Saddam to die Saturday: Judge
REUTERS
Appeals court judge and head of ex-dictator's legal team suggest execution could come soon
December 29, 2006
Reuters and the
Associated Press
DUBAI U.S. officials have transferred former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to Iraqi custody, the chief defence lawyer said today in an indication that Saddams execution may be imminent.
"The American side has notified us that they have handed over the president to the Iraqi authorities," said Khalil al-Dulaimi, head of Saddams defence team.
"They told us the president is no longer under the authority of the American forces and they requested us not to go to Baghdad," he said.
Munir Haddad, a judge on the appeals court that upheld Saddams death sentence, said he was ready to attend the execution that he said would be held Saturday.
All the measures have been done, Haddad said. There is no reason for delays.
In Baghdad, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has signed Saddams death sentence, a government official said.
The appeals court on Tuesday upheld Saddams Nov. 5 death sentence for crimes against humanity for the killings, torture and other crimes against the Shiite population of the town of Dujail.
Although legally in Iraqi custody, U.S. troops had hitherto physically kept guard over Saddam. Although Iraqis will carry out the execution, U.S. and Iraqi officials say, it is likely U.S. forces will stay on hand throughout for fear that opponents of the former leader could turn it into a public spectacle.
Senior Iraqi officials have dismissed mounting speculation, including some from Washington, that they could hang Saddam within hours and said some in the cabinet were pushing for it to be put off for a month or more.
But a defence lawyer said he thought Saddam might well die on Saturday after lawyers were told to collect his belongings.
Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who has demanded the ousted president to be put to death this year for killing and oppressing Shiites, said there would be "no review or delay" in the sentence after this weeks failure of Saddams appeal.
With some of Saddams fellow Sunnis angry at what they see as a political act of vengeance by the U.S.-sponsored court and many Kurds keen to see him first convicted of genocide against them, the timing of Saddams walk to the gallows is an explosive issue for a country on the brink of sectarian civil war.
http://www.thestar.com/News/article/166251
Well if you can't trust Reuters and the AP, who can you...
Never mind.