On this date in 1980, a professor, a soldier, a bureaucrat and a businessman were hanged by Saddam Hussein in his campaign to cow Iraq’s Turkic ethnic minority.
The ethnic and religious quiltwork of Iraq is much more nuanced than Sunni vs. Shia — and this blog has noticed its deadly potential before.
This day’s hangings belong to an earlier era, of the Ba’athist secular pan-Arab aspiration that had Hussein quashing minority national aspirations. (Though the anti-minority stance was hardly unique to him.)
Nejdet Kochak, Abdullah Abdurrahman, Riza Demirji and Adil Sherif were ethnic Turkmen (or Turkomen), ethnically and linguistically distinct Moslem descendants of those far-flung peoples of the Eurasian steppes.
More to the point, they were relatively prominent voices for Turkoman civil rights in the face of harsh state suppression.
This being Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, the problem had an easy solution. The four were made examples of, convicted of spying for their brother Turks in Turkey, and hanged — but not forgotten.
On this day..
- 1891: Slumach
- 1985: Doyle Skillern, under the law of parties
- 1772: Bryan Sheehen, cuck
- 2014: Dennis McGuire, Ohio botch
- 1630: Christina Plum, at the stake, in Cologne
- 2013: A day in the death penalty around the world
- 1942: Senitsa Vershovsky, Mayor of Kremenchuk
- 1813: 14 Luddites at York
- 2003: Daniel Juan Revilla
- 1400: John Holland, Earl of Huntingdon
- 1682: Alexander Cockburn, hangman, condemned
- 1936: Albert Fish