Kadom al-Jabouri became famous when he took his hammer to the dictator's statue. Now he wishes he had never done it
Ten years ago, Kadom al-Jabouri became the face of the fall of
Baghdad. Pictured with a sledgehammer while attempting to demolish the
huge statue of Saddam Hussein in the city's Firdos Square, Jabouri's jubilant act of destruction made front pages around the world.
For
Tony Blair and President George W Bush, the image was a godsend,
encapsulating the delight of a grateful nation that their hated dictator
had been ousted. The US networks showed the statue's fall for hours on
end.
However, almost exactly a decade later, the "sledgehammer
man" – who was helped by a US tank carrier to finally topple the statue –
furiously regrets that afternoon and the symbolism of what he was
involved in. "I hated Saddam," the 52-year-old owner of a motorcycle
spares shop told the Observer. "I dreamed for five years of bringing down that statue, but what has followed has been a bitter disappointment.
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