http://apnews.myway.com/article/20031214/D7VE8A0G1.html

Many in the Arab world greeted news of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's capture
with initial disbelief that turned to joy and hunger for revenge against the
tyrant or, among some, sadness that an Arab leader should come to such a
tawdry end.
"Impossible! No, I don't believe it," cried Rami Makhoul, who works at a
jewelry store in the Syrian capital Damascus. At an outdoor market in Cairo,
shopkeepers could be heard yelling at each other, "They say he's been
captured, do you believe that?"

In the Jordanian capital Amman, 77-year-old Sheik Abu Khaled saw the TV
footage of the disheveled, bearded Saddam and declared, "This captured man
isn't Saddam. He'd rather blow himself up."

But as the news set in, many expressed joy that Saddam would never return to
rule Iraq, while others were disappointed that he was captured by Americans
or that he did not fight back rather than surrender.

"Saddam is a dictator and the Iraqi people suffered under him, but on the
other hand, it was the (American) occupation that caught him," Mohammed
Horani, a legislator with the Palestinian Parliament, said in the Gaza
Strip. "There will be a sense of confusion in the public."

In the Yemeni capital San'a, Mohammed Abdel Qader Mohammadi, 50, a teacher,
said he was surprised that the arrest took place as it did, with Saddam
caught lying down in a tiny, underground hiding place then videotaped by the
Americans, wild-haired and puffy-eyed, as a doctor checks inside his mouth.

"I expected him to resist or commit suicide before falling into American
hands," Mohammadi said. "He disappointed a lot of us, he's a coward."

But others who saw exiled Iraqis celebrating or TV footage of joyful people
in Baghdad said the capture of Saddam could be a new chapter for the Iraqi
people.

"I think this will bring security for the Iraqi people and hopefully they
will set up real government rather than a de facto one," said Saudi lawyer
Abdulrahman Mohammed. "Saddam's capture is also good for Iraq's immediate
neighbors and Saudi Arabia is one of them."

Rasheed al-Osaimi, a 22-year-old Saudi student, said the Iraqi leader should
be tried and executed. "Saddam should not be spared, he should get the death
penalty, which is the least he deserves," he said.

Makhoul, the jewelry store employee in Damascus who at first did not believe
Saddam had been captured, said he had mixed feelings about the former Iraqi
leader's arrest.

"This is a great day for the Iraqi people and I share their happiness," he
said. "Saddam is a dictator and this should be the fate of all dictators."

Makhoul, however, said he was sad that Saddam should meet his fate at the
hands of the Americans, whom he said "cared nothing about the Iraqi people."

Samer Saado, an employee at a Damascus flower shop, said he didn't care
about Saddam but felt overwhelming sadness for Iraq and the entire Arab
world.

"What the Americans are doing in Iraq and everywhere else is humiliating.
There's nothing to say we're not next in line," he said.


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