With the removal of Saddam Hussein from power in 2003 with the US-led invasion, Al-Hakim and SCIRI returned to Iraq where they have been major players in Iraq's politics. SCIRI's leader, Mohammed Baqir Al-Hakim, was assassinated on 29 August 2003, when a massive
car bomb exploded as he left the
Imam Ali Mosque in
Najaf. Following the murder, Abdul Aziz Al-Hakim became SCIRI's head. Al-Hakim was the top candidate listed for the
United Iraqi Coalition during the first
Iraqi legislative election of January 2005 but did not seek a government post because the Alliance had decided not to include theologians in the government.
Interior Ministry Under Abdul Aziz Al-Hakim, SCIRI controlled Iraq's Interior Ministry. In 2006 according to the United Nations human rights chief in Iraq, John Pace, said that every month hundreds of Iraqis were being tortured to death or executed by the Interior Ministry under SCIRI's control. According to a 2006 report by the Independent newspaper: 'Mr Pace said the Ministry of the Interior was "acting as a rogue element within the government". It is controlled by the main Shia party, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (Sciri); the Interior Minister,
Bayan Jabr, is a former leader of Sciri's Badr Brigade militia, which is one of the main groups accused of carrying out sectarian killings. Another is the Mehdi Army of the young cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, who is part of the Shia coalition seeking to form a government after winning the mid-December election. Many of the 110,000 policemen and police commandos under the ministry's control are suspected of being former members of the Badr Brigade. Not only counter-insurgency units such as the Wolf Brigade, the Scorpions and the Tigers, but the commandos and even the highway patrol police have been accused of acting as death squads. The paramilitary commandos, dressed in garish camouflage uniforms and driving around in pick-up trucks, are dreaded in Sunni neighbourhoods. People whom they have openly arrested have frequently been found dead several days later, with their bodies bearing obvious marks of torture.
U.S. visits On 4 December 2006, al-Hakim met with
George W. Bush and made a commitment to help end violence, Al-Hakim also gave his assessment of the situation in Iraq: On 5 December 2006, on behalf of
The Catholic University of America and
American University's
Center for Global Peace, he spoke at the
Pope John Paul II Cultural Center. The title of his speech was "Freedom and Tolerance in Shi'a Islam and the Future of Iraq". Notable guests at this event included
Archbishop Donald Wuerl of
Washington, D.C., and Rabbi Professor
Ephraim Isaac from the
Institute of Semitic Studies in
Princeton, New Jersey. ==Illness and death==