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Iraq's Aziz gets family call, Saddam trial
nears
12.8.2005
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BAGHDAD (Reuters)
- Iraq's imprisoned former deputy prime minister
Tareq Aziz took a 10-minute phone call from his
family on Thursday, his first such contact in over
two years, and will receive a visit from them next
week, his lawyer said.
With the trial of his former leader Saddam Hussein
probably less than two months away, according to a
source close to the Iraqi Special Tribunal which is
trying him for crimes against humanity, Aziz said
through his attorney on Wednesday that he would not
testify against the ousted president. |

Tareq Aziz, the Iraqi former deputy prime minister
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Lawyer Badia Aref said Aziz had spoken with his
family on the telephone from the U.S.-run facility
near Baghdad where he is being held along with
Saddam and other senior members of the
administration overthrown by U.S. forces in April
2003.
He would receive his first visit on Aug. 21, Aref
said. It is not clear whether others among the key
defendants have received such visits in the past and
there has been no word that Saddam himself has seen
members of his family, now in exile.
The reasons were not clear for the apparent
concessions made to Aziz, once the urbane face of
Saddam's government to the outside world.
The source close to the tribunal said on Thursday
that investigating magistrates were making good
progress on a number of cases, as well as that of
the killings at Dujail, for which Saddam was charged
last month and will face trial soon.
That case, involving dozens of Shi'ite villagers
killed after an assassination attempt on Saddam in
1982, is less sweeping than some of the cases the
former president faces, such as the massacres of
Kurds in the late 1980s and of Shi'ite rebels in
1991. But prosecutors believe it may be easier to
prove his personal responsibility in the Dujail
killings.
The possibility that the tribunal timetable could be
delayed by complaints from politicians that some of
its judges were former members of Saddam's ruling
Baath party appeared to have receded, the source
told reporters at a briefing.
Reuters
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