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Saddam Hussein enjoyed fishing, although not always in a particularly relaxed fashion - he would sometimes order grenades to be lobbed into the water if the fish were not biting.
The catch would then be served to guests who would be suitably honoured to be dining on the results of the President's sporting prowess.
Many of Saddam's 52 palaces had access to water. The premier among them, the Maqar-el-Tharthar, north of Baghdad, beside Lake Tharthar, was a complex of 45 marble mansions where members of his coterie and his sons Uday and Qusay would also go on angling trips, surrounded by bodyguards.
A year after the invasion by United States-led forces in 2003, the fishing jetties of Maqar, the once fabled "Green Palace", lay empty, with tumbleweed from the gardens blowing into the lake.
But now fishing is back at the palace. The Baghdad Anglers Club and School of Flyfishing hold their regular meetings at the various former homes of Saddam in the Iraqi capital every Sunday, although these are sometimes interrupted by mortar and rocket fire.
The members are US and British military and officials, and occasionally the few foreign journalists that are still left in Iraq.
A tournament held two months ago was featured in a Florida TV fishing show hosted by Joe Mercurio, who flew in to donate rods and tackle from the show's sponsors. The club has a website, baghdadflyfishing.com, with a gallery of photos of soldiers showing off their catch.
Fishing stories can, of course, be as unreliable as war stories. "You need that photo, or if you, say, caught a 24-incher no one is going to believe you," said Warrant Officer Leslie "Scott" Henry, a 19-year-old helicopter pilot.
Fishing, he says, offers a bit of sanity in the middle of the mayhem. His female colleague, Warrant Officer Stormy Ripley, agrees. "Anything that will get me close to the water helps me relax. There's something innocent about it in the midst of all this war."
The normal catch is carp, which would be eaten at the cafes beside the Tigris in a dish called "mazgouf" in more peaceful times before the war, although the club has also had some luck with another kind of fish, asp.
The best site, says Henry, is the half-built Victory Over the United States palace, which is now part of an American base.
"Carp eat off the bottom. They are garbage fish, they are just not very sexy," says Henry. The best way to catch them is with wads of bacon swiped from the military dining hall.
The fish caught by the club, however, are no match for those Uday was supposed to have caught. He came first in a number of competitions, on occasions against semi-professional anglers. But then, it was wiser not to beat Saddam's son at anything much. Documents showed he had come first in a class of 174 in every subject.
- INDEPENDENT