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Ali Dizaei
http://www.tackfilm.se/?id=1325353567044RA89
Mittwoch, 4. Januar 2012
http://www.alidizaei.de/
Waad Al Baghdadi news 15 September 2011
Waad Al-Baghdadi
who lied on oath about his identity and nationality at the Commander
Dizaei's trial in 2010, which led to the officer's conviction and
imprisonment, was finally brought to justice.
Baghdadi whose real name is Maleki was sent to prison for 8 months for stealing money from the British Tax Paper by way of fraudulent benefit claims.
Baghdadi whose real name is Maleki was sent to prison for 8 months for stealing money from the British Tax Paper by way of fraudulent benefit claims.
is interesting is
that the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and the IPCC who have been
protecting Al Baghdadi's criminality attempted to persuade the
sentencing judge not to sentence Al-Baghdadi to prison by giving the
judge a personal letter of recommendation. It is astonishing that a
criminal is being thanked for his lies to put an innocent police officer
in prison.
another act of
disgrace, the CPS and IPCC in order to once again protect Al- Baghdadi
made an application to a judge for reporting restrictions so that the
British media cannot report Al-Baghdadi's criminality.
truth is that these two agencies (CPS and IPCC) relied on the evidence of a thief and a thug to put in prions a very senior British Iranian police officer and now Al-Baghdadi's thuggery has come back to haunt them. Therefore, their action is also about saving face.
truth is that these two agencies (CPS and IPCC) relied on the evidence of a thief and a thug to put in prions a very senior British Iranian police officer and now Al-Baghdadi's thuggery has come back to haunt them. Therefore, their action is also about saving face.
Ali Dizaei accuser Waad al-Baghdadi admits benefit fraud – - NineNews Today
Waad Al-Baghdadi’s: a thief, a crook a rapist and a police informant
Waad Al-Baghdadi’s: a thief, a crook a rapist and a police informantis the story of the thief of Baghdad
Waad Al-Baghdadi ( Commander Ali Dizai's witness) is the the person who has raped this innocent girl. But the Brirish media have been prevented from naming him and stating the fact that on 16th of September 2011 he was sent to prison for stealing from the British Tax Payer. Only in UK a rapist who is a benefit cheat can be protected in this way. Shame on those who are protecting him.
Waad Al-Baghdadi Went to UK in 2003 and lied about his name, date of birth and country of birth. He said he was Iraqi. In fact he was born in Maydan Khrasoon and was selling heroin in the streets of Tehran from the age of 12. He was well known began stealing benefit money from the British public straight away on his arrival became a police informant selling information about others for money lied about Commander Ali Dizaei whilst being paid by the police. His lies meant Ali Dizaei spent a year in prison.
Good cop, Bad cop, won't go away cop !!!
Ali Dizaei
Ali Dizaei ... good cop, bad cop, won't go away cop
Dizaei is either cunning and treacherous or a police martyr, depending on your view. But he has so far outmanoeuvred his opponents. The police appeals tribunal has now ruled that he should be reinstated on full pay and conditions and receive back pay of up to £180,000. However, he has been suspended by the authority because he is still facing criminal charges.
In May, Commander Dizaei, 49, was released from jail after serving 15 months of a four-year sentence for misconduct in a public office and perverting the course of justice, following a Court of Appeal ruling that his conviction was unsafe. A retrial to establish the facts of his arrest of a web designer, Waad al-Baghdadi, in 2008, follows next year. In the meantime, he is campaigning to get his old job back.
This Iranian-born officer is clearly highly intelligent and in 25 years of police service he appears to have built up an impressive record in tackling crime. In happier times he has been fêted by politicians such as Michael Heseltine and Boris Johnson and by police commissioners. Yet he has also managed continually to fall out with his bosses. He has been quick to attribute this to institutional racism within the police force. An alternative explanation would be that they have wearied of his insubordination, or worse.
However, the Met has discovered that it is extremely hard to sack a police officer, especially one with a law degree.
He is an intriguing and exasperating mass of contradictions. He answers the door of his modest house in Acton with smiling courtesy. Inside, the decoration is ingeniously Babylonian. Painted pillars, ochre fabrics, an enormous plasma TV on the wall. His graceful third wife, Shai, who has been a ferocious support to her husband, offers tea - English or Persian - and nougat.
Dizaei has an answer for almost everything, alternating between eloquence and bombast. He reminds me of George Galloway.
Explaining his curious trip to Iran in 2009, he says that he has lectured round the world on policing and was there as an eminent expat: "If you ask me if Ahmadinejad is a nice guy or not, I don't have sufficient information." Easy to find out, you would have thought.
The role Ali Dizaei carved out for himself was more about politics than policing - he says his loyalty is to the "public" rather than the police, and he has the right to criticise police operations openly.
He even published a book titled Not One of Us. He smirks that he never became "house trained" by the Met. Yet his trump card is that, despite everything, he is a policeman. He was born into the police - his father was a senior officer in Iran - and he never wanted to be anything else.
He discusses himself with a series of rhetorical flourishes which do not invite interruption. "They can call me flamboyant, say 'he uses the race bandwagon'. Fair enough, all of those things they can throw at me but one thing they would love to say is that this guy is just mouth when it comes to delivering front-line policing."
"Boris had to say, 'Well done, boy'...he has not been in touch in recent times." The peeling-off of Dizaei's high-profile champions is a pattern. Those who promoted him seemed to create a rod for their own backs.
According to Dizaei, he is a model policeman with the vision of New York supercop Bill Bratton - indeed he claims to have adopted zero tolerance policing in Henley before others had thought of it.
He is aghast to a suggestion that he could have been more obedient to his former boss, the former Commissioner Sir Ian Blair: "I did not agree in some ways about his views on policing." He is also outraged that he should be rebuked, as he puts it, for a free kebab from his uncle's restaurant while Sir Paul Stephenson resigned following a £12,000 stay at Champneys ("Now I am sorry, but the hypocrisy is breathtaking") and contemptuous of the Met's conduct over phone-hacking at News International.
"How can anyone say it is perfectly okay to be wining and dining with the very organisation you are investigating? Do they believe people are stupid?"
Dizaei's sense of grievance could be considered inflated. For instance, he compares himself to both Nelson Mandela and Gandhi, before a hasty correction.
"I take inspiration from people like Gandhi and Mandela, who have been to jail but used that experience in a positive way. I am not suggesting that I am even a molecule of their stature, but all of us have role models to aspire to." You see why he might get on the nerves of his colleagues.
Yet his experience of jail was undoubtedly hair-raising, and might have broken weaker men. Dizaei began his sentence in solitary confinement at Wandsworth jail.
Dizaei says he was denied showers and could not speak to his family for several days. He claims his situation was worsened by his name being displayed on the door of his cell. "Prisoners would stand in corridors making death threats, saying 'Rat, fucking copper, you're dead'."
After a fortnight he was moved to Cambridge, but he is still bitter that he was not allowed to serve his sentence immediately in an open prison. Incidentally, he expresses sympathy for Charlie Gilmour, who is serving 16 months in Wandsworth, arguing that his treatment has also been disproportionate.
At Cambridge, he was subjected to further attacks from other prisoners. He says that a bucket of excrement was poured over his head: "Then they kicked me to the ground."
Even in an open prison in Swansea he was unsafe. "I was punched in the eye and had to go to hospital. They broke into my room and put faeces over family items such as photographs. I was living in constant fear of my life."
He also claims that he had to duck to save himself as other prisoners tried to throw boiling sugared water at him, which would peel his skin. "You may say this is bad luck but I don't think this is the way to deal with a police officer who has not killed anybody."
While he was in prison, Shai and his youngest son Erfan, aged eight - he has three other sons aged 22, 21 and 19 from his second marriage - allegedly battled with poverty and persecution.
He says that his son's leg was broken at school by bullies, and that missiles were thrown over his garden fence. Yet Erfan, a polite boy who returns from school during the interview, still has ambitions to join the police force.
The next trial is make or break. "I am fighting these battles out of my own money. So far I have spent over £1 million. I have had to mortgage my house and borrow money. My family would be destitute if it had not been for the support of friends."
He is now claiming legal aid, and is due considerable back payments from the police. Principle has always been accompanied by compensation for Dizaei.
Yet he is passionate that his driving impulse is still policing. The slur he says he cannot forgive is that he is a "criminal in uniform". He wants vindication and revenge on the police authority.
"These individuals have a vendetta against me and they have caused the taxpayers of London to spend £10 million. The equivalent of 1,000 police officers, just to prosecute me.
"I am adamant to expose the skulduggery that has put me in prison and that is still continuing today, that is the last thing that I will do."
In May, Commander Dizaei, 49, was released from jail after serving 15 months of a four-year sentence for misconduct in a public office and perverting the course of justice, following a Court of Appeal ruling that his conviction was unsafe. A retrial to establish the facts of his arrest of a web designer, Waad al-Baghdadi, in 2008, follows next year. In the meantime, he is campaigning to get his old job back.
This Iranian-born officer is clearly highly intelligent and in 25 years of police service he appears to have built up an impressive record in tackling crime. In happier times he has been fêted by politicians such as Michael Heseltine and Boris Johnson and by police commissioners. Yet he has also managed continually to fall out with his bosses. He has been quick to attribute this to institutional racism within the police force. An alternative explanation would be that they have wearied of his insubordination, or worse.
However, the Met has discovered that it is extremely hard to sack a police officer, especially one with a law degree.
He is an intriguing and exasperating mass of contradictions. He answers the door of his modest house in Acton with smiling courtesy. Inside, the decoration is ingeniously Babylonian. Painted pillars, ochre fabrics, an enormous plasma TV on the wall. His graceful third wife, Shai, who has been a ferocious support to her husband, offers tea - English or Persian - and nougat.
Dizaei has an answer for almost everything, alternating between eloquence and bombast. He reminds me of George Galloway.
Explaining his curious trip to Iran in 2009, he says that he has lectured round the world on policing and was there as an eminent expat: "If you ask me if Ahmadinejad is a nice guy or not, I don't have sufficient information." Easy to find out, you would have thought.
The role Ali Dizaei carved out for himself was more about politics than policing - he says his loyalty is to the "public" rather than the police, and he has the right to criticise police operations openly.
He even published a book titled Not One of Us. He smirks that he never became "house trained" by the Met. Yet his trump card is that, despite everything, he is a policeman. He was born into the police - his father was a senior officer in Iran - and he never wanted to be anything else.
He discusses himself with a series of rhetorical flourishes which do not invite interruption. "They can call me flamboyant, say 'he uses the race bandwagon'. Fair enough, all of those things they can throw at me but one thing they would love to say is that this guy is just mouth when it comes to delivering front-line policing."
"Boris had to say, 'Well done, boy'...he has not been in touch in recent times." The peeling-off of Dizaei's high-profile champions is a pattern. Those who promoted him seemed to create a rod for their own backs.
According to Dizaei, he is a model policeman with the vision of New York supercop Bill Bratton - indeed he claims to have adopted zero tolerance policing in Henley before others had thought of it.
He is aghast to a suggestion that he could have been more obedient to his former boss, the former Commissioner Sir Ian Blair: "I did not agree in some ways about his views on policing." He is also outraged that he should be rebuked, as he puts it, for a free kebab from his uncle's restaurant while Sir Paul Stephenson resigned following a £12,000 stay at Champneys ("Now I am sorry, but the hypocrisy is breathtaking") and contemptuous of the Met's conduct over phone-hacking at News International.
"How can anyone say it is perfectly okay to be wining and dining with the very organisation you are investigating? Do they believe people are stupid?"
Dizaei's sense of grievance could be considered inflated. For instance, he compares himself to both Nelson Mandela and Gandhi, before a hasty correction.
"I take inspiration from people like Gandhi and Mandela, who have been to jail but used that experience in a positive way. I am not suggesting that I am even a molecule of their stature, but all of us have role models to aspire to." You see why he might get on the nerves of his colleagues.
Yet his experience of jail was undoubtedly hair-raising, and might have broken weaker men. Dizaei began his sentence in solitary confinement at Wandsworth jail.
Dizaei says he was denied showers and could not speak to his family for several days. He claims his situation was worsened by his name being displayed on the door of his cell. "Prisoners would stand in corridors making death threats, saying 'Rat, fucking copper, you're dead'."
After a fortnight he was moved to Cambridge, but he is still bitter that he was not allowed to serve his sentence immediately in an open prison. Incidentally, he expresses sympathy for Charlie Gilmour, who is serving 16 months in Wandsworth, arguing that his treatment has also been disproportionate.
At Cambridge, he was subjected to further attacks from other prisoners. He says that a bucket of excrement was poured over his head: "Then they kicked me to the ground."
Even in an open prison in Swansea he was unsafe. "I was punched in the eye and had to go to hospital. They broke into my room and put faeces over family items such as photographs. I was living in constant fear of my life."
He also claims that he had to duck to save himself as other prisoners tried to throw boiling sugared water at him, which would peel his skin. "You may say this is bad luck but I don't think this is the way to deal with a police officer who has not killed anybody."
While he was in prison, Shai and his youngest son Erfan, aged eight - he has three other sons aged 22, 21 and 19 from his second marriage - allegedly battled with poverty and persecution.
He says that his son's leg was broken at school by bullies, and that missiles were thrown over his garden fence. Yet Erfan, a polite boy who returns from school during the interview, still has ambitions to join the police force.
The next trial is make or break. "I am fighting these battles out of my own money. So far I have spent over £1 million. I have had to mortgage my house and borrow money. My family would be destitute if it had not been for the support of friends."
He is now claiming legal aid, and is due considerable back payments from the police. Principle has always been accompanied by compensation for Dizaei.
Yet he is passionate that his driving impulse is still policing. The slur he says he cannot forgive is that he is a "criminal in uniform". He wants vindication and revenge on the police authority.
"These individuals have a vendetta against me and they have caused the taxpayers of London to spend £10 million. The equivalent of 1,000 police officers, just to prosecute me.
"I am adamant to expose the skulduggery that has put me in prison and that is still continuing today, that is the last thing that I will do."
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