NOVANEWS
Jordanian supporters of ex-Iraqi President Saddam Hussein physically battling it out with Iraqis who oppose the strongman’s rule in the Iraqi embassy in Amman. (YouTube screen grab)
Zionist Al Arabiya –
A statement by the Iraqi ambassador to Jordan, which denounced the brutal regime of Saddam Hussein, ignited a fight between both supporters and opponents of the former Iraqi leader.
In a YouTube video published on Sunday, mostly Jordanian supporters of Saddam and Iraqi opponents physically kicked each other and threw chairs at one another during an event that had been organized by the Iraqi embassy in Amman.
After the Iraqi Ambassador, Hadi Jawad, criticized Saddam’s 24-year rule, some of the Jordanian attendees questioned him, describing the rule of Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki as nothing better especially due to the fact that deadly violence continues in Iraq.
Just before the physical hostilities, the toppled strongman’s Jordanian supporters at the event were heard chanting “with blood and spirit we will redeem you, oh Saddam!”
The aggression came to an end after security guards stormed the hall.
In March 2003, the U.S. invasion of Iraq brought an end to Saddam’s hold on power and his one-arty Baathist rule in the country.
In a YouTube video published on Sunday, mostly Jordanian supporters of Saddam and Iraqi opponents physically kicked each other and threw chairs at one another during an event that had been organized by the Iraqi embassy in Amman.
After the Iraqi Ambassador, Hadi Jawad, criticized Saddam’s 24-year rule, some of the Jordanian attendees questioned him, describing the rule of Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki as nothing better especially due to the fact that deadly violence continues in Iraq.
Just before the physical hostilities, the toppled strongman’s Jordanian supporters at the event were heard chanting “with blood and spirit we will redeem you, oh Saddam!”
The aggression came to an end after security guards stormed the hall.
In March 2003, the U.S. invasion of Iraq brought an end to Saddam’s hold on power and his one-arty Baathist rule in the country.