The Man Who Toppled Saddam -
His hands were bleeding
and his eyes filled with tears as, four years ago, he slammed a sledgehammer
into the tiled plinth that held a 20ft bronze statue of Saddam Hussein. Then
Kadhim al-Jubouri spoke of his joy at being the leader of the crowd that toppled
the statue in Baghdad's Firdous Square. Now, he is filled with nothing but
regret.
The moment became symbolic across the world as it signalled the fall of the
dictator. Wearing a black vest, Mr al-Jubouri, an Iraqi weightlifting champion,
pounded through the concrete in an attempt to smash the statue and all it meant
to him. Now, on the fourth anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq, he says:
"I really regret bringing down the statue. The Americans are worse than the
dictatorship. Every day is worse than the previous day."
The weightlifter had also been a mechanic and had felt the full weight of
Saddam's regime when he was sent to Abu Ghraib prison by the Iraqi leader's son,
Uday, after complaining that he had not been paid for fixing his motorcycle.
He explained: "There were lots of people from my tribe who were also put in
prison or hanged. It became my dream ever since I saw them building that statue
to one day topple it."
Yet he now says he would prefer to be living under Saddam than under US
occupation. He said: "The devil you know [is] better than the devil you don't.
We no longer know friend from foe. The situation is becoming more dangerous.
It's not getting better at all. People are poor and the prices are going higher
and higher."
Saddam, he says, "was like Stalin. But the occupation is proving to be worse"