http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/03/18/saddam-specter-lives-on-in-iraqi-landmarks/


Saddam specter lives on in Iraqi landmarks 




BAGHDAD: The soaring half domes of the Martyr Monument stand out against the 
drabness of eastern Baghdad, not far from where Saddam Hussein’s feared eldest 
son was said to torture underperforming athletes. Saddam built the split 
teardropshaped sculpture in the middle of a manmade lake in the early 1980s to 
commemorate Iraqis killed in the Iran-Iraq War. The names of hundreds of 
thousands of fallen Iraqi soldiers are inscribed in simple Arabic script around 
the base.

Today the monument stands as a memorial to a different sort of martyr. In 
recent years, the Shiite-led government has begun turning it into a museum 
honoring the overwhelmingly Shiite and Kurdish victims of Saddam’s 
Sunni-dominated but largely secular regime. The transformation of the Martyr 
Monument and other Saddam-era sites highlights Iraq’s effort to memorialize 
those persecuted by the former dictator and purge many symbols of his rule. Yet 
a decade on from the US-led invasion, Iraqis still grapple with the country’s 
postwar identity and how much should be done to cleanse Iraq of traces of the 
strongman.

It is a tricky balancing act that risks exacerbating Iraq’s already strained 
sectarian tensions. Many Iraqi Sunnis today feel their sect has been 
marginalized and unfairly persecuted by Shiite Prime Minister Nouri Al- 
Maliki’s government. For Baghdad, the historical clean-up effort has the added 
benefit of ridding Iraq of many uncomfortable references to war with Shiite 
heavyweight Iran, an increasingly important ally. The Martyr Monument now 
features mannequins striking gruesome, if not particularly convincing, poses to 
display firingsquad executions and the unearthing of mass graves. Also depicted 
here are the poison- gas killings of some 5,000 Kurds by Saddam’s forces in the 
northern town of Halabja 25 years ago this month.

Kifah Haider, spokesman for the governmentbacked Establishment of Martyrs, 
which oversees the site, denied that the museum gives preference to certain 
victims over others. “We wanted to document the crimes of the former regime,” 
he said. “It’s so this generation learns about the crimes they didn’t have to 
live through.” The site plays up the majority Shiites’ role in opposing 
Saddam’s rule. Images of turbaned Shiite clerics, including many family members 
and political allies of Iraq’s postwar political elite, gaze down upon 
visitors. One banner depicts al- Maliki signing Saddam’s execution order.

Posters show hellish fires superimposed on photos of the ousted leader. The 
Martyr Monument is located some 2.5 miles from Firdous Square, where 10 years 
ago on live television US Marines memorably hauled down a Soviet-style statue 
of Saddam, symbolically ending his rule. Today, that pedestal in central 
Baghdad stands empty. Bent iron beams sprout from the top, and posters of 
anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr in military fatigues are pasted on 
the sides. But Saddam’s grandiose creations live on elsewhere. The 
crossed-sword archways he commissioned during Iraq’s nearly eight-year war with 
Iran stand defiantly on a little-used parade ground inside the Green Zone, the 
fortified district that houses the sprawling US Embassy and several government 
offices. Iraqi officials began tearing down the archways in 2007 but quickly 
halted those plans and then started restoring the monument two years ago. — AP


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