Latif was born in 1964, the son of a wealthy Iraqi businessman. He
attended the most exclusive school in Baghdad where another pupil was
Uday Saddam Hussein, son of the future President. Everyone noticed the
boys bore an uncanny resemblance to each other.
Whilst Latif was a young army officer fighting in the Iran/Iraq war, he
was summoned to a presidential palace and informed by Uday that he
wanted Latif to become his 'fidai' or body-double.
After a spell of imprisonment and threats to his family, Latif was
forced to agree. He underwent cosmetic surgery to look even more like
Uday and was trained to act like him in every way.
For years, Latif represented Uday in all manner of functions and
duties. He lived in a presidential palace in a life of unbelievable
extravagance and luxury. But Latif also witnessed the extreme cruelty
of the Saddam regime. Uday's psychotic temper, rapes, orgy parties,
torture atrocities, and sadistic murders.
Latif was so psychologically disturbed at losing his own identity and
by the role he was forced to play he even tried to commit suicide.
He survived eleven assassination attempts and was wounded nine times by
bullets meant to assassinate Uday.
When Uday also shot him in a fit of temper, Latif fled Iraq helped by
the CIA.
The CIA was grateful for Latif's insight into the regime and wanted him
to be their spokesperson on Iraq. But, as his family was still in Iraq,
Latif refused and moved to Austria where he hoped to live a peaceful
life.
To earn an income, Latif wrote the first version of The Devil's Double
revealing his time as Uday's fidai. And exposing the darkest secrets of
the Saddam regime to a shocked world.
For refusing to work with them, he was covertly imprisoned for nine
months by the CIA and on his release he found a bomb under his car
doubtless planted on orders of Uday who was to later murder Latif's
father.
For the next few years Latif traveled around Europe, surviving other
assassination attempts and trying to live undisturbed under a false
identity.
During this time, he amassed a fortune of $??m and lost it all when the
woman he fled Iraq with emptied their joint bank account during another
period of incarceration. Whilst in London in the 1990's, he was offered
money and a British passport by the Saudi's if he would murder a man he
had befriended who was a Saudi dissident. Also a Saudi Princess with
whom he had an affair, was beheaded when she returned to Saudi Arabia
to seek a divorce.
Latif eventually moved to Ireland where, after run-ins with the IRA and
drug-dealers, he found himself living as a beggar on the street.
This is where he met his wife Karen who helped him rebuild his life.
He has written three books serializing his life. 'The Devil's Double'
on which the feature film is based, 'The Black Hole' which relates his
time pressurized by the CIA and on the run through Europe and 'Forty
Shades of Conspiracy' which tells of his years in Ireland and how he
was continually victimized and denied Irish citizenship despite having
an Irish wife and child.
He has also written a fourth book 'The Hangman of Abu Grahib' yet to be
published.
Today, Dr. Latif Yahia is now an international human rights lawyer,
businessman and an outspoken Internet blogger commenting on
developments in the Arab world, politics, justice and injustice.