Saddam’s ‘human shields’ want answers

By AFP
|
August 05, 2021

LONDON: More than three decades may have passed since they were held as human shields by Saddam Hussein in Iraq, but those caught up in the ordeal still want answers.

Passengers who were taken off British Airways Flight 149 in Kuwait on August 2, 1990 want the UK government to admit liability, apologise and release a secret report about what really happened.

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A new book, "Operation Trojan Horse", claims the authorities in London used the flight to deploy nine military intelligence officials in Kuwait and knew the civilians risked capture. Author Stephen Davis said the plane landed despite Britain receiving US intelligence announcing the Iraqi invasion three hours and 45 minutes beforehand and the control tower in Kuwait turning away all other flights that night.

Shortly afterwards, Iraqi jets pounded the runway with bombs before tanks and troops surrounded the airport as Kuwaiti defences capitulated. Some of the 367 passengers and crew who were taken off the Kuala Lumpur-bound jet spent more than four months in captivity.

They were placed at sites throughout Iraq thought likely to be targeted by a Western military coalition. One of them, Barry Manners, 55, was travelling with his then-boyfriend to Malaysia at the time.

He said in London this week that the "conspiracy of silence" about what happened had destroyed his faith in authority. "It’s the antithesis of every value you were taught, the whole essence of Western society," he told AFP.

Another, Margaret Hearn, 65, said: "I trusted British Airways. It makes you very angry. Luckily, I came out of it, but no thanks to them." Reliving his time as a hostage, Manners, a landlord, said he befriended his captor, an engineer at Dukan Dam in northern Iraq, but constantly worried about food shortages and that the guards would be ordered to shoot prisoners.

"You refuse to believe you’re going to be released -- you have these false dawns and it’s debilitating," he said at the launch of Davis’ book. Manners burst into tears upon returning to London, after more than four months in captivity, but suffered from deteriorating mental health after his partner died in 1992.

"There were times when nihilistic thoughts became so intrusive. There was no joy in the world," he said. "It’s difficult to know how much was bereavement and how much was trauma from Iraq -- the two were a toxic combination."

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