death Sentence, Saddam Back In Court
1. Wide shot of defendants, defendant Sabir Abdul-Aziz al-Douri, former intelligence director, walking to seat
2. Chief Judge Mohammed Oreibi speaking
3. Defendant, Ali Hassan al-Majeed, cousin of Saddam Hussein, senior Baath party member, seated in dock
4. Defendant, former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, seated in dock
5. Various of court session as defendants take their seats
6. Witness Qahar Khalil Mohammed speaking
7. Defendant, Tahir Taufiq, senior Baath party member
8. SOUNDBITE: (Kurdish) Kurdish witness: Qahar Khalil Mohammed:
++NOT VERBATIM - INCLUDES CUTAWAYS++
"When they fired in our direction, we all fell to the ground."
9. Chief Judge giving Saddam permission to talk, saying: "Please."
10. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, defendant and former Iraqi leader:
"All the complainers (witnesses) come to the court and talk freely without any objection and the court starts recording their testimonies. But no one, neither Arabs nor Kurds, uphold their testimonies. Is this the method that will help bring us to truth?"
11. Witness showing signs of torture in his back
12. Prosecutor talking
13. Wide shot of defendants (former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, bottom right; Farhan Mutlaq Saleh, bottom left; former Defence Minister Sultan Hashim, centre right; former senior officer Hussein Rasheed, centre centre; former intelligence director Sabir Abdul-Aziz al-Douri, centre left; senior Baath party member Tahir Taufiq, top right; cousin of Saddam Hussein and senior Baath party member Ali Hassan al-Majeed, top left)
STORYLINE:
Deposed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein returned to court in Baghdad on Tuesday for his genocide trial, two days after another panel convicted him of crimes against humanity and sentenced him to hang.
Saddam found his way quietly to his seat among the other six defendants charged in the Operation Anfal crackdown against Iraqi Kurds in the late 1980s.
The first witness of the day, Qahar Khalil Mohammed, told the court that he and other men from his village surrendered to Iraqi soldiers after being promised that Saddam had issued an amnesty for them.
Instead soldiers opened fire on the 33 men, killing many of them.
Mohammed said he was wounded but survived.
"When they fired in our direction, we all fell to the ground," he testified.
He said an Iraqi medical officer used a broken bottle to clean his wound and showed the court scars he said were caused in the incident.
Saddam complained respectfully to the judge that the witnesses were not giving incriminating testimony, and that they were not being adequately cross-examined.
The prosecution says about 180-thousand Kurds, most of them civilians, were killed in the crackdown in 1987-88.
The Anfal trial will continue while an appeal in the Dujail case is under way.
On Sunday, another five-judge panel convicted Saddam in the deaths of nearly 150 Shiite Muslims following a 1982 assassination attempt against him in the town of Dujail in 1982.
He and two others were sentenced to death by hanging.
Four co-defendants received lesser sentences and one was acquitted.
On Monday, the chief prosecutor in the Dujail case said a nine-judge appeals panel was expected to rule on Saddam's guilty verdict and death sentence by the middle of January.
That could set in motion a possible execution by mid-February.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/f42684c6b078dc1e78c551d862e81fe9
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 23 Jul 2015
- views: 0
IRAQ: SAADOUN HAMMADI ELECTED AS SPEAKER OF RULING BAATH PARTY
Natural Sound
Iraq's newly-elected National Assembly has elected Saadoun Hammadi as the new speaker of the ruling Baath party.
Hammadi, who was prime min...
Natural Sound
Iraq's newly-elected National Assembly has elected Saadoun Hammadi as the new speaker of the ruling Baath party.
Hammadi, who was prime minister from 1991 to 1993 and parliamentary speaker from 1984 to 1988, is a senior member of the ruling Baath Party.
Speaking after his election, he said United Nations-imposed trade sanctions had thrown many Iraqis into poverty, and he urged the assembly to make improving the economy a priority.
The Iraqi Parliament is packed with supporters of President Saddam Hussein - which is just as well as it's the president who makes all the important decisions.
Elections for the new Parliament were held on March 24th this year.
All 160 candidates of the ruling Baath party won seats plus 60 independents.
On Tuesday, they met to elect a new speaker.
Saadoun Hammadi, who was speaker of the 1984-1989 parliament, won 248 votes out of 250.
A loyal supporter of the president, he told the parliament he was dedicated to the principles of Saddam Hussein.
Hammadi blamed the United States and its Gulf War allies for the country's present plight.
The speaker made no mention of the current oil talks between Iraq and the United Nations.
The talks centre on a Security Council resolution allowing Iraq to sell 2 billion (b) dollars (d) worth of oil over six months to buy urgently-needed food and medicine.
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wn.com/Iraq Saadoun Hammadi Elected As Speaker Of Ruling Baath Party
Natural Sound
Iraq's newly-elected National Assembly has elected Saadoun Hammadi as the new speaker of the ruling Baath party.
Hammadi, who was prime minister from 1991 to 1993 and parliamentary speaker from 1984 to 1988, is a senior member of the ruling Baath Party.
Speaking after his election, he said United Nations-imposed trade sanctions had thrown many Iraqis into poverty, and he urged the assembly to make improving the economy a priority.
The Iraqi Parliament is packed with supporters of President Saddam Hussein - which is just as well as it's the president who makes all the important decisions.
Elections for the new Parliament were held on March 24th this year.
All 160 candidates of the ruling Baath party won seats plus 60 independents.
On Tuesday, they met to elect a new speaker.
Saadoun Hammadi, who was speaker of the 1984-1989 parliament, won 248 votes out of 250.
A loyal supporter of the president, he told the parliament he was dedicated to the principles of Saddam Hussein.
Hammadi blamed the United States and its Gulf War allies for the country's present plight.
The speaker made no mention of the current oil talks between Iraq and the United Nations.
The talks centre on a Security Council resolution allowing Iraq to sell 2 billion (b) dollars (d) worth of oil over six months to buy urgently-needed food and medicine.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/88aeb0019cb050740ad75f3572585b16
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
First public comments since weapons inspectors returned
1. Various of Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, smiling and greeting Baath Party leadership
2. Pan along leaders lining up to greet Saddam Hussein
3. Leaders l...
1. Various of Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, smiling and greeting Baath Party leadership
2. Pan along leaders lining up to greet Saddam Hussein
3. Leaders lined up, about to sit down
4. Mid shot Saddam Hussein speaking
5. Leaders listening
6. Wide shot Saddam Hussein speaking
7. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"We will try to avoid bringing harm on the Iraqi people. Some people might claim that the Iraqis didn't give the international community a suitable chance to resist, with tangible evidence, the American allegations that Iraq has developed weapons of mass destruction during the four year absence of UN inspectors. We will provide them with this chance."
8. Cutaway
9. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"It is the humane duty of any honourable and patriotic person wherever they are, to defend Iraq against the unjust, arrogant, debased American tyranny, and to bear what has gone on in the last 12 years, the attacks by the enemy and the sanctions."
10. Cutaway
11. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"We shall take the stand that befits our people, principles and mission. Victory will be yours."
12. Officials standing up
13. Wide shot Saddam Hussein standing up
STORYLINE:
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein urged the Iraqi people on Thursday to support the new UN arms inspections as an opportunity to disprove American allegations that his government harbours weapons of mass destruction.
In a holiday greeting to Iraqi military and political leaders, Saddam Hussein said he agreed to the inspections, in which one of his own palaces was searched, "to keep our people out of harm's way" in the face of US threats.
The Iraqi president's remarks contrasted sharply with a vice president's harsh words late on Wednesday about the inspections.
Taha Yassin Ramadan accused the UN monitors of being US and Israeli spies and of staging the presidential palace inspection as a provocation.
Saddam Hussein spoke at a gathering of the leadership of his Baath Party and the Iraqi military on the first morning of the three-day Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.
He denounced Washington as an "unjust, arrogant, debased American tyranny."
Then, turning to address US allegations that Iraq retains chemical and biological weapons, he said Iraqis wanted to disprove those claims after a four-year absence of UN weapons inspectors from their country.
Washington threatens to take military action against Iraq if, in the US view, it does not cooperate in the disarmament effort.
Alluding to eventual war, Saddam declared: "We shall take the stand that befits our people, principles
and mission. Victory will be yours."
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wn.com/First Public Comments Since Weapons Inspectors Returned
1. Various of Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, smiling and greeting Baath Party leadership
2. Pan along leaders lining up to greet Saddam Hussein
3. Leaders lined up, about to sit down
4. Mid shot Saddam Hussein speaking
5. Leaders listening
6. Wide shot Saddam Hussein speaking
7. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"We will try to avoid bringing harm on the Iraqi people. Some people might claim that the Iraqis didn't give the international community a suitable chance to resist, with tangible evidence, the American allegations that Iraq has developed weapons of mass destruction during the four year absence of UN inspectors. We will provide them with this chance."
8. Cutaway
9. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"It is the humane duty of any honourable and patriotic person wherever they are, to defend Iraq against the unjust, arrogant, debased American tyranny, and to bear what has gone on in the last 12 years, the attacks by the enemy and the sanctions."
10. Cutaway
11. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, Iraqi President:
"We shall take the stand that befits our people, principles and mission. Victory will be yours."
12. Officials standing up
13. Wide shot Saddam Hussein standing up
STORYLINE:
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein urged the Iraqi people on Thursday to support the new UN arms inspections as an opportunity to disprove American allegations that his government harbours weapons of mass destruction.
In a holiday greeting to Iraqi military and political leaders, Saddam Hussein said he agreed to the inspections, in which one of his own palaces was searched, "to keep our people out of harm's way" in the face of US threats.
The Iraqi president's remarks contrasted sharply with a vice president's harsh words late on Wednesday about the inspections.
Taha Yassin Ramadan accused the UN monitors of being US and Israeli spies and of staging the presidential palace inspection as a provocation.
Saddam Hussein spoke at a gathering of the leadership of his Baath Party and the Iraqi military on the first morning of the three-day Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.
He denounced Washington as an "unjust, arrogant, debased American tyranny."
Then, turning to address US allegations that Iraq retains chemical and biological weapons, he said Iraqis wanted to disprove those claims after a four-year absence of UN weapons inspectors from their country.
Washington threatens to take military action against Iraq if, in the US view, it does not cooperate in the disarmament effort.
Alluding to eventual war, Saddam declared: "We shall take the stand that befits our people, principles
and mission. Victory will be yours."
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
GWT: Newreaders reports death of senior Baath party leader
1. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Iraqi TV Presenter:
"We have just received this in the name of Allah the merciful, the compassionate. The leadership of the Baath Arabic...
1. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Iraqi TV Presenter:
"We have just received this in the name of Allah the merciful, the compassionate. The leadership of the Baath Arabic Socialist would like to extend its condolences to the brave Iraqi people and to the warriors of the Baath Arabic Socialist Party. The late hero comrade Nayif Shindakh Thamir, official in charge of the Baath Party organisations in Al-Najaf, was martyred while pursuing the enemy's criminal forces from the American-British forces alongside his comrades from the party and the people of Al-Najaf. The enemy forces were patrolling the area and carrying out reconnaissance work. The criminal force fled in fear and panic in front of the heroes of the people, the party, and the mujahidin. Please God be merciful on our martyrs and kill the enemies of our people. (Statement) issued by the command of the Baath Arabic Socialist Party/Iraq, 22 March 2003."
STORYLINE:
Iraqi state television has reported the death Nayif Shindakh Thamir, an official in charge of the Baath party organisations in Najaf on Saturday.
Thamir was reportedly killed in fighting near the Shi'ite holy city of Najaf, 150 kilometres from Baghdad.
It appears from the wording of the statement that the clashes were between US troops and Baath Party militiamen.
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wn.com/Gwt Newreaders Reports Death Of Senior Baath Party Leader
1. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Iraqi TV Presenter:
"We have just received this in the name of Allah the merciful, the compassionate. The leadership of the Baath Arabic Socialist would like to extend its condolences to the brave Iraqi people and to the warriors of the Baath Arabic Socialist Party. The late hero comrade Nayif Shindakh Thamir, official in charge of the Baath Party organisations in Al-Najaf, was martyred while pursuing the enemy's criminal forces from the American-British forces alongside his comrades from the party and the people of Al-Najaf. The enemy forces were patrolling the area and carrying out reconnaissance work. The criminal force fled in fear and panic in front of the heroes of the people, the party, and the mujahidin. Please God be merciful on our martyrs and kill the enemies of our people. (Statement) issued by the command of the Baath Arabic Socialist Party/Iraq, 22 March 2003."
STORYLINE:
Iraqi state television has reported the death Nayif Shindakh Thamir, an official in charge of the Baath party organisations in Najaf on Saturday.
Thamir was reportedly killed in fighting near the Shi'ite holy city of Najaf, 150 kilometres from Baghdad.
It appears from the wording of the statement that the clashes were between US troops and Baath Party militiamen.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Protestors attack statue of Baath Party founder
1. Statue of former Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Baqr with a man on top of its head beating it with a stick
2. Demonstrators around statue with banners
3....
1. Statue of former Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Baqr with a man on top of its head beating it with a stick
2. Demonstrators around statue with banners
3. Long shot of statue's head with a man standing there while hitting it with a shoe
4. Demonstrators holding banners calling for the removal of Ba'ath party members
5. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox pop:
"The person who started the crimes in Iraq was Ahmed Hassan Al Baqr because Saddam was working under his protection. The first crime committed by Al Baqr was executing one of our Sunni brothers Abdul Aziz al-Badri, the Sunni leader. He deported a lot of our religious leaders including Mahdi al-Hakim."
6. Wide reverse shot of statue with crowd around it
7. US troops watching
8. Crane knocking the head off the statue
9. People hitting the head with shoes, as it is carried away
10. A man holding up a plate with the portrait of President Abdul Karim Qasim who ruled in the late-1950s and others just visible giving the victory sign with their fingers
11. Body of statue being toppled
12. Wide of demonstrators surrounding the fallen statue
STORYLINE:
With the help of a crane, dozens of Iraqis chanting anti-Ba'ath Party slogans toppled a statue of former President Ahmed Hassan al-Baqr on Sunday in the upscale Baghdad district of al-Mansour.
At one stage a man stood on top of the statue and used his shoe to hit the bronze face.
Al-Baqr came to power in a 1968 coup and remained in office until 1979.
Saddam Hussein wielded vast influence during al-Baqr's years at the helm.
Saddam officially succeeded al-Baqr in 1979, becoming the head of the Baath Party as well.
Al-Baqr died in 1982.
Saddam remained in office for more than 23 years until being ousted last month, when American forces captured Baghdad in the coalition's war on Iraq.
The Ba'ath Party was banned by US authorities last week.
Graffiti at the base of al-Bakr's statue said: "Oh, Saddam, we shall avenge you."
It was dated April 28, Saddam's birthday. Saddam's own statues in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq have been toppled by crowds.
Most of the thousands of portraits, posters and murals bearing his image have either been defaced or destroyed.
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wn.com/Protestors Attack Statue Of Baath Party Founder
1. Statue of former Iraqi President Ahmed Hassan al-Baqr with a man on top of its head beating it with a stick
2. Demonstrators around statue with banners
3. Long shot of statue's head with a man standing there while hitting it with a shoe
4. Demonstrators holding banners calling for the removal of Ba'ath party members
5. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Vox pop:
"The person who started the crimes in Iraq was Ahmed Hassan Al Baqr because Saddam was working under his protection. The first crime committed by Al Baqr was executing one of our Sunni brothers Abdul Aziz al-Badri, the Sunni leader. He deported a lot of our religious leaders including Mahdi al-Hakim."
6. Wide reverse shot of statue with crowd around it
7. US troops watching
8. Crane knocking the head off the statue
9. People hitting the head with shoes, as it is carried away
10. A man holding up a plate with the portrait of President Abdul Karim Qasim who ruled in the late-1950s and others just visible giving the victory sign with their fingers
11. Body of statue being toppled
12. Wide of demonstrators surrounding the fallen statue
STORYLINE:
With the help of a crane, dozens of Iraqis chanting anti-Ba'ath Party slogans toppled a statue of former President Ahmed Hassan al-Baqr on Sunday in the upscale Baghdad district of al-Mansour.
At one stage a man stood on top of the statue and used his shoe to hit the bronze face.
Al-Baqr came to power in a 1968 coup and remained in office until 1979.
Saddam Hussein wielded vast influence during al-Baqr's years at the helm.
Saddam officially succeeded al-Baqr in 1979, becoming the head of the Baath Party as well.
Al-Baqr died in 1982.
Saddam remained in office for more than 23 years until being ousted last month, when American forces captured Baghdad in the coalition's war on Iraq.
The Ba'ath Party was banned by US authorities last week.
Graffiti at the base of al-Bakr's statue said: "Oh, Saddam, we shall avenge you."
It was dated April 28, Saddam's birthday. Saddam's own statues in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq have been toppled by crowds.
Most of the thousands of portraits, posters and murals bearing his image have either been defaced or destroyed.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 1
FILE Senior Baath Party leader now in US custody
US Pool
1. Playing card King of Diamonds featuring Aziz Saleh al-Numan, Baath Party Regional Chairman responsible for West Baghdad (one of pack of 55 playing c...
US Pool
1. Playing card King of Diamonds featuring Aziz Saleh al-Numan, Baath Party Regional Chairman responsible for West Baghdad (one of pack of 55 playing cards issued by U.S. Central Command of most wanted Iraqis)
2. Close up of still of al-Numan on card
APTN
FILE: Baghdad, 8 August 2002
3. Pull out Aziz Saleh al-Numan salutes marching volunteers (volunteers to defend Iraq)
4. Close up al-Numan speaking (UPSOUND: (Arabic) Aziz Saleh al-Numan, Member of the Arab Ba'ath Command
"We will fight the enemy. We fight them until death and martyrdom.")
STORYLINE:
US forces in Iraq say they captured a former senior Ba'ath Party leader on Thursday, one of 55 most wanted Iraqis featured in the pack of playing cards issued by the U.S. Central Command.
Aziz Saleh al-Numan was Number 8 on the list.
The announcement of his capture came as US General Tommy Franks, the top American commander, ordered all full Ba'ath members to identify themselves and await further instructions.
A former governor of Najaf, al-Numan is the highest-ranking of the 25 people taken into custody so far.
Central Command said coalition forces captured him on Wednesday near Baghdad but provided no other details.
Iraqi opposition groups have accused al-Numan, a Shiite, of playing a leading role in quelling the 1991 Shiite rebellion.
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wn.com/File Senior Baath Party Leader Now In US Custody
US Pool
1. Playing card King of Diamonds featuring Aziz Saleh al-Numan, Baath Party Regional Chairman responsible for West Baghdad (one of pack of 55 playing cards issued by U.S. Central Command of most wanted Iraqis)
2. Close up of still of al-Numan on card
APTN
FILE: Baghdad, 8 August 2002
3. Pull out Aziz Saleh al-Numan salutes marching volunteers (volunteers to defend Iraq)
4. Close up al-Numan speaking (UPSOUND: (Arabic) Aziz Saleh al-Numan, Member of the Arab Ba'ath Command
"We will fight the enemy. We fight them until death and martyrdom.")
STORYLINE:
US forces in Iraq say they captured a former senior Ba'ath Party leader on Thursday, one of 55 most wanted Iraqis featured in the pack of playing cards issued by the U.S. Central Command.
Aziz Saleh al-Numan was Number 8 on the list.
The announcement of his capture came as US General Tommy Franks, the top American commander, ordered all full Ba'ath members to identify themselves and await further instructions.
A former governor of Najaf, al-Numan is the highest-ranking of the 25 people taken into custody so far.
Central Command said coalition forces captured him on Wednesday near Baghdad but provided no other details.
Iraqi opposition groups have accused al-Numan, a Shiite, of playing a leading role in quelling the 1991 Shiite rebellion.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 1
WRAP Opposition parties meet to discuss future government, reax
1. Exterior of building
2. Jalal Talabani, of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan arrives for meeting
3. Iraqi security
4. Abdul Aziz al-Hakim arrives for mee...
1. Exterior of building
2. Jalal Talabani, of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan arrives for meeting
3. Iraqi security
4. Abdul Aziz al-Hakim arrives for meeting
5. Ahmad Chalabi, of the exiled opposition Iraqi National Congress arrives for meeting
6. Various wide shots of conference table with Jay Garner, ORHA's civilian administrator present
7. Wide shot of security men walking towards podium
8. Wide shot of journalists at news conference
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Jay Garner, ORHA's civilian administrator:
"Real quickly, just let me say that we had a very good meeting tonight we continue to discuss the process of raising a democracy in Kurdistan, I'm quite sure that is going to happen and there are many good things happening now. I think everyday gets just a little bit better."
10. Security men escorting officials
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Ahmad Chalabi, leader of Iraqi National Congress group:
"We had a useful and successful meeting of the leadership, we agreed to form a security committee to cooperate with the coalition forces to provide a larger measure of security for the people in Iraq. We discussed the expansion of leadership and we agreed to expand it to include two more members"
12. Cutaway of news journalists
13. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Aziz Al Hakim, leader of Islamic Revolution Higher Council:
"We talked and discussed in detail about the real problems that the Iraqi people suffer from. Firstly the political and sovereignty vacuum and secondly the problems of crime that most Iraqis are suffering from.
14. Cutaway of bank of cameras
STORYLINE:
Five longtime Iraqi opponents of Saddam Hussein agreed Thursday to broaden the membership of their informal council - the potential core of a new government - by adding an Iranian-backed Shiite group and the son of an old-guard democrat.
During a meeting with U.S. officials, the group also agreed to cooperate with American forces to improve security in lawless parts of the country.
"We agreed to form a security committee to cooperate with the coalition forces to provide a larger measure of security for the people in Iraq," said Ahmad Chalabi, head of the Iraqi National Congress - the powerful opposition group that spent years in exile.
Chalabi had been out of the country for decades and faced criticism - as he assumed a post-Saddam leadership role - for being out of touch with present-day Iraqi problems and politics.
The opposition figures joined forces with the Shiite group al-Dawa, which is based in the Iranian capital, Tehran, and with Naseer al-Chaderchi.
He is the son of Kamel al-Chaderchi, the leader of the National Democratic Party which was formed in the 1940s and played a leading role in Iraq's democratic development until 1968, when the Baath Party came to power and banned all other political parties.
Some have expressed concern that Iraqi exiles, who dominate Chalabi's INC and are a significant force in other anti-Saddam Hussein groups, could wield a disproportionate amount of power in a future Iraq government. But the Americans appeared optimistic.
"I think every day gets a little better," retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, the American who leads the civil administration, said as he left the meeting, refusing other comment.
Also at the talks were Massoud Barzani, head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party; Jalal Talabani, leader of the rival Patriotic Union of Kurdistan; Iyad Allawi, of the Iraqi National Accord; and Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, whose elder brother heads the Shiite Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Chalabi also said that he "discussed cooperation in intelligence" with the Americans.
Several Iraqis appointed by U.S. advisers to lead postwar ministries were members of Saddam's Baath Party.
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wn.com/Wrap Opposition Parties Meet To Discuss Future Government, Reax
1. Exterior of building
2. Jalal Talabani, of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan arrives for meeting
3. Iraqi security
4. Abdul Aziz al-Hakim arrives for meeting
5. Ahmad Chalabi, of the exiled opposition Iraqi National Congress arrives for meeting
6. Various wide shots of conference table with Jay Garner, ORHA's civilian administrator present
7. Wide shot of security men walking towards podium
8. Wide shot of journalists at news conference
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Jay Garner, ORHA's civilian administrator:
"Real quickly, just let me say that we had a very good meeting tonight we continue to discuss the process of raising a democracy in Kurdistan, I'm quite sure that is going to happen and there are many good things happening now. I think everyday gets just a little bit better."
10. Security men escorting officials
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Ahmad Chalabi, leader of Iraqi National Congress group:
"We had a useful and successful meeting of the leadership, we agreed to form a security committee to cooperate with the coalition forces to provide a larger measure of security for the people in Iraq. We discussed the expansion of leadership and we agreed to expand it to include two more members"
12. Cutaway of news journalists
13. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Abdul Aziz Al Hakim, leader of Islamic Revolution Higher Council:
"We talked and discussed in detail about the real problems that the Iraqi people suffer from. Firstly the political and sovereignty vacuum and secondly the problems of crime that most Iraqis are suffering from.
14. Cutaway of bank of cameras
STORYLINE:
Five longtime Iraqi opponents of Saddam Hussein agreed Thursday to broaden the membership of their informal council - the potential core of a new government - by adding an Iranian-backed Shiite group and the son of an old-guard democrat.
During a meeting with U.S. officials, the group also agreed to cooperate with American forces to improve security in lawless parts of the country.
"We agreed to form a security committee to cooperate with the coalition forces to provide a larger measure of security for the people in Iraq," said Ahmad Chalabi, head of the Iraqi National Congress - the powerful opposition group that spent years in exile.
Chalabi had been out of the country for decades and faced criticism - as he assumed a post-Saddam leadership role - for being out of touch with present-day Iraqi problems and politics.
The opposition figures joined forces with the Shiite group al-Dawa, which is based in the Iranian capital, Tehran, and with Naseer al-Chaderchi.
He is the son of Kamel al-Chaderchi, the leader of the National Democratic Party which was formed in the 1940s and played a leading role in Iraq's democratic development until 1968, when the Baath Party came to power and banned all other political parties.
Some have expressed concern that Iraqi exiles, who dominate Chalabi's INC and are a significant force in other anti-Saddam Hussein groups, could wield a disproportionate amount of power in a future Iraq government. But the Americans appeared optimistic.
"I think every day gets a little better," retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, the American who leads the civil administration, said as he left the meeting, refusing other comment.
Also at the talks were Massoud Barzani, head of the Kurdistan Democratic Party; Jalal Talabani, leader of the rival Patriotic Union of Kurdistan; Iyad Allawi, of the Iraqi National Accord; and Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, whose elder brother heads the Shiite Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Chalabi also said that he "discussed cooperation in intelligence" with the Americans.
Several Iraqis appointed by U.S. advisers to lead postwar ministries were members of Saddam's Baath Party.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
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Reaction to US order for Baath party to dissolve
Baghdad - May 9, 2003
1. Wide shot Freedom Square
2. Crowds gather around of what was Saddam's statue - graffiti on base says "All done, go home"
3. Leg of...
Baghdad - May 9, 2003
1. Wide shot Freedom Square
2. Crowds gather around of what was Saddam's statue - graffiti on base says "All done, go home"
3. Leg of Saddam's statue with people kicking it
4. People beating slipper on leg of Saddam's statue
FILE
5. Various Saddam meeting with senior Baath party members
Baghdad - May 11, 2003
6. Cutaway of Sethny being interviewed
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Zaab Sethny, Advisor to the National Iraqi Congress:
"The biggest immediate danger from the Baath Party and the pro-Saddam loyalists is the disruption of public order, of law and order and security and possible acts of terrorism to come. There's a fear, a general fear among the Iraqi people that Saddam and the Baath (Party) will come back. We don't believe that they will come back, we believe that Saddam's regime is finished. But we'd like to finish it once and for all by finding Saddam and his close associates and by uprooting the remnants of his regime."
8. Wide shot of Iraqi Congress Headquarters building
9. Set up shot Adnan Panchachi, Former Iraqi Foreign Minister
10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adnan Panchachi, Former Iraqi Foreign Minister:
"It is quite possible that some officials who served the previous regime, in some capacity or another the administration, who are not implicated in the crimes committted by the regime, crimes against humanity and other things... quite probably, some of them could be retained, I don't know. I mean each case has to be examined separately on its own merits."
10. Close up of his hands
STORYLINE:
The US general who commanded the Iraq war issued a statement on Sunday saying Saddam Hussein's Baath Party was "dissolved," and he ordered the political organisation that ruled the country for 35 years to cease existence.
The message from General Tommy Franks, commander of coalition forces, was read over US-controlled Information Radio on Sunday afternoon.
A spokesman for the Iraqi National Congress, a London-based, US-backed opposition group, said a priority was to uproot all former members of the Baath Party to prove to the Iraqi people that Saddam and his regime were finished for good.
A former Iraqi Foreign Minister said that some Baath Party members might be allowed back into the administration at some point.
Adnan Pachachi said it would be on a case-by-case basis, but because membership was essential for many professionals such as doctors, he said not all former members should automatically be ruled out.
Pachachi, the exiled former Foreign Minister, has returned to Iraq after 30 years and says he wants to be involved in a new Iraqi government but only if he is elected.
In the weeks since fighting ebbed, the US occupying force's administration has moved to appoint its own overseers to government ministries and bring people back to work with an eye toward excluding Baathists who worked closely with the Saddam regime.
However, membership or affiliation with the party was required for many if not most white-collar jobs, and American officials have acknowledged that purging Baathists from the ranks of Iraq's civil service may be neither possible nor desirable.
Unseating the Baath was considered a top priority of American military planners in the runup to the Iraq war, which began on March 20 and had largely ended by mid-April.
The order by General Franks is in some ways a formality, given that the Baath-controlled government has been overthrown and both the American military and its civilian administrative counterparts have occupied the country.
But some upper-level Baath government and party leaders, including Saddam himself, remain either unaccounted for or on the run.
The United States says it has made a priority of tracking them down.
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wn.com/Reaction To US Order For Baath Party To Dissolve
Baghdad - May 9, 2003
1. Wide shot Freedom Square
2. Crowds gather around of what was Saddam's statue - graffiti on base says "All done, go home"
3. Leg of Saddam's statue with people kicking it
4. People beating slipper on leg of Saddam's statue
FILE
5. Various Saddam meeting with senior Baath party members
Baghdad - May 11, 2003
6. Cutaway of Sethny being interviewed
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Zaab Sethny, Advisor to the National Iraqi Congress:
"The biggest immediate danger from the Baath Party and the pro-Saddam loyalists is the disruption of public order, of law and order and security and possible acts of terrorism to come. There's a fear, a general fear among the Iraqi people that Saddam and the Baath (Party) will come back. We don't believe that they will come back, we believe that Saddam's regime is finished. But we'd like to finish it once and for all by finding Saddam and his close associates and by uprooting the remnants of his regime."
8. Wide shot of Iraqi Congress Headquarters building
9. Set up shot Adnan Panchachi, Former Iraqi Foreign Minister
10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Adnan Panchachi, Former Iraqi Foreign Minister:
"It is quite possible that some officials who served the previous regime, in some capacity or another the administration, who are not implicated in the crimes committted by the regime, crimes against humanity and other things... quite probably, some of them could be retained, I don't know. I mean each case has to be examined separately on its own merits."
10. Close up of his hands
STORYLINE:
The US general who commanded the Iraq war issued a statement on Sunday saying Saddam Hussein's Baath Party was "dissolved," and he ordered the political organisation that ruled the country for 35 years to cease existence.
The message from General Tommy Franks, commander of coalition forces, was read over US-controlled Information Radio on Sunday afternoon.
A spokesman for the Iraqi National Congress, a London-based, US-backed opposition group, said a priority was to uproot all former members of the Baath Party to prove to the Iraqi people that Saddam and his regime were finished for good.
A former Iraqi Foreign Minister said that some Baath Party members might be allowed back into the administration at some point.
Adnan Pachachi said it would be on a case-by-case basis, but because membership was essential for many professionals such as doctors, he said not all former members should automatically be ruled out.
Pachachi, the exiled former Foreign Minister, has returned to Iraq after 30 years and says he wants to be involved in a new Iraqi government but only if he is elected.
In the weeks since fighting ebbed, the US occupying force's administration has moved to appoint its own overseers to government ministries and bring people back to work with an eye toward excluding Baathists who worked closely with the Saddam regime.
However, membership or affiliation with the party was required for many if not most white-collar jobs, and American officials have acknowledged that purging Baathists from the ranks of Iraq's civil service may be neither possible nor desirable.
Unseating the Baath was considered a top priority of American military planners in the runup to the Iraq war, which began on March 20 and had largely ended by mid-April.
The order by General Franks is in some ways a formality, given that the Baath-controlled government has been overthrown and both the American military and its civilian administrative counterparts have occupied the country.
But some upper-level Baath government and party leaders, including Saddam himself, remain either unaccounted for or on the run.
The United States says it has made a priority of tracking them down.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Civilian admin chief on developments in Iraq
1. Wide shot of Bremer entering news journalists
2. Cutaway of journalists
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"Encouraging robust ...
1. Wide shot of Bremer entering news journalists
2. Cutaway of journalists
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"Encouraging robust trade between Iraq and the rest of the world will be a key element of our strategy. And so today I want to announce that we will be setting up a new trade credit facility. It will provide trade credit for exports to Iraq within weeks. Support for this facility will come from many private banks and from the central bank of Iraq. I might note that a vault of the central bank which has been submerged underwater since yesterday has been open and 250 (m) million dollars recovered undamaged".
4. Wide of news conference
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"I am today establishing an Iraqi de-Baathification council to advise me on how best to implement the de-Baathification policies and to ensure the structure and influence of the Baath Party is eliminated for good. And this council, which will be made up of Iraqis, will also help the coalition reclaim the assets of the Baath party to the Iraqi people. Another step to ensure that the future of Iraq is much brighter than the past".
6. Cutaway of news conference
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"We normally associate Memorial Day of course with American service men and women, their sacrifice and those of their families, but today I also want to remember the other coalition service men and women who fell in this struggle as well, of course, of the thousands of Iraqis of the years who were killed by Saddam so that the Baath party could stay in power".
8. Cutaway of news conference
9. Wide shot of Bremer leaving news conference
STORYLINE:
While acknowledging that the situation in Iraq remains far from ideal, Paul Bremer, Iraq's US governor, said on Monday that occupying forces have done a great deal to re-establish stability and will be pushing to help the nation rebuild its economy.
Bremer said the UN Security Council's decision last week to lift 13 years of economic sanctions imposed against Saddam Hussein's regime had "brought Iraq out of the darkness of international isolation."
More than seven weeks after Saddam was ousted from power by American forces, Baghdad remains a deeply troubled city.
Trade credits for exports to Iraq are to be issued which, Bremer noted, could be partly funded by the recent discovery of 250 (m) million dollars in an Iraqi central bank vault.
A so-called "de-Baathification" council is to be established with the aim of eliminating Saddam Hussein's former party from Iraq.
Finally, Bremer mentioned the United States' Memorial Day holiday, which he said this year wouldn't just commemorate American service men and women but those Iraqis who died at the hands of Saddam's regime.
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wn.com/Civilian Admin Chief On Developments In Iraq
1. Wide shot of Bremer entering news journalists
2. Cutaway of journalists
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"Encouraging robust trade between Iraq and the rest of the world will be a key element of our strategy. And so today I want to announce that we will be setting up a new trade credit facility. It will provide trade credit for exports to Iraq within weeks. Support for this facility will come from many private banks and from the central bank of Iraq. I might note that a vault of the central bank which has been submerged underwater since yesterday has been open and 250 (m) million dollars recovered undamaged".
4. Wide of news conference
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"I am today establishing an Iraqi de-Baathification council to advise me on how best to implement the de-Baathification policies and to ensure the structure and influence of the Baath Party is eliminated for good. And this council, which will be made up of Iraqis, will also help the coalition reclaim the assets of the Baath party to the Iraqi people. Another step to ensure that the future of Iraq is much brighter than the past".
6. Cutaway of news conference
7. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Bremer, top US official in Iraq:
"We normally associate Memorial Day of course with American service men and women, their sacrifice and those of their families, but today I also want to remember the other coalition service men and women who fell in this struggle as well, of course, of the thousands of Iraqis of the years who were killed by Saddam so that the Baath party could stay in power".
8. Cutaway of news conference
9. Wide shot of Bremer leaving news conference
STORYLINE:
While acknowledging that the situation in Iraq remains far from ideal, Paul Bremer, Iraq's US governor, said on Monday that occupying forces have done a great deal to re-establish stability and will be pushing to help the nation rebuild its economy.
Bremer said the UN Security Council's decision last week to lift 13 years of economic sanctions imposed against Saddam Hussein's regime had "brought Iraq out of the darkness of international isolation."
More than seven weeks after Saddam was ousted from power by American forces, Baghdad remains a deeply troubled city.
Trade credits for exports to Iraq are to be issued which, Bremer noted, could be partly funded by the recent discovery of 250 (m) million dollars in an Iraqi central bank vault.
A so-called "de-Baathification" council is to be established with the aim of eliminating Saddam Hussein's former party from Iraq.
Finally, Bremer mentioned the United States' Memorial Day holiday, which he said this year wouldn't just commemorate American service men and women but those Iraqis who died at the hands of Saddam's regime.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
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Thursday is anniversary of 1968 Baath revolution
Baghdad, Iraq - 16 July 2003
1. US soldier on tank in central Baghdad
2. Mid shot tank and soldier
3. Close up of machine gunner on tank
4. Wide of street
...
Baghdad, Iraq - 16 July 2003
1. US soldier on tank in central Baghdad
2. Mid shot tank and soldier
3. Close up of machine gunner on tank
4. Wide of street
5. People in cafe
6. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Mashaad, Vox Pop:
"At night we have to be inside by eight or nine o'clock, there is no security, we don't feel safe. When Saddam was in power it was safe, you could walk around the streets at night without any problem."
7. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Abdul Karim Ali Qasem, Vox Pop:
"We are products of our time. Saddam has gone, we suffered from war for thirty-five years against Iran and Kuwait as well as thirteen years of sanctions. I am a high school teacher. I used to earn 12-thousand dinars and now I earn 300-thousand. I think life has got much better."
8. Men in cafe playing backgammon
9. Various of political party offices - now legal after the fall of Saddam
Iraqi TV
Baghdad - File, 17 July 2002
10. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, then President of Iraq:
"Temmuz (July Revolution) returns to say to all evil, tyrants and oppressors of the world: You will never defeat me this time. Never! Even if you come together from all over the world, and invite all the devils as well, to stand by you.
11. Various of Saddam greeting members of the Iraqi army.
STORYLINE:
In Saddam's Iraq the 17th of July was the country's biggest holiday, the anniversary of the day the Ba'ath party came to power in 1968.
Saddam became president eleven years later and set the country on the path of conflict with its neighbours.
Under Saddam the day was marked with celebrations and praise for the dictator.
Last year, Saddam used to occasion to make a televised speech in which he spoke defiantly: saying the United States and its allies would not be able to topple his regime.
This year, after Saddam's fall from power, Iraqis are reflecting on how their lives have changed and on whether things were better or worse under the old regime.
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wn.com/Thursday Is Anniversary Of 1968 Baath Revolution
Baghdad, Iraq - 16 July 2003
1. US soldier on tank in central Baghdad
2. Mid shot tank and soldier
3. Close up of machine gunner on tank
4. Wide of street
5. People in cafe
6. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Mashaad, Vox Pop:
"At night we have to be inside by eight or nine o'clock, there is no security, we don't feel safe. When Saddam was in power it was safe, you could walk around the streets at night without any problem."
7. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) Abdul Karim Ali Qasem, Vox Pop:
"We are products of our time. Saddam has gone, we suffered from war for thirty-five years against Iran and Kuwait as well as thirteen years of sanctions. I am a high school teacher. I used to earn 12-thousand dinars and now I earn 300-thousand. I think life has got much better."
8. Men in cafe playing backgammon
9. Various of political party offices - now legal after the fall of Saddam
Iraqi TV
Baghdad - File, 17 July 2002
10. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Saddam Hussein, then President of Iraq:
"Temmuz (July Revolution) returns to say to all evil, tyrants and oppressors of the world: You will never defeat me this time. Never! Even if you come together from all over the world, and invite all the devils as well, to stand by you.
11. Various of Saddam greeting members of the Iraqi army.
STORYLINE:
In Saddam's Iraq the 17th of July was the country's biggest holiday, the anniversary of the day the Ba'ath party came to power in 1968.
Saddam became president eleven years later and set the country on the path of conflict with its neighbours.
Under Saddam the day was marked with celebrations and praise for the dictator.
Last year, Saddam used to occasion to make a televised speech in which he spoke defiantly: saying the United States and its allies would not be able to topple his regime.
This year, after Saddam's fall from power, Iraqis are reflecting on how their lives have changed and on whether things were better or worse under the old regime.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Baath party member killed
1. Crime scene with American soldiers, Iraqi police and body on the ground
2. Body on the ground
3. Body with blanket over him
4. Body with police tape block...
1. Crime scene with American soldiers, Iraqi police and body on the ground
2. Body on the ground
3. Body with blanket over him
4. Body with police tape blocking the crime scene
5. Prayer beads and blood on the ground
6. Blood on the ground
7. Pan to US Humvee
8. Crowd gathers around the body
9. Dead man's wife identifies him and cries
10. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Victim's Nephew (no name given):
"He was just a member like any other member of the party (he means BAATH PARTY)
11. Wide shot of the Al Rashad Police Station in Baghdad
12. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) First Lt. Ali Abbas Hassan, Rashad Police Force:
"Two persons shot this man dead. His name is Subhi Sattam Guood. They shot him with four bullets from a pistol 8.5 mms. This is just a revenge incident
more or less. It's not a robbery or theft related."
13. UPSOUND "What do you mean by revenge?"
14. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) First Lt. Ali Abbas Hassan, Rashid Police Force:
"That means that he's suspected of being a former member of the Baath Party."
15. Policeman noting details next to covered corpse
16. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Unnamed witness
"They picked up his wallet to look for his identity and they found about fifteen hundred US dollars and twenty five thousand dinars. Nobody (meaning those who killed him) touched the money. It's just plain murder."
17. Truck carrying the corpse drives off
STORYLINE:
An Iraqi man was murdered in broad daylight in Bahgdad on Saturday as he was getting out of a minibus.
Two men shot Subhi Sattam Guood from a car with an 8.5 mm pistol, according to eyewitnesses and the police.
The victim's nephew, who reached the crime scene shortly after the shooting, said Subhi Sattam Guood was killed because he was a member of the former ruling Baath party.
The policeman leading the investigation said the murder was "just a revenge incident", not a robbery.
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wn.com/Baath Party Member Killed
1. Crime scene with American soldiers, Iraqi police and body on the ground
2. Body on the ground
3. Body with blanket over him
4. Body with police tape blocking the crime scene
5. Prayer beads and blood on the ground
6. Blood on the ground
7. Pan to US Humvee
8. Crowd gathers around the body
9. Dead man's wife identifies him and cries
10. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Victim's Nephew (no name given):
"He was just a member like any other member of the party (he means BAATH PARTY)
11. Wide shot of the Al Rashad Police Station in Baghdad
12. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) First Lt. Ali Abbas Hassan, Rashad Police Force:
"Two persons shot this man dead. His name is Subhi Sattam Guood. They shot him with four bullets from a pistol 8.5 mms. This is just a revenge incident
more or less. It's not a robbery or theft related."
13. UPSOUND "What do you mean by revenge?"
14. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic) First Lt. Ali Abbas Hassan, Rashid Police Force:
"That means that he's suspected of being a former member of the Baath Party."
15. Policeman noting details next to covered corpse
16. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Unnamed witness
"They picked up his wallet to look for his identity and they found about fifteen hundred US dollars and twenty five thousand dinars. Nobody (meaning those who killed him) touched the money. It's just plain murder."
17. Truck carrying the corpse drives off
STORYLINE:
An Iraqi man was murdered in broad daylight in Bahgdad on Saturday as he was getting out of a minibus.
Two men shot Subhi Sattam Guood from a car with an 8.5 mm pistol, according to eyewitnesses and the police.
The victim's nephew, who reached the crime scene shortly after the shooting, said Subhi Sattam Guood was killed because he was a member of the former ruling Baath party.
The policeman leading the investigation said the murder was "just a revenge incident", not a robbery.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/63382d773f0efc49ef093cf33bf83d60
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
US announces arrest of highly sought Baath Party official
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt, US Army (partially overlaid with Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad picture):
"As a result of aggressive operatio...
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt, US Army (partially overlaid with Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad picture):
"As a result of aggressive operations this week, the coalition announces the capture of Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad, number 54 in the coalition 55 deck of cards list. Khamis was captured as a result of a combined operation by the 82nd airborne division, and special operations forces. He was captured January 11th in the vicinity of al-Ramadi, and is currently in coalition custody. (camera pans to still of Khamis on screen, zooms in) With the capture of number 54 we have taken another significant step in reducing anti-coalition resistance. He was an enabler for many of the resistance attacks on Iraqis, as well as US and coalition forces. These attacks were crimes against the Iraqi people. The coalition and the Governing Council have the resolve to see this process through to the end. Former regime elements that support violence, jihadists and terrorists have no place in a free and democratic Iraq. (returns to wide shot of Kimmitt) The coalition is committed to pursuing the remaining fugitives on the list until all are brought to justice."
STORYLINE:
US paratroopers have captured a former Baath Party official who was No. 54 on the list of 55 most wanted figures from Saddam Hussein's regime, US officials announced on Wednesday.
Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad, a former regional Baath Party chairman and militia commander, was arrested on Sunday in the Ramadi area west of Baghdad, according to Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt.
Kimmitt refused to discuss further details of the arrest.
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wn.com/US Announces Arrest Of Highly Sought Baath Party Official
1. SOUNDBITE (English) Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt, US Army (partially overlaid with Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad picture):
"As a result of aggressive operations this week, the coalition announces the capture of Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad, number 54 in the coalition 55 deck of cards list. Khamis was captured as a result of a combined operation by the 82nd airborne division, and special operations forces. He was captured January 11th in the vicinity of al-Ramadi, and is currently in coalition custody. (camera pans to still of Khamis on screen, zooms in) With the capture of number 54 we have taken another significant step in reducing anti-coalition resistance. He was an enabler for many of the resistance attacks on Iraqis, as well as US and coalition forces. These attacks were crimes against the Iraqi people. The coalition and the Governing Council have the resolve to see this process through to the end. Former regime elements that support violence, jihadists and terrorists have no place in a free and democratic Iraq. (returns to wide shot of Kimmitt) The coalition is committed to pursuing the remaining fugitives on the list until all are brought to justice."
STORYLINE:
US paratroopers have captured a former Baath Party official who was No. 54 on the list of 55 most wanted figures from Saddam Hussein's regime, US officials announced on Wednesday.
Khamis Sirhan al-Muhammad, a former regional Baath Party chairman and militia commander, was arrested on Sunday in the Ramadi area west of Baghdad, according to Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt.
Kimmitt refused to discuss further details of the arrest.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Iraqi police hold senior Baath party member
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL...
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL of Abdul Razaq
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"We catch Mohammad, we catch him in one of his house, we watch him 10 days, and now we do it, and we have the team, the command is Dave and Jimmy Steel and Kaufman, who work together, and we have good team to go and attack and catch Mohammad Zimam."
7. Various shots of Ibrahim sitting with Abdul Razaq
8. Wide shot beginning of press conference, Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt (U.S. military spokesman), Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister, and another official sit down
9. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic, followed by English translation) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"Of course he was very loyal to the tyrant Saddam, and he had his own personal prison behind (inaudible). They called it the special investigative unit. It had cages that were used by dogs previously. However it used to be used (by him) to hold innocent people. Hence he is a person that is known by the crime he has committed against the Iraqi people and the world."
10. Wide shot press conference
11. Journalists with photo of Abdul Razaq behind
12. End of press conference
STORYLINE
Iraqi police on Sunday arrested a former Ba''ath Party chairman who was one of 11 fugitives still at large from the US military''s list of the 55 most wanted members of Saddam Hussein''s regime, the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.
Mohammed Zimam Abdul Razaq - who was Number 41 on the list and the four of spades in the military''s "deck of cards" of wanted men - was captured at one of his homes in western Baghdad, deputy Interior Minister Ahmed Kadhum Ibrahim told journalists.
Abdul-Razaq did not resist arrest, he said.
Abdul-Razaq was sitting next to Ibrahim, wearing a traditional black robe.
Abdul-Razaq was the Ba''ath Party regional chairman in the northern provinces of Nineveh and Tamim, which include the city of Kirkuk.
The US military has offered a one (m) million (US) dollar reward for all those still at large on the list.
During a ceremony to present Abdul Razaq to reporters, Ibrahim appealed to the most sought after regime fugitive, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, to surrender.
Ibrahim promised al-Douri, the former vice chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Command Council, that is he turned himself in and he would be treated with dignity.
At a later press conference, Ibrahim talked in more detail about the crimes Abdul Razaq is wanted for.
He said the captive was a Saddam loyalist, who kept innocent people in cages meant for dogs, in a prison euphemistically called the ''special investigative unit''.
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wn.com/Iraqi Police Hold Senior Baath Party Member
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL of Abdul Razaq
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"We catch Mohammad, we catch him in one of his house, we watch him 10 days, and now we do it, and we have the team, the command is Dave and Jimmy Steel and Kaufman, who work together, and we have good team to go and attack and catch Mohammad Zimam."
7. Various shots of Ibrahim sitting with Abdul Razaq
8. Wide shot beginning of press conference, Brigadier General Mark Kimmitt (U.S. military spokesman), Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister, and another official sit down
9. SOUNDBITE: (Arabic, followed by English translation) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"Of course he was very loyal to the tyrant Saddam, and he had his own personal prison behind (inaudible). They called it the special investigative unit. It had cages that were used by dogs previously. However it used to be used (by him) to hold innocent people. Hence he is a person that is known by the crime he has committed against the Iraqi people and the world."
10. Wide shot press conference
11. Journalists with photo of Abdul Razaq behind
12. End of press conference
STORYLINE
Iraqi police on Sunday arrested a former Ba''ath Party chairman who was one of 11 fugitives still at large from the US military''s list of the 55 most wanted members of Saddam Hussein''s regime, the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.
Mohammed Zimam Abdul Razaq - who was Number 41 on the list and the four of spades in the military''s "deck of cards" of wanted men - was captured at one of his homes in western Baghdad, deputy Interior Minister Ahmed Kadhum Ibrahim told journalists.
Abdul-Razaq did not resist arrest, he said.
Abdul-Razaq was sitting next to Ibrahim, wearing a traditional black robe.
Abdul-Razaq was the Ba''ath Party regional chairman in the northern provinces of Nineveh and Tamim, which include the city of Kirkuk.
The US military has offered a one (m) million (US) dollar reward for all those still at large on the list.
During a ceremony to present Abdul Razaq to reporters, Ibrahim appealed to the most sought after regime fugitive, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, to surrender.
Ibrahim promised al-Douri, the former vice chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Command Council, that is he turned himself in and he would be treated with dignity.
At a later press conference, Ibrahim talked in more detail about the crimes Abdul Razaq is wanted for.
He said the captive was a Saddam loyalist, who kept innocent people in cages meant for dogs, in a prison euphemistically called the ''special investigative unit''.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/8f320230916b8ed7192ae932e0b88fcd
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Iraqi police hold senior Baath party member
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL...
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL of Abdul Razaq
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"We catch Mohammad, we catch him in one of his house, we watch him 10 days, and now we do it, and we have the team, the command is Dave and Jimmy Steel and Kaufman, who work together, and we have good team to go and attack and catch Mohammad Zimam."
7. Various shots of Ibrahim sitting with Abdul Razaq
STORYLINE
Iraqi police on Sunday arrested a former Ba''ath Party chairman who was one of 11 fugitives still at large from the US military''s list of the 55 most wanted members of Saddam Hussein''s regime, the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.
Mohammed Zimam Abdul Razaq - who was Number 41 on the list and the four of spades in the military''s "deck of cards" of wanted men - was captured at one of his homes in western Baghdad, deputy Interior Minister Ahmed Kadhum Ibrahim told journalists.
Abdul-Razaq did not resist arrest, he said.
Abdul-Razaq was sitting next to Ibrahim, wearing a traditional black robe.
Abdul-Razaq was the Ba''ath Party regional chairman in the northern provinces of Nineveh and Tamim, which include the city of Kirkuk.
The US military has offered a one (m) million reward for all those still at large on the list.
During a ceremony to present Abdul-Razaq to reporters, Ibrahim appealed to the most sought after regime fugitive, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, to surrender.
Ibrahim promised al-Douri, the former vice chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Command Council, to turn himself in and he would be treated with dignity.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/244f92986038e25e6506f51f8e35e816
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wn.com/Iraqi Police Hold Senior Baath Party Member
1. Mohammad Zimam Abdul Razaq (centre, wearing head dress)
2. Razaq
3. Close up hands, tilt up Abdul Razaq
4. STILL of Abdul Razaq in deck of cards
5. STILL of Abdul Razaq
6. SOUNDBITE (English) Ahmed Khadum Ibrahim, Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister:
"We catch Mohammad, we catch him in one of his house, we watch him 10 days, and now we do it, and we have the team, the command is Dave and Jimmy Steel and Kaufman, who work together, and we have good team to go and attack and catch Mohammad Zimam."
7. Various shots of Ibrahim sitting with Abdul Razaq
STORYLINE
Iraqi police on Sunday arrested a former Ba''ath Party chairman who was one of 11 fugitives still at large from the US military''s list of the 55 most wanted members of Saddam Hussein''s regime, the Iraqi Interior Ministry said.
Mohammed Zimam Abdul Razaq - who was Number 41 on the list and the four of spades in the military''s "deck of cards" of wanted men - was captured at one of his homes in western Baghdad, deputy Interior Minister Ahmed Kadhum Ibrahim told journalists.
Abdul-Razaq did not resist arrest, he said.
Abdul-Razaq was sitting next to Ibrahim, wearing a traditional black robe.
Abdul-Razaq was the Ba''ath Party regional chairman in the northern provinces of Nineveh and Tamim, which include the city of Kirkuk.
The US military has offered a one (m) million reward for all those still at large on the list.
During a ceremony to present Abdul-Razaq to reporters, Ibrahim appealed to the most sought after regime fugitive, Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, to surrender.
Ibrahim promised al-Douri, the former vice chairman of the ruling Revolutionary Command Council, to turn himself in and he would be treated with dignity.
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/244f92986038e25e6506f51f8e35e816
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
Baath Party Headquarters On Fire, Interior Of One Of Saddam's Palaces, Us Checkpoint On The Outskirt
APTN
15.4.03 Baghdad
Knocked over sign "Saddam City" outside burning Baath party headquarters
Various of building on fire
15.4.03 Tikrit, Iraq
[Interior o...
APTN
15.4.03 Baghdad
Knocked over sign "Saddam City" outside burning Baath party headquarters
Various of building on fire
15.4.03 Tikrit, Iraq
[Interior of one of Saddam's palaces]
US marine sitting on APC in front of statue of Saddam Hussein on horseback
Statue of Saddam
Wide of part of Saddam's palace complex with US truck in front
Damage to roof
Chandeliers hanging above damaged staircase
Marine walking past damage
Wide shot
15.4.03 Kirkuk, Iraq
Cars at a US checkpoint on the outskirts of Kirkuk
Close-up barbed wire
Various shops which have reopened for business
Man sweeping up rubbish on street
15.4.03 Nasiriyah, Iraq
[Locals protest unfair representation at opposition meeting]
Various of demonstration
Men chanting
Koran held aloft
Leader addressing crowd
BREAK.....
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/fef36866117c01f38b9447dd1844ba90
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
wn.com/Baath Party Headquarters On Fire, Interior Of One Of Saddam's Palaces, US Checkpoint On The Outskirt
APTN
15.4.03 Baghdad
Knocked over sign "Saddam City" outside burning Baath party headquarters
Various of building on fire
15.4.03 Tikrit, Iraq
[Interior of one of Saddam's palaces]
US marine sitting on APC in front of statue of Saddam Hussein on horseback
Statue of Saddam
Wide of part of Saddam's palace complex with US truck in front
Damage to roof
Chandeliers hanging above damaged staircase
Marine walking past damage
Wide shot
15.4.03 Kirkuk, Iraq
Cars at a US checkpoint on the outskirts of Kirkuk
Close-up barbed wire
Various shops which have reopened for business
Man sweeping up rubbish on street
15.4.03 Nasiriyah, Iraq
[Locals protest unfair representation at opposition meeting]
Various of demonstration
Men chanting
Koran held aloft
Leader addressing crowd
BREAK.....
You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/fef36866117c01f38b9447dd1844ba90
Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork
- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 0
-
Flashpoint Golan: Baath Party Unification 1b
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Flashpoint Golan: Baath Party Unification - 2
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Flashpoint Golan: Baath Party Unification - 3 & wrap
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Qur'an Points to Baath Party, Saddam, Bashar, Russia, and the Iranian Trojan Horse
This is my analysis and Allah knows best. The Holy Qur'an points to Dajjal being Jewish and Iran-based. Hadith, history and current events confirm that. The ...
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Documentary: The Survivors 1
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out...
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Documentary: The Survivors 5
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out...
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Charlie Rose | Bashar al-Assad - President of Syria
May 27, 2010 Copyright © 2010 Charlie Rose LLC. All rights reserved.
Bashar al-Assad is the President of the Syrian Arab Republic, Regional Secretary of the Baath Party, and the son of former President Hafez al-Assad.
Originally trained as a doctor, Assad attended medical school at the University of Damascus Faculty of Medicine. He then went on to get subspecialty training in ophthalmology
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طوفان في بلاد البعث | (A Flood in Ba'ath Country (2003
Syria. 2003. Directed by Omar Amiralay.
This film completes Amiralay's trilogy on the Tabqa dam as it critiques the impacts the dam's construction and collapse had on the local townspeople. While his first film ("Film Essay on the Euphrates Dam" (1970)) praised the Ba'ath party for its "innovative" development, his second ("Everyday Life in a Syrian Village" (1974)) and third films critiqued the
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Hezbollah's role In Al Qusayr documentary)
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr...
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Never forget our people's suffering - The Kurdish Winter (2014)
From 1961 until 1991 the world was silent during the genocide of Kurdish people by Saddam's baath party in Iraq. Documentary film maker Ari Murad, traveled all over the diaspora and Kurdistan to document childhood traumas and past tragedies inflicted by the event.
-
nterview/Debate BBC Arabic with Raphael Luzon about Jews of Libya after the Revolution.flv
Interview/Debate between Raphael Luzon, one of the Leader of Jews of Libya, Sheich Sallabi, Mr Lallouche and Secretary of Baath party in Tunisia.
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Long video of syrian Fighters Lay Siege at Aleppo Central Prison
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr...
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The Kurdish Winter (2015)
Please share and like.
The largest population group with a country, the Kurds are over 40 million, this film highlights the traumas inflicted on us by the Iraqi Baath Government.
In 2011 the world approved of the 'Arab Spring' their revolutions and civil disobedience caused government to collapse with militarily and humanitarian aid from the west when the despots resisted. Yet from 1961 until 200
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KNN: Awat Namiq Agha on 9th June 1963 in Sulaimani
A reportage on the 9th June 1963. After the topple of Abdul-Kareem Qasim by Iraqi Baath Party on the 8th February 1963, the new Iraqi regime started a peace ...
-
Syrian Revolution 2004 Al Qamishli Protests
syrian revolution 2004kurds are against baath party and bashar al assad as well. freedom for syria freedom for kurds.
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The Alawis (Analysis, 10/2/13)
The government of President Assad of Syria is under threat. So too is the secretive Shia sect known as the Alawis - or Alawites - to which he and many of the governing party and security officials belong.
Hostility towards the minority Alawi population is such that one leading commentator predicts they are likely to be the victims of the world's next genocide.
Presenter Owen Bennett Jones investi
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The new Syria: Polls or Poles-Middle East Today-03-02-2012
Nearly 65 percent of eligible voters in Syria went to the ballot boxes for a national referendum on a new constitution. Some 89% have voted yes to a constitu...
-
Inside Iraq - Strained Iraqi-Syrian relations
Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, has accused Damascus of trying to restore Baathists to power after a public meeting was held for members of the dis...
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Documantary Saddam Hussein the big sucret , based on true story ,new details documentary 2015
Documantary Saddam Hussein the big sucret , based on true story ,new details documentary 2015
SADDAM'S END: Mowaffak al-Rubaie sits in his office with a statue of Saddam Hussein behind him, the rope used to hang the dictator around its neck, recalling his final minutes.The former national security advisor, who oversaw Saddam's 2006 execution, said he remained strong until the end, and never expre
Qur'an Points to Baath Party, Saddam, Bashar, Russia, and the Iranian Trojan Horse
This is my analysis and Allah knows best. The Holy Qur'an points to Dajjal being Jewish and Iran-based. Hadith, history and current events confirm that. The ......
This is my analysis and Allah knows best. The Holy Qur'an points to Dajjal being Jewish and Iran-based. Hadith, history and current events confirm that. The ...
wn.com/Qur'an Points To Baath Party, Saddam, Bashar, Russia, And The Iranian Trojan Horse
This is my analysis and Allah knows best. The Holy Qur'an points to Dajjal being Jewish and Iran-based. Hadith, history and current events confirm that. The ...
Documentary: The Survivors 1
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out......
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out...
wn.com/Documentary The Survivors 1
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out...
Documentary: The Survivors 5
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out......
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out...
wn.com/Documentary The Survivors 5
The Ba'ath party, led by Saddam Hussein, killed 182.000 Iraqi Kurds and buried them all in mass graves in 1988. Among all, only thirteen people could get out...
Charlie Rose | Bashar al-Assad - President of Syria
May 27, 2010 Copyright © 2010 Charlie Rose LLC. All rights reserved.
Bashar al-Assad is the President of the Syrian Arab Republic, Regional Secretary of the...
May 27, 2010 Copyright © 2010 Charlie Rose LLC. All rights reserved.
Bashar al-Assad is the President of the Syrian Arab Republic, Regional Secretary of the Baath Party, and the son of former President Hafez al-Assad.
Originally trained as a doctor, Assad attended medical school at the University of Damascus Faculty of Medicine. He then went on to get subspecialty training in ophthalmology in London's academic hospitals. Initially Assad had few political aspirations; his father had been grooming Bashar's older brother, Basil al-Assad, to be the future president. However, Basil's death in an automobile accident in 1994 suddenly made Bashar his father's new heir apparent. When the elder Assad died in 2000, Bashar was elected President unopposed with apparent massive popular support, after Syria's Majlis Al Shaa'b (Parliament) swiftly voted to lower the minimum age for candidates from 40 to 34.
Upon becoming President, Bashar al-Assad promised economic and political reforms to Syria, but he has so far delivered little change from the status quo. The Baath Party remains in control of the parliament, and is constitutionally the "leading party" of the state.
wn.com/Charlie Rose | Bashar Al Assad President Of Syria
May 27, 2010 Copyright © 2010 Charlie Rose LLC. All rights reserved.
Bashar al-Assad is the President of the Syrian Arab Republic, Regional Secretary of the Baath Party, and the son of former President Hafez al-Assad.
Originally trained as a doctor, Assad attended medical school at the University of Damascus Faculty of Medicine. He then went on to get subspecialty training in ophthalmology in London's academic hospitals. Initially Assad had few political aspirations; his father had been grooming Bashar's older brother, Basil al-Assad, to be the future president. However, Basil's death in an automobile accident in 1994 suddenly made Bashar his father's new heir apparent. When the elder Assad died in 2000, Bashar was elected President unopposed with apparent massive popular support, after Syria's Majlis Al Shaa'b (Parliament) swiftly voted to lower the minimum age for candidates from 40 to 34.
Upon becoming President, Bashar al-Assad promised economic and political reforms to Syria, but he has so far delivered little change from the status quo. The Baath Party remains in control of the parliament, and is constitutionally the "leading party" of the state.
- published: 29 May 2010
- views: 203977
طوفان في بلاد البعث | (A Flood in Ba'ath Country (2003
Syria. 2003. Directed by Omar Amiralay.
This film completes Amiralay's trilogy on the Tabqa dam as it critiques the impacts the dam's construction and collapse...
Syria. 2003. Directed by Omar Amiralay.
This film completes Amiralay's trilogy on the Tabqa dam as it critiques the impacts the dam's construction and collapse had on the local townspeople. While his first film ("Film Essay on the Euphrates Dam" (1970)) praised the Ba'ath party for its "innovative" development, his second ("Everyday Life in a Syrian Village" (1974)) and third films critiqued the government's refusal to take responsibility for the faulty dam and failure to provide basic amenities to the poor, despite its promise of radical economic improvements. In this documentary, Amiralay explores the region and the village of el-Machi to examine the consequences of the Ba'ath's 40 year rule in Syria.
wn.com/طوفان في بلاد البعث | (A Flood In Ba'Ath Country (2003
Syria. 2003. Directed by Omar Amiralay.
This film completes Amiralay's trilogy on the Tabqa dam as it critiques the impacts the dam's construction and collapse had on the local townspeople. While his first film ("Film Essay on the Euphrates Dam" (1970)) praised the Ba'ath party for its "innovative" development, his second ("Everyday Life in a Syrian Village" (1974)) and third films critiqued the government's refusal to take responsibility for the faulty dam and failure to provide basic amenities to the poor, despite its promise of radical economic improvements. In this documentary, Amiralay explores the region and the village of el-Machi to examine the consequences of the Ba'ath's 40 year rule in Syria.
- published: 01 Sep 2014
- views: 605
Hezbollah's role In Al Qusayr documentary)
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr......
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr...
wn.com/Hezbollah's Role In Al Qusayr Documentary)
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr...
Never forget our people's suffering - The Kurdish Winter (2014)
From 1961 until 1991 the world was silent during the genocide of Kurdish people by Saddam's baath party in Iraq. Documentary film maker Ari Murad, traveled all ...
From 1961 until 1991 the world was silent during the genocide of Kurdish people by Saddam's baath party in Iraq. Documentary film maker Ari Murad, traveled all over the diaspora and Kurdistan to document childhood traumas and past tragedies inflicted by the event.
wn.com/Never Forget Our People's Suffering The Kurdish Winter (2014)
From 1961 until 1991 the world was silent during the genocide of Kurdish people by Saddam's baath party in Iraq. Documentary film maker Ari Murad, traveled all over the diaspora and Kurdistan to document childhood traumas and past tragedies inflicted by the event.
- published: 21 Oct 2015
- views: 14
nterview/Debate BBC Arabic with Raphael Luzon about Jews of Libya after the Revolution.flv
Interview/Debate between Raphael Luzon, one of the Leader of Jews of Libya, Sheich Sallabi, Mr Lallouche and Secretary of Baath party in Tunisia....
Interview/Debate between Raphael Luzon, one of the Leader of Jews of Libya, Sheich Sallabi, Mr Lallouche and Secretary of Baath party in Tunisia.
wn.com/Nterview Debate BBC Arabic With Raphael Luzon About Jews Of Libya After The Revolution.Flv
Interview/Debate between Raphael Luzon, one of the Leader of Jews of Libya, Sheich Sallabi, Mr Lallouche and Secretary of Baath party in Tunisia.
Long video of syrian Fighters Lay Siege at Aleppo Central Prison
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr......
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr...
wn.com/Long Video Of Syrian Fighters Lay Siege At Aleppo Central Prison
Off facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Globalmilitaryvideos?ref=hl The Syrian civil war is an ongoing armed conflict in Syria between forces loyal to the Syr...
The Kurdish Winter (2015)
Please share and like.
The largest population group with a country, the Kurds are over 40 million, this film highlights the traumas inflicted on us by the Iraq...
Please share and like.
The largest population group with a country, the Kurds are over 40 million, this film highlights the traumas inflicted on us by the Iraqi Baath Government.
In 2011 the world approved of the 'Arab Spring' their revolutions and civil disobedience caused government to collapse with militarily and humanitarian aid from the west when the despots resisted. Yet from 1961 until 2003 the world was silent during the Kurdish Winter.
I traveled all over the diaspora and Kurdistan to document childhood traumas, incarcerations, revolutions and past tragedies inflicted by Saddam's Baath party.
wn.com/The Kurdish Winter (2015)
Please share and like.
The largest population group with a country, the Kurds are over 40 million, this film highlights the traumas inflicted on us by the Iraqi Baath Government.
In 2011 the world approved of the 'Arab Spring' their revolutions and civil disobedience caused government to collapse with militarily and humanitarian aid from the west when the despots resisted. Yet from 1961 until 2003 the world was silent during the Kurdish Winter.
I traveled all over the diaspora and Kurdistan to document childhood traumas, incarcerations, revolutions and past tragedies inflicted by Saddam's Baath party.
- published: 15 Oct 2015
- views: 39
KNN: Awat Namiq Agha on 9th June 1963 in Sulaimani
A reportage on the 9th June 1963. After the topple of Abdul-Kareem Qasim by Iraqi Baath Party on the 8th February 1963, the new Iraqi regime started a peace ......
A reportage on the 9th June 1963. After the topple of Abdul-Kareem Qasim by Iraqi Baath Party on the 8th February 1963, the new Iraqi regime started a peace ...
wn.com/Knn Awat Namiq Agha On 9Th June 1963 In Sulaimani
A reportage on the 9th June 1963. After the topple of Abdul-Kareem Qasim by Iraqi Baath Party on the 8th February 1963, the new Iraqi regime started a peace ...
Syrian Revolution 2004 Al Qamishli Protests
syrian revolution 2004kurds are against baath party and bashar al assad as well. freedom for syria freedom for kurds....
syrian revolution 2004kurds are against baath party and bashar al assad as well. freedom for syria freedom for kurds.
wn.com/Syrian Revolution 2004 Al Qamishli Protests
syrian revolution 2004kurds are against baath party and bashar al assad as well. freedom for syria freedom for kurds.
- published: 29 Mar 2011
- views: 10129
-
author: DIAKONES47
The Alawis (Analysis, 10/2/13)
The government of President Assad of Syria is under threat. So too is the secretive Shia sect known as the Alawis - or Alawites - to which he and many of the go...
The government of President Assad of Syria is under threat. So too is the secretive Shia sect known as the Alawis - or Alawites - to which he and many of the governing party and security officials belong.
Hostility towards the minority Alawi population is such that one leading commentator predicts they are likely to be the victims of the world's next genocide.
Presenter Owen Bennett Jones investigates the Alawis' origins, history and culture and asks how these once marginalised people came to power in a Sunni majority state.
He discovers that for many their fortunes changed fifty years ago when the Baath party seized power in a coup d'etat. Alawis were dominant among the army officers who took control. They set about modernising the country and rolling out a secular agenda.
Now, as Syria's revolution has morphed into a civil war, many Alawis believe their only choice is to kill or be killed. Are the majority of Alawis right to be convinced that the Assad regime is all that stands between them and a return to second-class status, or worse? If the opposition wins in Syria, are warnings about pogroms against the Alawis alarmist, or inevitable? ***
===============================================
Alawites, Alai, Alawis, Nusayri, Nusayriya, Nusayris, Shi'i, Shi'a, Shia, Shia Sect, Sect, Sectarianism, Syrians, Syrian Revolution, Syrian War, Revolution, Islamic State, ISIS, Hafez al-Assad, Bashar al-Assad, Assad Dynasty, Martin Chulov, Ibn Taymiyyah, Jamal Suliman, Fawaz Gerges, Joshua Landis, Peter Galbraith, Syrian, Middle East, Sunni Majority, Shi'a Sect, Gnostics, Heretics,
wn.com/The Alawis (Analysis, 10 2 13)
The government of President Assad of Syria is under threat. So too is the secretive Shia sect known as the Alawis - or Alawites - to which he and many of the governing party and security officials belong.
Hostility towards the minority Alawi population is such that one leading commentator predicts they are likely to be the victims of the world's next genocide.
Presenter Owen Bennett Jones investigates the Alawis' origins, history and culture and asks how these once marginalised people came to power in a Sunni majority state.
He discovers that for many their fortunes changed fifty years ago when the Baath party seized power in a coup d'etat. Alawis were dominant among the army officers who took control. They set about modernising the country and rolling out a secular agenda.
Now, as Syria's revolution has morphed into a civil war, many Alawis believe their only choice is to kill or be killed. Are the majority of Alawis right to be convinced that the Assad regime is all that stands between them and a return to second-class status, or worse? If the opposition wins in Syria, are warnings about pogroms against the Alawis alarmist, or inevitable? ***
===============================================
Alawites, Alai, Alawis, Nusayri, Nusayriya, Nusayris, Shi'i, Shi'a, Shia, Shia Sect, Sect, Sectarianism, Syrians, Syrian Revolution, Syrian War, Revolution, Islamic State, ISIS, Hafez al-Assad, Bashar al-Assad, Assad Dynasty, Martin Chulov, Ibn Taymiyyah, Jamal Suliman, Fawaz Gerges, Joshua Landis, Peter Galbraith, Syrian, Middle East, Sunni Majority, Shi'a Sect, Gnostics, Heretics,
- published: 19 Apr 2015
- views: 5
The new Syria: Polls or Poles-Middle East Today-03-02-2012
Nearly 65 percent of eligible voters in Syria went to the ballot boxes for a national referendum on a new constitution. Some 89% have voted yes to a constitu......
Nearly 65 percent of eligible voters in Syria went to the ballot boxes for a national referendum on a new constitution. Some 89% have voted yes to a constitu...
wn.com/The New Syria Polls Or Poles Middle East Today 03 02 2012
Nearly 65 percent of eligible voters in Syria went to the ballot boxes for a national referendum on a new constitution. Some 89% have voted yes to a constitu...
Inside Iraq - Strained Iraqi-Syrian relations
Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, has accused Damascus of trying to restore Baathists to power after a public meeting was held for members of the dis......
Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, has accused Damascus of trying to restore Baathists to power after a public meeting was held for members of the dis...
wn.com/Inside Iraq Strained Iraqi Syrian Relations
Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, has accused Damascus of trying to restore Baathists to power after a public meeting was held for members of the dis...
Documantary Saddam Hussein the big sucret , based on true story ,new details documentary 2015
Documantary Saddam Hussein the big sucret , based on true story ,new details documentary 2015
SADDAM'S END: Mowaffak al-Rubaie sits in his office with a statue...
Documantary Saddam Hussein the big sucret , based on true story ,new details documentary 2015
SADDAM'S END: Mowaffak al-Rubaie sits in his office with a statue of Saddam Hussein behind him, the rope used to hang the dictator around its neck, recalling his final minutes.The former national security advisor, who oversaw Saddam's 2006 execution, said he remained strong until the end, and never expressed any regret,
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd al-Tikrītī
28 April 1937– 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003 A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organization Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region—which espoused ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism—Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup (later referred to as the 17 July Revolution) that brought the party to power in Iraq.
wn.com/Documantary Saddam Hussein The Big Sucret , Based On True Story ,New Details Documentary 2015
Documantary Saddam Hussein the big sucret , based on true story ,new details documentary 2015
SADDAM'S END: Mowaffak al-Rubaie sits in his office with a statue of Saddam Hussein behind him, the rope used to hang the dictator around its neck, recalling his final minutes.The former national security advisor, who oversaw Saddam's 2006 execution, said he remained strong until the end, and never expressed any regret,
Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti (Arabic: صدام حسين عبد المجيد التكريتي Ṣaddām Ḥusayn ʿAbd al-Maǧīd al-Tikrītī
28 April 1937– 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003 A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organization Ba'ath Party – Iraq Region—which espoused ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and Arab socialism—Saddam played a key role in the 1968 coup (later referred to as the 17 July Revolution) that brought the party to power in Iraq.
- published: 02 Jul 2015
- views: 2