Trials of Saddam Hussein

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Saddam Hussein during his first appearance before the Iraqi Special Tribunal
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Saddam Hussein during his first appearance before the Iraqi Special Tribunal

The trial of Saddam Hussein, the former President of Iraq, is being held under the Iraqi Special Tribunal. He is tried for allegations involving human rights abuses in Iraq, in particular in the context of the failed assassination attempt in Dujail in 1982. He may also be tried for events dating to the Iran-Iraq War and the invasion of Kuwait including with war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide. He could face the death penalty if convicted.

On June 30, 2004, Saddam Hussein, held in custody by U.S. forces at Camp Cropper in Baghdad, along with 11 senior Ba'athist officials, were handed over legally (though not physically, as there is at present no adequate Iraqi prison to hold them) to the interim Iraqi government to stand trial. Particular attention will be paid to his activities in violent campaigns against the Kurds in the north during the Iran-Iraq War, and against the Shiites in the south in 1991 and 1999 to put down revolts. Saddam asserts that he is still President of Iraq.

Contents

First hearing

The 67-year-old deposed Iraqi leader appeared confident and defiant throughout the 26-minute hearing. Alternating between listening to and gesturing at the judge, Saddam questioned the legitimacy of the tribunal set up to try him. He called the court a "play aimed at Bush's chances of winning the U.S. presidential elections." He emphatically rejected charges against him. "This is all theatre. The real criminal is Bush," he stated. When asked by the judge to identify himself in his first appearance before an Iraqi judge, he answered, "You are an Iraqi, you know who I am." "I am still the president of the republic and the occupation cannot take that away," Saddam declared.

Also during the arraignment, Saddam defended Iraq's August 1990 invasion of Kuwait and referred to Kuwait's rulers as "dogs," which led to an admonishment from the judge for using coarse language in court (dogs are widely considered to be unclean animals in the Islamic world). Later on July 1, Kuwait's information minister Abul-Hassan said crude language was "expected" of Saddam. "This is how he was raised," said the minister. [1] Unlike the conservative monarchs in the area, which rule every other Arab nation in the Persian Gulf region, Saddam Hussein was born into a hard-scrabble, landless peasant family and was allegedly beaten as a child.

Although no attorneys for Saddam were present at the July 1 hearing, his first wife, Sajida Talfah, has hired a multinational legal team of over 20 attorneys, headed by Jordanian Mohammad Rashdan and including Ayesha Qaddafi (Libya), Curtis Doebbler (United States), Emmanuel Ludot (France), Marc Henzelin (Switzerland) and Giovanni di Stefano (United Kingdom). Towards the end of the hearing, the deposed president refused to sign the legal document confirming his understanding of the charges.

Pre-trial events

Iraqis chant slogans in support of Saddam Hussein during a during a protest against his trial on October 18, 2005.
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Iraqis chant slogans in support of Saddam Hussein during a during a protest against his trial on October 18, 2005.

The London-based Arab-language daily newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi reported in early May, 2005, that during a meeting with Donald Rumsfeld, "known only to a few Iraqi officials in Jordan", Saddam refused an offer of release if he made a televised request to armed groups for a ceasefire with allied forces. It is important to note however, that no other major newspaper or wire service has picked this story up since. [2] The London Daily Telegraph newspaper, quoting an unnamed senior UK government source, had reported two weeks before that Iraqi insurgents were being offered a "deal" whereby the former President of Iraq would receive a more lenient sentence if they gave up their attacks. [3]

On June 17, 2005, former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad announced the formation, under his joint chairmanship, of an international Emergency Committee for Iraq, with a main objective of ensuring fair trials for Saddam Hussein and the other former Bath Party officials being tried with him.[4]

On July 18, 2005, Saddam was charged by the Special Tribunal with the first of an expected series of charges, relating to the mass killings of the inhabitants of the village of Dujail in 1982 after a failed assassination attempt against him.

On August 8, 2005, Saddam's family announced that they had dissolved the Jordan-based legal team and that they had appointed Khalil al-Duleimi, the only Iraq-based member, as the sole legal counsel.[5]

In an interview broadcast on Iraqi television on September 6, 2005, Iraqi president Jalal Talabani said that he had directly extracted confessions from Saddam that he had ordered mass killings and other "crimes" during his regime and that he deserves to die. Two days later, Saddam's lawyer denied that he confessed.[6]

Saddam's defense repeatedly argued for a delay in the proceedings, insisting that it had not been given sufficient time to review all prosecution documents as provided for under tribunal rules, but so far these submissions have been rejected. Meanwhile international human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, have suggested that the Iraqi Special Tribunal and its legal process may not meet international standards for a fair trial. The United Nations also declined to support the proceeding, expressing similar concerns over fairness as well as over the possibility of a death sentence in the case.

Al-Dujail trial

Saddam Hussein shares a joke with a guard at his trial on October 19, 2005.
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Saddam Hussein shares a joke with a guard at his trial on October 19, 2005.

Iraqi authorities put Saddam Hussein and seven other former Iraqi officials on trial on October 19, 2005 four days after the 15 October 2005 referendum on the new constitution. The tribunal specifically charged the defendants with the killing of 143 Shiites from Dujail, in retaliation for the failed assassination attempt of 8 July 1982. Supporters of Saddam protested against the trial in Tikrit.[7]

Saddam's co-defendants are:

  • Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, his half-brother and former chief of intelligence
  • Taha Yassin Ramadan, former Vice-President
  • Awad Hamed al-Bandar Al-S'adun, a former chief judge
  • Abdullah Kadhem Roweed Al-Musheikhi, Al-Dujail Baath party official
  • Mizher Abdullah Roweed Al-Musheikhi, (son of Abdullah Kadhem), Al-Dujail Baath party official
  • Ali Daeem Ali, Dujail Baath party official
  • Mohammed Azawi Ali, Dujail Baath party official

As in his pre-trial appearence, Saddam at the opening of his trial on October 19 appeared defiant and rejected the tribunal's legitimacy and independence from the control of foreign occupation. "I do not respond to this so-called court, with all due respect to its people, and I retain my constitutional right as the president of Iraq," Saddam declared. He added, "Neither do I recognize the body that has designated and authorized you, nor the aggression because all that has been built on false basis is false."

Activists from the Bangladesh Samajtantric Dal (BSD) in Dhaka, Bangladesh chant slogans demanding the immediate release of Saddam Hussein during a protest against his trial on October 20, 2005. One sign reads, 'free Saddam, hang Bush and Blair.'
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Activists from the Bangladesh Samajtantric Dal (BSD) in Dhaka, Bangladesh chant slogans demanding the immediate release of Saddam Hussein during a protest against his trial on October 20, 2005. One sign reads, 'free Saddam, hang Bush and Blair.'

When the judge asked for his name, Saddam said "I am the president of the Iraq", refused to state his name, but returned the question, asking Kurdish judge Rizgar Mohammed Amin, "Who are you? I want to know who you are". When Amin addressed Saddam as "the former president," Saddam objected emphatically, said he was still the President of the Republic of Iraq, and had not been deposed.

While Saddam's seven co-defendants appeared in traditional Arabic male dress, Saddam wore a dark suit and a white shirt. Al-Bandar, sitting next to Saddam in the front row in a pen of white metal bars, complained that the defendants had been stripped of their head-coverings, upon which they were given back to them.

After the charges were read to them, all eight defendants pleaded not guilty. The first session of his trial lasted 3 hours. The court adjourned the case until 28 November 2005, as some of the witnesses were to scared to attend, and also to allow the defense more time to study evidence [8]. During an interview with the Arab news agency al-Arabiya following the opening of the trial, Saddam's eldest daughter Raghad branded the court a "farce" and boasted that her father, who dominated the courtroom with his bearing of swagger and confidence associated with his decades in power, behaved like a "lion" during the proceedings. [9] "My father is brave, a lion, I am proud of him," she said. "He is a man who dedicated his life to serve his country, he was brave in his youth, so how can he be afraid now?" she added. [10]

On October 20, 2005, attorney Saadoun Sughaiyer al-Janabi, charged with the defense of Awad Hamed al-Bandar, was abducted from his office by gunmen, and found shot dead near his office a few hours later. On November 8, 2005, attorney Adel al-Zubeidi, who had been representing Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan and Abdullah Kazim Ruwayyid, was killed by three gunmen in Baghdad. Barazan Ibrahim's lawyer Thamer Hamoud al-Khuzaie was also wounded in the attack.

Notes

  1. ^  Saddam upsets Kuwaiti 'dogs' at Mail & Guardian online
  2. ^  Saddam rejects Rumsfeld offer of release at Thepeninsulaqatar.com
  3. ^  Malaysia: Former Prime Minister Urgers Fair Trial for Saddam at Adnki.com
  4. ^  Saddam's Jordan-based legal team dissolved at Boston.com
  5. ^  Lawyer denies Saddam confession at BBC News
  6. ^  Demonstrations, statements, supporting Saddam at Arabicnews.com
  7. ^  "Saddam may escape noose in deal to halt insurgency" at dailytelegraph.co.uk

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