|
Hip-swaying dancing doll ridicules
Saddam
Baghdad -
Iraqis used to dance to his tune, but in Baghdad toy shops a chubby,
gun-toting Saddam Hussein doll now wiggles his hips to the "Hippy
Hippy Shake."
Toy stores around Baghdad are doing a
quick trade in dancing Saddam dolls -- foot-high battery-powered
puppets of the former president, kitted out in full insurgent regalia,
who swing their hips to cheesy pop music at the flick of a switch.
Decked out with hand-grenades,
daggers, a walkie-talkie, binoculars and an AK-47, Saddam dances to
the "Hippy Hippy Shake" when turned on.
"It's funny, isn't it?" said Mustapha
al-Kadamy, a young father as he browsed through a toy store in the
wealthy Mansoor district and prepared to buy one of the dancing
Saddams.
"Tomorrow Saddam will go before an
Iraqi judge and so today is a good day to make fun of him -- we need
to be able to smile after all the horrible things he's done to us."
The owner of the store started
offering the dolls shortly after Saddam's regime was overthrown in
April last year.
A Turkish traveling salesmen turned
up with the Chinese-made puppets, also featuring dancing Osama bin
Ladens, Fidel Castros and George W. Bushes, and he placed an order.
At first it was the hip-shaking
Osamas that sold best, but slowly Iraqis grew less fearful of
ridiculing their deposed president and started buying the Saddam ones
too.
"At the beginning we'd hide them
under the counter and only sell them to those who specially asked
because people were upset to see the former president as a doll,"
explained Asaad Majid, a salesman in the al-Jelawi toy store in
Mansoor.
"Now we're not scared anymore, we
display them openly, and people buy them regularly," he said, adding
that demand peaked soon after Saddam was captured last December.
Thursday, the real Saddam and 11 of
his associates will go before an Iraqi judge to be charged with war
crimes and crimes against humanity. Saddam's trial is not expected to
begin until early next year.
There was little doubt about Saddam's
guilt in the minds of customers and sales staff Wednesday.
"If he's executed, then that's the
end of it -- it's too easy for him," said Ala, a sales assistant at
Jelawi's.
"It would be better to keep him in
prison for the rest of his life so that he has to suffer every day." --
Reuters
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|