Opposition: Saddam forces families of top Iraqi officials to stay in shelters in order to prevent coup d'etat

Published January 16th, 2003 - 02:00 GMT
Al Bawaba
Al Bawaba

Albawaba.com special 

Amman 

 

A London based Iraqi opposition group said Thursday that the Iraqi regime has recently moved families of a number of senior Iraqi officials and security officers to recently reopened shelters around Baghdad. 

 

Iraq Prospects Organization’s events director said in a telephone call with Albawaba.com that sources which have left Iraq in the past few days confirmed to her that “families of senior officials and security officers were moved to shelters in Baghdad.” 

 

According to her own resources the organization coordinator, Ebtihal Al Husseini, pointed out that shelters in the Al Mansour and Al A’miriyyah areas have been reopened to receive these families. “These moves were taken to help the regime monitor the movements and whereabouts of these officials,” claimed Al Husseini, citing her sources as saying. She indicated that the shelters were put under tight security measures. 

 

The opposition coordinator ruled out that the Iraqi regime aimed at protecting these families. She conveyed they were most likely held “as hostages by the regime, which has lost confidence in everybody and wanted to ensure that they would not revolt against it.”  

 

In recent weeks, newspapers throughout the world said a palace coup would be welcomed in most Western capitals. 

 

Qubad Talanani, the Washington spokesman for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, one of the two ruling Kurdish parties, was recently quoted as saying there was "a good chance" that a coup would take place once Saddam's downfall was imminent.  

 

A coup was always the CIA's preferred option for getting rid of Saddam but his control of Iraq is so complete that plotters risk certain death if any hint of their activities are discovered, The Telegraph newspaper wrote earlier this week. 

 

Late last year, Ari Fleischer, U.S. President Bush's spokesman, said that "the cost of one bullet, if the Iraqi people take it on themselves, is substantially less than" the billions of dollars it would cost to launch a war. (Albawaba.com)

© 2003 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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