BAGHDAD (Reuters)
- Nearly two years after he was found in hiding,
Saddam Hussein goes on trial in Baghdad on Wednesday
charged with crimes against humanity for the death
of more than 140 Shi'ite Muslim men over two decades
ago.
Together with seven others, all members of his
once-feared Baath Party, Saddam will face a
five-judge panel from Iraq's Special Tribunal, a
court established by U.S. authorities in December
2003 to try the leaders of the overthrown regime.
However, while the day in court for the former
dictator has been long awaited by Iraqis and others,
it may not last long.
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Former dictator Saddam Hussein
Photo : AP
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Government officials and sources close to the
tribunal say the case may be quickly adjourned,
perhaps on the first day, so the judges, who have
received training over the past 18 months in
Britain, can study defense motions for a dismissal
or delay.
Saddam, 68, may not speak other than to confirm his
name when charges are read out; at a pre-trial
hearing in July last year he defiantly gave his
occupation as "president of Iraq".
He has not been seen in public since, other than in
video of interviews with magistrates, in which he
appeared thoughtful, stroking the greying beard he
has sported since his capture.
The charges stem from events that took place on July
8, 1982, when a group of young men linked to the
Shi'ite Dawa Party attempted to assassinate Saddam
as his armoured motorcade passed through Dujail, a
town about 60 km (35 miles) north of Baghdad.
In retaliation for the botched attempt on his life,
prosecutors will try to show that Saddam ordered his
henchmen to hunt down, torture and kill scores of
men from the town, not just immediately after that
day, but in the years that followed.
Women and children were also alleged to have been
forcibly removed from Dujail, taken to Abu Ghraib
prison and later sent to an internment camp in the
desert near the border with Saudi Arabia where many
ultimately "disappeared".
Helicopters and tanks then demolished parts of the
town, while Saddam's soldiers laid waste to rich
farmland and fruit groves, destroying the people's
homes and their livelihoods.
INTENSE SECURITY
Investigators have had nearly two years to collect
evidence and interview witnesses in the case, the
first of several which Saddam is expected to face in
the coming months, including charges of genocide for
attacks against Kurds in the 1980s.
More than 800 pages of evidence are said to have
been gathered ahead of the Dujail trial. Saddam's
chief lawyer, Khalil Dulaimi, says he has not been
given nearly enough time to study it all or
interview witnesses, limiting his defense.
An Iraqi with little experience of arguing major
cases, particularly not those involving allegations
of crimes against humanity, Dulaimi has said he
intends to challenge the legitimacy of the court in
motions to be presented on Wednesday.
The defense team backing him from London has said he
will present a dossier of 122 points designed to
show that the court, whose judges were chosen under
U.S. occupation, does not have jurisdiction over
Saddam and is illegal.
In the run-up to the trial, human rights groups have
raised concerns about the independence of the court
and its ability to meet international standards for
major criminal proceedings.
The trial will get under way amid intense security,
unprecedented even for Iraq, with body searches,
X-rays, deep background checks on observers,
eye-scans and finger-printing.
The defendants will sit facing the judges, who will
be on a raised dais behind court clerks. A curtain
will protect the identity of witnesses, and
bullet-proof glass will separate the few journalists
and observers from the rest of the court.
The prosecution and defense lawyers -- each
defendant can have his own representative -- will be
allowed to question witnesses only via the judges,
as Iraqi law dictates.
With less than 24 hours to go, it still has not been
decided whether it will be carried live on TV or
with a delay.
If proceedings are quickly adjourned, sources close
to the court say it could be several weeks before
they resume, probably after parliamentary elections
are held in mid-December.
Reuters
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