| |
Saddam to stand in docks on Oct
19
BAGHDAD (Iraq)—The trial of Iraq’s former strongman Saddam Hussein and
seven associates will start on Oct. 19, the government announced Sunday.
In northern Iraq, clashes were continuing in an ethnically mixed
insurgent stronghold, medical workers said.
The announcement by government spokesman Laith Kubba confirmed
unofficial reports that the former strongman and several of his closest
aides will face a special tribunal immediately after the national
referendum on Iraq’s constitution on Oct. 15.
Kubba said seven co-defendants from Saddam’s regime would also face
trial. They include: Barazan Ibrahim, intelligence chief at the time and
Saddam’s half brother; former Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan; and
Awad Hamed al-Bandar, at the time a Baath party official in Dujail,
Kubba said.
The eight men will be charged with responsibility for the 1982 massacre
of 143 Shiites in Dujail, a town north of Baghdad, after a failed
assassination attempt. If found guilty, Saddam could receive the death
penalty.
US occupation authorities scrapped the death penalty soon after the 2003
war, but the new Iraqi government later reinstated it so it would have
the option of executing Saddam if he is convicted of crimes committed
during his regime.
Saddam is expected to face about a dozen trials for alleged crimes
committed by his regime, including the gassing of Kurds in Halabja and
the 1991 suppression of a Shiite uprising in the south.
“The charges against Saddam are so many (and) regardless of how many
years he is going to live, the charges and trials would not end,” Kubba
said.
“We urge anybody who has documents related to Saddam trial to present
them to the tribunal,” Kubba said.
Saddam’s Iraqi lawyer, Khalil al-Dulaimi, could not be reached for
comment. A judge said it would be routine for al-Dulaimi to ask for an
adjournment of the trial for procedural reasons.
Meanwhile, fighting was continuing for a third day in Tal Afar, a town
about 260 miles northwest of Baghdad, said Dr. Abdel al-Kamal from the
local hospital.
US and Iraqi officials urged civilians to leave affected areas of the
city, a sign that the Americans were preparing a major assault. US
forces crushed insurgents there last fall, leaving only about 500
American soldiers behind and handing over control to the Iraqis.
But Iraqi authorities lost control of the city, and insurgent ranks
swelled. That forced the US command to shift the 3rd Armored Cavalry
Regiment from the Baghdad area to Tal Afar to restore order.
On Saturday, US and Iraqi forces were firing at insurgents on the
western side of the city, Iraqi officials said. Elsewhere, American and
Iraqi forces were moving house-to-house, searching for weapons and
arresting men capable of firing them, Iraqi authorities said.
Hospital officials said they were unsure of casualties because it was
too dangerous for ambulances to reach the area. Officials said they
hoped to get ambulances into the area Sunday.
US and Iraqi officials had hoped that a new constitution, finalized Aug.
28 after weeks of intense negotiations, would help bring Iraq’s factions
together and in time lure Sunni Arabs away from the Sunni-dominated
insurgency.
Kubba said seven co-defendants from Saddam’s regime would also face
trial. They include: Barazan Ibrahim, intelligence chief at the time and
Saddam’s half brother; former Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan; and
Awad Hamed al-Bandar, at the time a Baath party official in Dujail,
Kubba said.
The eight men will be charged with responsibility for the 1982 massacre
of 143 Shiites in Dujail, a town north of Baghdad, after a failed
assassination attempt. If found guilty, Saddam could receive the death
penalty.
Instead, the bitter talks sharpened communal tensions, at a time when
both Sunnis and Shiites accused extremists from the other community of
killing their civilians. Discreet talks are under way to make changes in
the language of the draft to ease Sunni Arab hostility to the document.
However, both Sunni and Shiite community leaders are gearing up for a
decisive political battle in the referendum. Sunni clerics are urging
their followers to reject the charter while most of the Shiite clergy
supports it.—Agencies |
|