Execution approved for Saddam cousin ‘Chemical Ali’

? The Saddam Hussein henchman known as “Chemical Ali” for gassing thousands of Kurdish civilians is due to hang within the month, following the endorsement of his death sentence Friday by Iraq’s presidential council.

But even survivors were notably subdued about the news in a nation weary of violence and suffering.

The agreement among Iraq’s three-member presidential council – President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, along with the Sunni and Shiite vice presidents – eliminated the last barrier before Ali Hassan al-Majid can be executed.

The presidential council spared the lives of two other Saddam aides, in what was seen as a possible attempt to appease minority Sunnis. The two men – Hussein Rashid Mohammed, former deputy director of operations for the Iraqi armed forces, and former defense minister Sultan Hashim al-Taie – are in U.S. custody, as is al-Majid.

The date of the execution will be determined by the Iraqi government.

A cousin of Saddam who once was an army motorcycle messenger, al-Majid rose to become a general and served as defense minister from 1991-95. He was among the most important figures in the former regime’s inner circle, and was known as one of the most merciless.

Al-Majid, al-Taie and Mohammed were sentenced to death in June after being convicted of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity for their part in Operation Anfal – a 1987-88 crackdown on the Kurdish region that killed nearly 200,000 civilians and guerrillas. Witnesses testified that Iraqi government forces attacked women and children, burned crops, killed livestock and forced civilians into detention camps.

Hundreds of Kurds danced in the streets last June when al-Majid was sentenced to death.

But on Friday in Halabja, a city near the Iranian border that was the scene of a notorious gas attack that killed an estimated 5,000 civilians, news that al-Majid’s sentence is to be carried out was greeted with relief but not joy.

“I am glad to see Chemical Ali hanged at last and I am psychologically relieved to see the person who killed thousands of my people being punished at last,” said 43-year-old Aras Abdi, who lost 12 relatives in the Halabja attack.

“On the other hand, the execution will not improve our lives. We have been neglected by the Kurdish regional government.”