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Court upholds
Saddam’s death verdict
Execution possible
within 30 days
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD (Iraq)—Iraq’s highest appeals court on Tuesday upheld Saddam
Hussein’s death sentence and said he must be hanged within 30 days for
the killing of 148 Shiites in the central city of Dujail. The sentence
“must be implemented within 30 days,” chief judge Aref Shahin said.
“From tomorrow, any day could be the day of implementation.”
On Nov. 5, an Iraqi court sentenced Saddam to the gallows for ordering
the 1982 killings following an attempt on his life. Under Iraqi law, the
appeals court decision must be ratified by President Jalal Talabani and
Iraq’s two vice presidents. Talabani opposes the death penalty but has
in the past deputized a vice president to sign an execution order on his
behalf — a substitute that was legally accepted.
Raed Juhi, a spokesman for the High Tribunal court that convicted
Saddam, said the judicial system would ensure that Saddam is executed
even if Talabani and the two vice presidents do not ratify the decision.
“We’ll implement the verdict by the power of the law,” Juhi said. He did
not elaborate.
The appeals court also upheld death sentences for Barzan Ibrahim,
Saddam’s half brother and intelligence chief during the Dujail killings,
and Awad Hamed al-Bandar, head of Iraq’s Revolutionary Court, which
issued the death sentences against the Dujail residents.
The appeals court concluded the sentence of life imprisonment given to
former vice president Taha Yassin Ramadan was too lenient and returned
his file to the High Tribunal. Ramadan was convicted of premeditated
murder in the Dujail case. “We demand that he be sentenced to death,”
said Shahin, the appeals judge.
At his trial, Saddam argued that the Dujail residents who were killed
had been convicted in a legitimate Iraqi court for trying to assassinate
him in 1982. The televised trial was watched throughout Iraq and the
Middle East as much for theater as for substance. Saddam was ejected
from the courtroom repeatedly for political harangues, and his half
brother once showed up in long underwear and sat with his back to the
judges.
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