UPDATED ON:
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
17:58 Mecca time, 14:58 GMT
News Middle East
Former Iraqi vice-president hanged
Ramadan was hanged at 3:05am on Tuesday [EPA]
Taha Yassin Ramadan, Iraq's former vice-president, was hanged before dawn on Tuesday for his role in the killing of 148 Shia Iraqis in Dujail, an official in the prime minister's office said.
 
"Ramadan was hanged at 3:05am today," said the official who witnessed the hanging.
 
No official announcement has been made by the government.
The official said Ramadan was weighed before the hanging and the length of rope was chosen accordingly to prevent a repeat of what happened to Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, Saddam Hussein's half brother and former intelligence chief, who was decapitated on the gallows.
Murder, deportation and torture
 
Ramadan was convicted in November of murder, forced deportation and torture, and sentenced to life in prison.
 
Taha Yassin Ramadan
  • Born in 1938
  • Bank clerk before enlisting in the army
  • Formed Baath party's armed wing in 1970
  • Iraq's vice-president from 1991 until government ousted in 2003
  • Captured by Kurds in 2003
  • Sentenced to life in prison in November 2006
  • Amended to death sentence in February 2007
A month later, an appeals court said the sentence was too lenient, and returned his case to the High Tribunal, demanding he be sentenced to death.
 
The court agreed to turn it to a death sentence last week.
 
Ramadan is the third Saddam aide to be hanged for crimes against humanity since the former government was ousted by US-led forces four years ago.
 
Son denounces trial
 
Ramadan's son, Ahmed, denounced the execution.
 
"It was not an execution. It was a political assassination," he told Al Jazeera by telephone from the Yemeni capital Sanaa.
 
He said a family representative had attended the execution and that his father's body would be buried in Tikrit, north Baghdad.
 
Saddam was hanged for the Dujail killings on December 30 while al-Tikriti and Awad Ahmed al-Bandar, the former head of the Revolutionary Court, were executed on January 15.
 
The executions have outraged Iraqi Sunnis and caused concern among international human rights groups, which had appealed for Ramadan's life.
 
Ramadan had maintained his innocence, saying his duties were limited to economic affairs, not security issues.
 
Human Rights Watch and the International Centre for Transitional Justice have said the evidence against him was insufficient for the death penalty.
 Source: Al Jazeera and agencies
 
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