Saddam Hussein’s granddaughter surfaces at glitzy Cartier bash after years in exile
The grand𒁏daughter of Saddam Hussein emerged from her quiet exile for a glitzy bash hosted by Car🐽tier in Dubai.
Hareܫer Hussein Kamel was shown hobnobbing with other well-heeled guests at the bra😼nd’s gathering in the United Arab Emirates, .
In one frame, she posed with a glam snap with two uniform-clad workers from th🐻e storied jewelry maison.
Hussain Kamel and her mother, Raghad Hussein, were granted asylum in Jordan in 2003 after the US invadꦡed Iraq.
The motheꦓr and daughter are still believed to be living under the protection of the Jordan൩ian royal family.
Hussain Kamel’s Instagram is mostly posts praising her late grandfather, who was found guilty of crimes agaꦓinst humanity and executed in December 2006.
“M🍃ay your soul rest in peace🌠,” she captioned one post.
In another post, Hussein Kamel added the hash🐼tag “#dontmessw🐈ithmyfamily.”
During his nearly 25-year-long regime, Saddam Hussein and his Baath Party asserted their dominance through extreme violence and subjugation — including the 1982 massacre of 142 Iraqi Shi’a Muslims.
Hussein Kamel’s father, Hussein Kamel al-Majid, defected from his father-🍌in-law’🍰s stronghold in 1995.
He returned to Iraq after being assured he would be safe — but was killed in a firefight, allegedly by Saddam’s security forces, shortly after arriving in the country.
Despite the conflict between her father and grandfather, Husseim Kamel frequently pays tribute to both m♉en on her social media.
“You have a place in my heart lik♓e that laughter that never disappears,” she wrote under🌃neath a childhood photo shared to commemorate the anniversary of her father’s killing.
Hussein Kamel’s cameo at the Cartier event comes just a few years after her mother appeared on the satellite channel Al Arabiya and expressed an interest in returning to Iraq and enterin🔯g politics.
A fewꦗ years earlier, an article in Der Spiegel accused Raghad Hussein of (ISIL), 🔜the jihadist group that emerged in the wake of the US invasion.
As of 2018, Raghad Hussein was listed on the Iraqi government’s most wanted list alongside 29 suspected ISIL fighters, 12 alleged al Qaeda members,🅺 and 20 Baath party members,.
Carౠtier🔯 did not immediately return The Post’s request for a comment about the Dubai party.