Background
Kadhem Sharif was born in 1952 and like his father became obsessed with motorcycles. As he grew up he also developed a passion for wrestling and weightlifting, becoming a world-class athlete.
Kadhem Sharif was born in 1952 and like his father became obsessed with motorcycles. As he grew up he also developed a passion for wrestling and weightlifting, becoming a world-class athlete.
He is most famous for attempting to use a sledgehammer to bring down the statue of Saddam Hussein at the in Baghdad. "I was 12 when I sneaked out on my father"s Harley for the first time. I bought my first one eight years later, a 1966 Fatboy," Sharif recalls.
Many of his sporting adventures held danger and he remembers that every time the Iraqi team did badly the leader of Iraqi sports, Saddam"s son Uday Hussein, would order that everyone have their heads and eyebrows shaved and on at least one occasion, they were put in prison.
Sharif"s association did not end there as Uday had Sharif build him a world-class gym. Sharif also developed a weightlifting program for Uday.
Sharif supplied some supplements but Uday instead started abusing steroids
Steroids affected him, he became an addict. The doctors said he should not mix alcohol and steroids, but he did and it drove him mad.
He was trying to be a hero by taking more and more tablets.
But he failed. Uday took up collecting motorcycles like Sharif, even stealing some from him. lieutenant was at this point that they had a falling out and Sharif refused to fix any of Uday"s bikes.
lieutenant was then that he was thrown in jail on trumped up charges and spent two years in Iraqi prisons.
On April 9, 2003 Sharif had his chance to take revenge. Hearing that the Saddam regime had fallen he took a 10 kg (22 lb) sledgehammer and went to work on the statue of Saddam Hussein that stood in in Baghdad. The square is directly in front of the Palestine Hotel where the world"s journalists had been staying.
Seeing a crowd and a story, the reporters and their cameras streamed out of the hotel and video taped the falling of Saddam Hussein"s statue.
While Sharif"s actions with the sledgehammer only resulted in a small dent in the statue base and bloody hands, he does claim to have handed over the Iraqi flag that was placed on the statue. The legality of Sharif"s motorcycle business and collection has always been murky and he has admitted that some of his bikes were stolen in neighboring countries and smuggled into Iraq along with dealing with the bikes looted from Kuwait when Saddam Hussein invaded the country.
His business finally caught up with him when in 2005 he was arrested in connection with dealing stolen bikes. Kadhem had been a bike collector almost all his life but after the war his collection greatly expanded until he was arrested.
In his collection there were a number of notable bike including:
1914 - This Norton was part of the escort of King Faisal, Iraq"s first monarch.
1947 - British-made Bachelor of Scientific Agriculture that he found rusting in a farm in "Anbar province", an area of western Iraq notorious for insurgent violence since the 2003 United States-led invasion. 1957 British Norton motorcycle that Saddam Hussein the revolutionary rode when on the run after the assassination of then Iraqi President Abd al-Karim Qasim half a century ago. 1957 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud, formerly the property of the Emir of Kuwait.
Saddam"s eldest son, Uday Hussein, became an invalid after he was seriously injured in a 1996 assassination attempt.
Uday, also a collector of bikes, had his collection made into three-wheelers so he could still drive them. After Saddam"s fall Kadhem was able to get his hands on all of Uday"s monster three-wheeled invalid motorcycles.