Dudes, she's been swanning around Amman in the finest restaurants and fashion boutiques. Its about time they reminded her she wasn't holidaying in the South of France. What comes around goes around!
Arrest Warrant Issued for Saddam's Daughter Saddam Hussein al-Majid Wanted on Charges of Terrorism
Baghdad, Aug 17, (VOI) – Interpol issued an arrest warrant against Raghad, former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein's daughter, upon a request from the Iraqi government.
"Raghad Saddam Hussein al-Majid, 38, is wanted by the Iraqi government on several charges of terrorism and crimes against innocent people," according to a statement published on Interpol's official web site and received by the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI).
The site called on anyone who has information about Raghad's whereabouts to report to the local police station in their city. Raghad lives in exile outside Iraq, with her children in the Jordanian capital Amman, hosted by the Hashemite royal family. The last time she was seen publicly was during a popular rally at the professional syndicate’s compound in Amman to protest the execution of her father on December 31, 2006.
Zorba Dude. Actually the slapper in the photo is Haifa Wahbi and not Raghad (no way in hell she'd look that good in a bikini). In the first photo Haifa is with Saddam's illegitimate son Ali.
CALM, LOB...Now listen up...MAMMMMMA here, where is your mind at, GUTTER. YEP. Sigh. little boys yep we women know how men think and where their brains are at yep sigh again
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Faith, Hope and Love, the Greatest of these is LOVE!!!
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell
Iraq Releases New Most Wanted List Mostly Former Officials, Family, Accused of Backing Armed Groups Baghdad, Aug 21, (VOI) – The Iraqi government has released a new list of wanted persons, mostly senior officials from former president Saddam Hussein's regime, who are accused of backing armed groups in the country, the Iraqi Ministry of Interior said on Tuesday.
"All those on the list are accused of financing and backing armed groups, which are seeking to undermine Iraq's security," director of the ministry's National Command Center staff, Maj. Gen. Abdul Kareem Khalaf, told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI). "Those who live in exile outside Iraq will be pursued by Interpol, delivered to the Iraqi security apparatus and brought to court," Maj. Gen. Khalaf indicated.
"The suspects include former officials Izzat Ibrahim Khalil al-Dori, the former deputy chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council; Younis al-Ahmad, a senior Baath Party leader; Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti, the former head of the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS); Mahmoud Diyab al-Ahmed, the former minister of interior; Ahmed Mahmoud al-Ahmed, his son; Ayman and Amr al-Sabaawi, Saddam's step nephews and others," Khalaf explained.
The list also included former Iraqi officials, who topped the Pentagon’s list of 55 wanted persons in 2003, he added.
Interpol on Saturday issued an arrest warrant against Saddam’s deputy Izzat al-Dori upon a request from the Iraqi government. A statement published on Interpol's official website called on anyone who has information about al-Dori's whereabouts to report to the local police station in their city. The U.S. forces had accused him of financing Iraqi insurgents and offered a $10 million reward for information on his whereabouts. Born in al-Dor town near Baghdad's northwestern city of Tikrit, the former Iraqi leader's hometown, al-Dori was the deputy commander-in-chief of the armed forces and held a senior post in the committee responsible for northern Iraq when chemical weapons were allegedly used to kill thousands of Kurds in 1988.
Interpol on Friday issued an arrest warrant for Saddam's 38-year old daughter, Raghad, on charges of terrorism and crimes against innocent people. Raghad lives in exile outside Iraq, with her children in the Jordanian capital Amman, hosted by the Hashemite royal family. The last time she was seen publicly was during a popular rally at the professional syndicates compound in Amman to protest the execution of her father on December 31, 2006.
you are so funny and have a great spirit, happy life maaaaaaaaaan.
quote:
ORIGINAL: sadiq2006
yellowsunshine
you are so funny and have a great spirit, happy life maaaaaaaaaan.
u silly goof, I u too, don't care if that is what you meant or not, I DO...
we all should be aware that in this day and age, photos are retouched all the time with this technology we now have, so often what we SEE is not real.
Oh boyfriend, thinks I am far too free with the word Love and thinks men may misunderstand me. Wouldn't be the first time. Big Girl now. Different kinds of Love. And FULL grown MEN should understand the difference.
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Faith, Hope and Love, the Greatest of these is LOVE!!!
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." George Orwell
Jordan Not Ready to Hand Over Saddam's Daughter to Iraq THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan indicated Monday it is not ready to surrender Saddam Hussein's eldest daughter to Iraq, despite a new push from authorities in Baghdad for her to face charges of funneling money to Sunni insurgents. A visiting Iraqi delegation last week handed Jordanian authorities a list of wanted fugitives, including Raghad Saddam Hussein, the independent newspaper Al Arab Al Yawm reported Monday. Interpol has posted a "red notice" on its Web site, advising that Saddam's daughter is wanted by the Iraqi government for "crimes against life and health" and for inciting terrorism. Jordanian government spokesman Nasser Judeh said Monday that Jordan was "not dealing with that situation right now." "We will deal with this issue when it happens, but it isn't on the agenda," he said. "It's only a warning from Interpol and not an arrest warrant." Red notices from Interpol are not international arrest warrants, but are intended to advise police forces that an individual is sought by a member government, according to Interpol's Web site. The issue of what to do with Saddam's daughters is complicated by Sunni Arab hostility, including in Jordan, toward the Shiite-dominated government of Iraq. An estimated 750,000 Iraqis, many of them Sunnis, have fled to Jordan to escape the chaos back home. Raghad, 38, and her sister, Rana, were granted refuge in Jordan by King Abdullah II after their father's regime collapsed in the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. Since then, the Jordanian government has turned down repeated requests by Iraq to hand over Raghad, insisting that to do so would violate Arab traditions of hospitality. "We have always said that she is here on purely humanitarian grounds," Judeh told reporters. "It was agreed with her that she would never practice any political or media activities." Last year, Iraqi authorities included Raghad on a list of most wanted fugitives accused of supporting Sunni insurgents. Many of those on the list are believed to be in Jordan. According to Al Arab Al Yawm, the Iraqis also asked for other Iraqi Sunnis, including Raghad's cousins, Ahmed Watban and Mohammed Sabawi; Harith al-Dhari, a hard-line cleric believed linked to Sunni insurgents; and Ziad Aziz, son of Saddam's deputy, Prime Minister Tariq Aziz, who is now in U.S. custody. Iraqi authorities have not released detailed information to support the allegations against Raghad or the others. In the absence of such public evidence, Jordan is unlikely to risk a Sunni backlash by handing over Sunnis to Iraq. "If Raghad Saddam Hussein was responsible for all that is happening in Iraq with the chaos, massacres, car bombs, al-Qaida, the Mahdi Army ... then the Americans shouldn't be in dialogue with the Iranians, but with her," a former information minister, Saleh Qallab, wrote Monday in the pro-government daily Al Rai. "It's about time that Iraq, instead of creating the 'Interpol hurricane,' proves its courage and says loudly and clearly that the one responsible for all that is happening in Iraq is Iran," he said. Raghad has been known to speak publicly in support of the anti-American insurgency in Iraq -- most recently in Yemen in February, when she joined hundreds of Baath party supporters commemorating the 40-day period since Saddam's death. At the gathering, Raghad -- who supervised Saddam's defense before his conviction and subsequent hanging -- said that "as long as the resistance and the mujahedeen are fulfilling their duties in Iraq, the Iraqi people, without any doubt, will achieve victory."
ofcourse she knows were are the billions of money and i am sure that she is the one who is helping to make destruction of iraq by helping the terrorsite and militia's and creating problems in iraq and ofcourse she does don't have faith in this Iraqi government because she knows that all of them they were helping saddam hussain in everything in the past and they were puppets.
and ofcourse the most important thing about it (that she want to take revenge on them and the iraqi people for her father's sake, because she believes that all of them are traitors and also the iraqi people she thinks that they are traitors because they betray her father.
so you could say it is kind of revenge my dear friend.
He has used his sex appeal at last to get all of those information for her. I was wondering why I keep hearing OOOHHHHHS and Ahhhhhhs from Jordan direction. Was there an earth quake too? or was it a love making explosion by Sadiq, our news Correspondant. God save Sadiq king of Kurdistan.
Do you think you have a point of view????????????????
I am glad you are able to amuse yourself. KAKA SADIQ....why don't you go and play with yourself on another site and give us peace, i mean amuse yourself.