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Rediff.com  » News » Iraqi shoe thrower released from prison

Iraqi shoe thrower released from prison

September 15, 2009 14:59 IST
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Iraqi television journalist Muntazer al-Zaidi, who threw his shoe at former US president George W Bush in Baghdad last year, has been released from prison.

Muntazer, 30, was initially sentenced to three years for assaulting a foreign head of state but had his jail time reduced to one year on appeal. He is being freed early because of good behaviour.

Muntazer shouted, "It is the farewell kiss, you dog," at Bush on December 14, 2008, seconds before hurling his size-10 shoes at the man who ordered Iraq be invaded and occupied six-and-a-half years ago.

Although Bush, who successfully ducked to avoid the footwear and laughed off the attack, the incident caused massive embarrassment to both him and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

Muntazer faces the prospect of a very different life from his previous existence, as a journalist for Al-Baghdadia television -- a small, privately owned Cairo-based station, which has continued to pay his salary.

Muntazer's boss has promised the previously little-known reporter a new home as a reward for loyalty and the publicity that his actions, broadcast live across the world, generated for the station.

But there is talk of plum job offers from bigger Arab networks, lavish gifts such as sports cars from businessmen, a celebrity status, and reports that Arab women from Baghdad to the Gaza Strip want his hand in marriage.

Earlier in the day, the family of the Iraqi journalist claimed that he was brutally tortured and repeatedly injected with "unknown substances" while in jail.

'They injected him with substances but he had no idea what they were. Every time he tried to refuse having the injections, the doctors would say, 'You don't know our job better than we do',' Times Online quoted Uday, the bother of al-Zaidi, as saying.

Uday said that his brother was burned with "cigarettes behind his ears, had his ribs and nose broken".

According to him, Al-Zaidi was tortured after he refused to write and sign a letter of apology to Bush and to the Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, who was standing next to the President during the incident.

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