Saturday, April 16, 2011

Maliki accused of killing Baath scientists and a past generation the responsibility of the arrival of government

Alsumaria News / Babylon Accused Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, on Friday, killing Baath scholars and clerics in Iraq for the duration of his reign, and expressed surprise at those who are defending what he called the "gang" in secret and in public, blaming the past generation the responsibility of the arrival of the Baath to power in Iraq.

He said Nuri al-Maliki in a speech at a memorial service to mark the anniversary of the martyrdom of Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr in the province of Babylon, and attended by "Alsumaria News", "The former regime violated the thought and science and scientists, and finished off on universities to become behind their counterparts in the world and crashes a lot, which was proud of by Iraq, and extended his hand to the men and women of great Iraq. "

Maliki said that "from within the evil legacy left behind by the Baath innocent lives that were lost in the mass graves and chemical weapons, arrests, executions, wars and other crimes," and expressed surprise "of those who defend in public and the secret of this gang."
Maliki said that "the past generation is responsible for the arrival of this gang to power and we have to work so as not to hold us responsible for allowing the next generation to them or for their fellow murderers and criminals to return again."
The Baath Party took power in Iraq twice, the first in a coup in the eighth of February 1963 against the founder of the Republic of Iraq and then-Prime Minister Abdul Karim Qasim, which ended in his execution inside the radio building of Iraq, one day after the coup, and continued in power about eight months before being thrown head Republic Abdel Salam Aref Bermzh in detention following the differences that cropped up between the two sides, as the Baath came to power, also in 1968 following a coup in July, led by former President Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr against his predecessor, Abdul Rahman Mohammed Aref, who arrived in turn to power following the death of his brother, Abdul Salam Aref in the crash of a helicopter within the area of ​​euphoria in the province of Basra, which he visited in 1966, and continued in power until his downfall in 2003 of U.S. forces to enter the country http://www.alsumarianews.com/ar/1/20235/news-details-.html

No comments:

Post a Comment

Auto Cad Tutorials