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Pain and Loss of Beheading Lingers for Son

February 8 2005 at 11:39 AM
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Ahmed  (Premier Login UAEi)



5 minutes ago Middle East - AP


By SCHEHEREZADE FARAMARZI, Associated Press Writer

IRBIL, Iraq - Shihab Khaled Anwar cannot bear to think of his father, beheaded in Iraq (news - web sites) for allegedly being an informant for Americans.



"If I think of him, I picture his head and I won't be able to sleep," the 10-year-old boy said.


The severed head was dumped on the pavement near his home in the northern city of Mosul a day after his father, Khaled Ibrahim, 29, was abducted by gunmen on his way to buy bread.


Shihab, too young to grasp the motives behind such brutality, refers to his father's killers as "burglars." The adults in the family have a different theory: he was tipping off the Americans about "terrorists."


Now the family feels abandoned by America, for whom Ibrahim sacrificed his life.


The U.S. military in Iraq never comments on its network of informants, past or present. But the beheading of Ibrahim indicates his death was the work of Iraqi insurgents, who have made decapitation the gruesome signature of their campaign against foreigners and Iraqi collaborators, often filming the act and distributing it on Web sites.


According to his wife, Ibrahim started off as a friend to Americans. They would visit the couple's home, and the Ibrahims would offer them food and drink. At some point the Americans, whom Mrs. Ibrahim did not identify, asked him to work for them.


Ibrahim was certainly qualified to help the Americans. He knew Mosul well and he was a Kurd. Kurds were persecuted under Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) and supported the 2003 U.S. invasion that toppled his regime.


From that point on, Ibrahim had regular contacts with Americans, said his wife, an Arab.


"Every week or two he went to see the Americans," she said. "He identified people who put explosives, the terrorists. He liked the Americans. He was against the situation."


She said the night before his death Ibrahim told her he sensed he was being watched. It was no surprise — he had received many threats from Islamic extremists for collaborating with the Americans.


The family's horror began at 7 a.m. on Sept. 5, when Ibrahim left his home in the northern city of Mosul with his 5-year-old son, Inad, to buy bread for breakfast.


They had only driven a couple of blocks when two cars blocked their path. Armed men dragged the father out of his car, striking him on the head with the rifle butt. Ibrahim fell unconscious to the ground.


The attackers then poured kerosene on his car as Inad sat inside. Just before lighting it, they removed the child and left him on the pavement to watch his father being driven away.


It was Inad who broke the news of his father's abduction to the family.


"Burglars took daddy and ran away," Shihab recalls his brother screaming as he burst into the house.


The next day, Ibrahim's head was found lying next to the burned car. Anwar Ibrahim, the victim's father, and his brother-in-law went to retrieve it.





"We put it in a coffin and took it away," said Anwar Ibrahim. "What else could we do?"

Ibrahim's wife was pregnant at the time. On Dec. 28, she gave birth to a fifth son.

She says the Americans have not offered the family any financial assistance; they have not even visited them to pay their respects.

Mrs. Ibrahim and her sons now live with Ibrahim's family in Irbil, in the Kurdish self-ruled region of northern Iraq.

Anwar Ibrahim, 65, works as a concierge in a university dormitory and makes about $250 a month. He complains it is not enough to make ends meet.

"There's no government. Nobody's helping us or telling us who did it. I'm a guard here trying to make money to support his five boys," the elder Ibrahim said.

The family has asked officials at the Kurdistan Democratic Party, one of two major Kurdish parties, for help but was told the case did not concern them.

"The Americans should help us. He died because of them," said Khaled's widow. "I want my children to have normal lives when they grow up."

Shihab suffers quietly, trying to make sense of his loss.

"I'm angry for what happened to my father," he said. "I don't know who did it. I think they were thieves. They were in two cars, there too many of them. They carried knives, a Kalashnikov and pistols."


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050208/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_son_s_suffering&cid=540&ncid=1480

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Al-Quds Lana

 
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