Newport-Mesa Iraqis support Hussein’s removal
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Paul Clinton
Maha Yousif says she supports President Bush’s bid to oust Saddam
Hussein, the leader of her Iraqi homeland.
Yousif, a 51-year-old orthodontist who now lives in Newport Coast,
left Baghdad 26 years ago with her husband, dentist Musa Bahia, but
says she retains an empathetic link to the friends and family who
still live in the country.
“We’re very concerned now because the Iraqi people are in a tough
spot,” Yousif said. “They’ve been suffering for years under this
dictator.”
Yousif and Bahia left shortly after Hussein and his Baath Party
came to power in 1968. At the time, Yousif graduated from dental
school and was given a choice: Support the Baath Party or have
trouble finding work.
“They tampered with my grades,” Yousif said. “They denied me a lot
of rights and privileges.”
Yousif and Bahia still have many relatives in Iraq and find it
difficult to watch the TV coverage of the war in their country. Their
relatives live in Baghdad and sections of southern Iraq, near
Karbala, which saw heavy fighting over the weekend.
The couple keep in contact with their relatives by telephone.
Anxiety aside, another local Iraqi emigre, Imam Moustafa
Al-Quazwini, said he keeps up on war updates while periodically
calling his relatives, who live in Baghdad and southern Iraq.
As a religious man, Al-Quazwini, who leads services at the Islamic
Education Center of Orange County in Costa Mesa, can’t fully support
Bush’s military campaign to remove Hussein.
“I am against the war since it brings pain and misery mostly to
the innocent civilians,” Al-Quazwini said. “However, the only
solution remaining is to topple the regime of Saddam Hussein and
remove him from power.”
Al-Quazwini left Iraq in 1993 after he said he watched Hussein’s
regime imprison or execute several of his family members. His still
has relatives in Baghdad, Karbal, Najaf and Basra.
The 41-year-old Al-Quazwini said his relatives support the
overthrow of Hussein by coalition forces.
“I did speak to them over the last few days,” Al-Quazwini said.
“They expressed their hopes that this regime will come to an end.”
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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