Iraq has executed a former senior security official from Saddam Hussein’s regime for his role in the 1980 execution of prominent Shia cleric Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr, the government announced on Monday.
The National Security Service said Saadoun Sabri al-Qaisi was found guilty of “grave crimes against humanity,” including the killings of al-Sadr, members of the al-Hakim family, and other civilians.
The report did not specify when al-Qaisi, a former major general under Saddam who was arrested last year, was executed.
Al-Sadr, one of the most prominent critics of Saddam’s Baathist regime, was arrested in 1980 along with his sister, Bint al-Huda, a revered scholar and activist, after they openly condemned the regime’s repression of Shia activists.
During their detention, they were tortured before being executed by a firing squad on April 8, 1980.
The execution sparked widespread outrage at the time and remains a symbol of repression under Saddam's rule.
Since the 2003 fall of Saddam, Iraqi authorities have prosecuted former officials accused of "crimes against humanity" and abuses against political and religious opponents.