Posted on 09/25/2006 5:46:39 AM PDT by TexKat
BAGHDAD - The newly-appointed judge in Saddam Husseins genocide trial threw Iraqs former leader out of court on Monday, imposing his authority on a legal process marred by political controversy.
A Kurdish villager, meanwhile, testified that women prisoners were often raped during the brutal 1987-1988 Anfal attacks against the Kurds that prosecutors say left 182,000 people dead.
Saddam was thrown out when he waved a sheet of yellow legal paper from the dock, declaring: I have a request here that I dont want to be in this cage any more.
But Judge Mohammed Al Oreibi Al Khalifah fired back: I am the presiding judge. I decide about your presence here. Get him out.
Bailiffs took Saddam out of the courtroom and the hearing at the Iraqi High Tribunal in Baghdadwhere Saddam is facing charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanitycontinued.
Saddam and six of his former colleagues face charges for spearheading the Anfal military campaign.
They face the death penalty if found guilty.
Khalifah took over as the trials new chief judge last week after his predecessor Abdullah Al Ameri was accused of showing leniency and sacked by the Iraqi government.
You need to show respect to the court and the case, and to those who dont show it, I am sorry, but I have to apply the law, Khalifah told another defendant, Sabir Al Duri, who was questioning the days first witness.
Saddams defence team was not in court. The Sunni strongmans counsel boycotted the trial on Monday and accused the government of interfering with the court proceedings.
Last week, the Iraqi government sacked Ameri after he told Saddam in open court that he had not been a dictator. He was quickly replaced with his deputy, Khalifah, a Shiite.
The defence team will not recognise the legitimacy of this court and does not accept the tailor-made decision taken by the occupying forces, chief defence attorney Khalil Al Dulaimi had told AFP in Amman on Sunday.
It is not about this judge or that judge, but from day one we have protested the legitimacy and the bias of this court, he argued.
On Monday Duri, the director of military intelligence under Saddam, referred to another accused and former defence minister Sultan Hashim Al Tai by his rank, irritating the judge.
Saddam responded by demanding to be excused, whereupon Khalifah ejected him, as he had done last Wednesday when the defendant had protested the replacement of the former trial judge.
Khalifah has provided eight court-appointed lawyers for the defendants.
Last week, government spokesman Ali Al Dabbagh said the decision to transfer Ameri was taken to preserve the neutrality of the court.
The latest events have provoked strong criticisms from international legal experts, who fear for the impartiality of the hearings.
Nehal Bhuta of the New York-based Human Rights Watch, a long observer of the trials, said the judges removal was a blatant violation of the independence of the court.
A senior Iraqi government official told AFP the government intervened as this was the trial of Saddam Hussein ... the man who has killed thousands. Anyone who says he was not a dictator will not be tolerated by the people.
Kurdish witness Rifat Mohammed Said, meanwhile, testified on Monday how his village was gassed and bombed and told of atrocities in the southern Nugrat Salman prison where he was held along with hundreds of others.
He said women detainees often complained of rape by Hajaj, the man who ran the prison.
Somebody needs to step forward and put a bullet in his head right there in the courtroom.
While it would feel right to do it, it wouldn't be the right thing to do to maintain legitimacy.
Even though that SOB "needs killin'" like few on this planet ever have...
Isn't it amazing how the media has ignored Saddam's trial?
All the public gets are snippets once every week or 2 if an outburst of some kind occurs or a lawyer is murdered.
I know but it feels good to say it.
Read post #4.
I agree wholeheartedly.
I would have found it impossible to drag him out of his hole alive. Accidents happen...
Judge: "I'm in charge. I make the decisions. NOw get outta here."
Do it!
Agree, he has already been given too much time to make politics speeches right there in the courtroom. Maybe I am radical here a little , but the trial looks like a nonsense: Saddam is constantly allowed to speak political speeches, the principal judge was loyal to him, etc. It's high time he was "ended". IMO, he should have been shot in that rathole when he was found...
May all future captures follow in line with Al-Zarqawi's
Agreed. Lert's hope it lasts.
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