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FACTBOX-Key facts on Taha Yassin Ramadan
20 Mar 2007 10:01:55 GMT
Source: Reuters

March 20 (Reuters) - Taha Yassin Ramadan, Saddam Hussein's former vice-president, was hanged in Baghdad early on Tuesday for his role in the killing of 148 Shi'ite Muslim men in the town of Dujail in the 1980s.

Here are some facts about him.

* Born to a peasant family in the northern Mosul region in the late 1930s, Ramadan worked in a bank after completing his secondary education. His political career began in 1956 when he joined the Baath party, then banned by the British-backed monarchy.

* Apart from Saddam's deputy Izzat Ibrahim, who remains at large, Ramadan was the sole survivor of the plotters of the 1968 coup which returned the Baath party to power. Ramadan joined Iraq's powerful Revolutionary Command Council after the coup.

* In 1970, he headed a revolutionary court that executed 44 officers for plotting to overthrow the regime.

* Iraqi exiles accused him of crimes against humanity for his role in crushing a Shi'ite uprising in southern Iraq after the 1991 Gulf War and his alleged involvement in the killing of thousands of Kurds in the north in 1988.

* Ramadan often went abroad as Saddam's envoy and held many senior posts as his "enforcer". He led the paramilitary Popular Army, whose task was to protect the government. The force was disbanded in 1991 when he became vice-president.

* Ramadan proposed in 2002, before the start of the war with Iraq in 2003, that Saddam and U.S. President George W. Bush settle their differences in a duel with weapons of their choice.

* Ramadan was captured in Mosul in August 2003 by Iraqi Kurdish fighters and handed over to U.S. forces. A special Iraqi tribunal convicted him of crimes against humanity. He was hanged early on Tuesday.
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U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon holds his chin during his meeting with Iraq's Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki (not pictured) in Baghdad March 22, 2007. Ban was left shaken but unhurt on Thursday on his first visit to Baghdad after a Katyusha rocket landed just metres from a building where he was giving a news conference. Ban and Maliki discussed a five-year reconstruction plan for Iraq that the secretary general launched last week as a "tool for unlocking Iraq's own potential".