November 29, 2009 6:35 PM

Mysterious "Saddam Channel" Hits Iraqi TV

(AP)  Turning on their TVs during the long holiday weekend, Iraqis were greeted by a familiar if unexpected face from their brutal past: Saddam Hussein.

The late Iraqi dictator is lauded on a mysterious satellite channel that began broadcasting on the Islamic calendar's anniversary of his 2006 execution.

No one seems to know who is bankrolling the so-called Saddam Channel, although the Iraqi government suspects it's Baathists whose political party Saddam once led. The Associated Press tracked down a man in Damascus, Syria named Mohammed Jarboua, who claimed to be its chairman.

The Saddam channel, he said, "didn't receive a penny from the Baathists" and is for Iraqis and other Arabs who "long for his rule."

Jarboua has clearly made considerable efforts to hide where it's aired from and refuses to say who is funding it besides "people who love us."

Iraqis surprised to find Saddam on their TVs responded with the kind of divided emotions that marked his reign.

"Iraqis don't need such a satellite channel because it has hostile intentions," said Hassan Subhi, a 28-year-old Shiite who owns an Internet cafe in eastern Baghdad.

Others said they felt a nostalgic sorrow at the sight of their late leader, a Sunni Arab.

"All my family felt sad," said Samar Majid, a Sunni high school teacher in western Baghdad, mentioning images shown from Saddam's execution, and pictures of his two sons and grandson.

The channel, which is broadcast across the Arab world, dredges up the sectarian divisions that Saddam inspired among Shiites and Sunnis at a time when Iraq is gearing up for crucial national elections. Iraqi politicians have been arguing over parliamentary seat distribution in a dispute that has inflamed the splits. The wrangling will likely delay the vote beyond its constitutionally required Jan. 30 deadline.

Saddam's hanging three years ago was on the first day of Eid al-Adha, the most important holiday of the Islamic calendar. His execution - and the day it was done - remains a sore point for Saddam sympathizers still smarting over images of the defiant leader in his final moments as Shiites in the death chamber shouted curses.

The Saddam Channel debuted on Friday, the first day of this year's Eid for Sunnis. The holiday started Saturday for Shiites. The station's official name alternates between "Al-Lafeta" ("the banner") and "Al-Arabi" ("the Arab").

It is mostly a montage of flattering, still images of Saddam - some of him dressed in military uniform, others in a suit, even one astride a white horse. One image shows his sons Odai and Qusai smiling with their father, and another their bodies after they and Saddam's grandson, Mustafa, were killed in a July 2003 gunfight with U.S. troops.

One prominently displayed image is that of a man burning an American flag. Another shows graves covered with Iraqi flags.

All the pictures are set against audio recordings of Saddam making speeches and reciting poetry. Patriotic songs urge listeners to "liberate our country." None of the pictures appear to be recent, and no announcers or commentators appear or speak.

A media adviser to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite, brushed off the station and its message, and refused to comment on whether the government will seek to shut down the channel.

Al-Maliki adviser Yassin Majid said in an interview that he had not seen the channel but had heard of it. He called it "an attempt from the dissolved Baath Party to return to Iraq's politics." Since Saddam's fall, Baathists have spread out around the region, mainly to Syria and Jordan but also to Gulf countries and Yemen.

Among the many mysteries surrounding the channel is where is being broadcast from.

In a telephone interview Sunday from Damascus, Jarboua said he is Algerian and that the Saddam Channel is based in Europe but refused to say where, citing safety concerns for its employees.

"There are threats that the Iraqi government will shut it down, kill its employees, that they will liquidate it," Jarboua said.

He said he started al-Lafeta nine months ago in Lebanon, and has employees in Syria, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

Ziad Khassawneh, a Jordanian Baathist who once headed Saddam's defense team, said wealthy Iraqis living in Lebanon, Syria and other Arab countries are funding the channel. He declined to give names.

Saddam's oldest daughter, Raghad Saddam Hussein, who lives in Jordan, has denied any connection to the channel.

One Jordan-based Iraqi Baathist said the station broadcasts from Libya and is run by followers of Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, Saddam's No. 2 and a top leader of the outlawed Baath party. Douri's whereabouts is unknown.

Another former Baathist official said the Saddam Channel broadcasts out of Damascus. Both men spoke on condition of anonymity because they said they needed to protect the security of the channel's employees.

A Mideast satellite expert said al-Lafeta's operators tried to hide any clues to their identities and broadcast sites by using a variety of satellite services and frequencies. The channel airs via Noorsat, a Bahrain-based satellite service. It also has purchased a frequency on Egypt-owned NileSat, which is run by Eutelsat, a European consortium.

Some Iraqis shrugged off the broadcast as harmless.

"This channel doesn't mean anything to people," Muhammad Abdullah, 35, an Iraqi journalist, said in northern Baghdad. "It has no effect on the Iraqi people now."
By Associated Press Writer Lara Jakes; AP writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad, Jamal Halaby in Amman, Jordan, and Salah Nasrawi and Sarah El Deeb in Cairo contributed to this report

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by pensacola8-2009 November 30, 2009 2:12 AM EST
Saddam Hussein was never found to have ties to alQuieda.

Saddam Hussein was never found to have ties to Osama Bin Laden. Hussein thought Bin Laden was a nut.

Saddam Hussein was never found to have any weapons of mass destruction. He admitted that they were destroyed after the Gulf War, but he kept up the ruse and the defiance to UN weapons inspectors over a fear of an Iranian invasion upon verifiable loss of detente.

Saddam Hussein's invasion Kuwait was over the Kuwaiti use of horizontal oil drilling technology that extracted petroleum from Iraqi oil bearing caverns, without paying royalty to Iraq. Upon confrontation, the Kuwaitis told Hussein that any attempt to stop it would result in turning every Iraqi female into a ten dollar prostitute.

It is clear and evident now that the covert Iranian invasion of Iraq did take place after Hussein was deposed.

It is clear and evident now that the execution of Saddam Hussein made him a martyr in the eyes of Iraqis who don't find their loss of stability very agreeable since the US led invasion.

It was predicted by then Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney after the Gulf War in 1993 that any post invasion Iraq to depose Hussein would revert to a political system that would be just as bad as the one under Hussein.

Saddam Hussein faced his execution with courage, defiance, and conviction that his political machine would prevail and survive the temporary occupation by foreign invaders.

The USA failure to understand Arab politics cost us over one trillion dollars.
Reply to this comment
by krb05 November 29, 2009 9:05 PM EST
Good to see that Solarrays247 is here to comment on all these posts..are we having a full discussion or each having one-on-one convos with Solarrays247?

I don't know if you know this but the Bush administration is out now and in the past. I don't know what good it's doing to point fingers and dream of what could have been.

Let's focus on the present and what we can do AS A COUNTRY not a country divided and live in the present. Thanks. We can play the blame game and whine about what ALREADY happened or we can move forward. Let's move forward.
Reply to this comment
by Solarrays247 November 29, 2009 9:43 PM EST
krb05 November 29, 2009 9:05 PM EST
Good to see that Solarrays247 is here to comment on all these posts..are we having a full discussion or each having one-on-one convos with Solarrays247?

I don't know if you know this but the Bush administration is out now and in the past. I don't know what good it's doing to point fingers and dream of what could have been.

Let's focus on the present and what we can do AS A COUNTRY not a country divided and live in the present. Thanks. We can play the blame game and whine about what ALREADY happened or we can move forward. Let's move forward.
*********************************************************************

Geez, where have you been? I don't recall seeing you here on the boards last year when I was beseeching my fellow Americans to unite, else divided we may fall! Welcome aboard!

But as a reminder, due to the fact that our country is currently experiencing the worst economic disaster in its history, and we're winding down an illegal war in Iraq, I'd like to quote something for you(the words will probably be familiar to you):

"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it."
~George Santayana,"Life of Reason, Reason in Common Sense", Scribner's, 1905, page 284"

In order to move forward, I believe it is mandatory to play the "blame game", and bring still others to justice! For you see, I don't whine...I prefer action. I think the country united pretty well in November 2008! However, there are still those in the GOP who prefer not to heed the call of their constituency....hence the danger of history repeating itself!!

Let's move forward, indeed!!
by cbsblogger November 29, 2009 8:34 PM EST
Some would claim there is a case to be made that Bush Cheney and OBL were more like partners than enemies. 8 years and trillions later and many thousands dead, one must wonder. Who really benefited from all of this, and who really besides Americans lost.
Reply to this comment
by Solarrays247 November 29, 2009 8:44 PM EST
cbsblogger November 29, 2009 8:34 PM EST
Some would claim there is a case to be made that Bush Cheney and OBL were more like partners than enemies. 8 years and trillions later and many thousands dead, one must wonder. Who really benefited from all of this, and who really besides Americans lost.
***************************************************************
Good question! I would be interested in some answers!

I would venture that the answer to your question is too painful for many Americans to acknowledge and/or accept. As far as loss? I would also ask the families of the reported hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi citizens, men, women, and children, who lost their lives.

I think we already know who really benefited, don't we?
by chelokee November 29, 2009 8:17 PM EST
Saddam Insane is an Idiot. He is a murderous thug. I can't wait till we catch him and string him up. We need to punish him for his crimes and send a message to all his stupid thugs. His thugs are stupid just like Saddam Insane. Saddam Insane is a stupid muderous thug and he will burn in hell so much for his crimes. You hear that Saddam, you are STUPID Yellow coward.
Reply to this comment
by Solarrays247 November 29, 2009 8:35 PM EST
by chelokee November 29, 2009 8:17 PM EST
Saddam Insane is an Idiot. He is a murderous thug. I can't wait till we catch him and string him up. We need to punish him for his crimes and send a message to all his stupid thugs. His thugs are stupid just like Saddam Insane. Saddam Insane is a stupid muderous thug and he will burn in hell so much for his crimes. You hear that Saddam, you are STUPID Yellow coward.
******************************************************************

Ahem.....eh...chelokee? Where have you been for the past three years, dear?

"Saddam's hanging three years ago was on the first day of Eid al-Adha, the most important holiday of the Islamic calendar."

You can save yourself a heart attack if you would first take a moment and read the article. ;=) Have a nice day!
by armyoftwelve November 29, 2009 7:37 PM EST
Let's see: TWO disastrous international wars. International pariah status. Hundreds of thouands dead in Iraqs gulag. Genocide against the Kurds. Environmental degradation in the marshes of the south.

Yeah...the people of iraq really need to yearn for the "good old days."
Reply to this comment
by Solarrays247 November 29, 2009 8:23 PM EST
The people of Iraq never asked us for help! But, don't let the rest of us stop you from attempting to justify an illegal war!!

Meanwhile, Bush held off in ordering the capture of bin Laden! Remember this?

One of Bush's first business partners was Bin Laden's brother.

"I don't know where bin Laden is. I have no idea and really don't care. It's not that important. It's not our priority."
- G.W. Bush, 3/13/02

"I am truly not that concerned about him."
- G.W. Bush, repsonding to a question about bin Laden's whereabouts,
3/13/02 (The New American, 4/8/02)

I do believe there are many Iraqi citizens that would sorely disagree with you right about now! Attempting to justify the Iraqi war should keep you busy for the rest of your life...but it will not change the truth! Carry on!
by wyodutch November 29, 2009 7:19 PM EST
Is Iraq better off now that we invaded their country, destroyed their infrasctructure and assassinated their political leadership?
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Only an idiot would say "Yes".
Reply to this comment
by us_1776 November 29, 2009 7:11 PM EST
Now for Iraqis that would be c-r-e-e-p-y.

Nothing like replaying the "horror" movie.
Reply to this comment
by mejordelahistoria November 29, 2009 7:02 PM EST
Saddam is the Dalai Lama compared to bush and his christians.
Reply to this comment
by ellensmithee November 29, 2009 6:39 PM EST
Solarrays:
But then Bush probably couldn't lead himself out of a damn paper bag! Nor would he allow the capture of one of the sons(bin Laden) of one of his daddy's business partners! Disgusting!
- - - - - - - - -
You sure got that right, Solarrays.
Reply to this comment
by PVperson2 November 29, 2009 5:36 PM EST
"face from their brutal past", since their MOST brutal past was the last 7 years, maybe they should have used the face of Bush.
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