October 18, 2005
On the Eve of Saddam's Trial - A Divided Iraq
By PATRICK COCKBURN
in Baghdad
http://www.counterpunch.org/
Saddam Hussein, once the absolute ruler of Iraq, goes on trial
for his life in a courtroom in Baghdad tomorrow. The main charge
against him is that he ordered the murder of 143 men from the
village of Dujail after an attempt to assassination him in 1982.
The attitude of Iraqis towards the trial is divided. Kurds and
Shias almost all want to see the former dictator executed for
mass murder while many Sunni Arabs believe the charges against
him are exaggerated or faked.
Saddam Hussein will be brought by American guards from a US
detention facility to the court in the capital's Green Zone near
the palaces where he once lived. The US is eager for the trial
to appear to be seen as an Iraqi affair though security will be
in the hands of the US military.
The charges against Saddam Hussein have yet to be spelled out in
court but Iraqi officials say they will focus on Dujail because
the documentary evidence is clear linking the former leader to
the killings. Beside him in the dock will sit six other
defendants. These include his half-brother Barzan al-Tikriti,
once head of the much-feared Mukhabarat intelligence
organisation, and Taha Yassin Ramadan, a notoriously brutal
lieutenant of Saddam. Also on trial will be a judge, Awad Hamed
al-Bander, who sentenced to death many people from Dujail, and
four local Baathist party officials.
Other more general charges against Saddam Hussein have been
mentioned by Iraqi court officials, including the slaughter of
Kurds in the Anfal campaign in 1987-88, the suppression of a
Shia uprising in 1991, the murder of Shia religious leaders and
the invasion of Kuwait in 1990. "It is not as if there is a
shortage of evidence against him," said Hoshyar Zebari, the
Iraqi Foreign Minister. "I could give evidence myself since he
murdered three of my brothers."
The trial will take place behind the tightest security. US
officials have been carrying out background checks on those
attending which are so detailed that one of them said "it was
like filling out a mortgage application. They asked if I had
taken hard or soft drugs or smuggled them into the country."
The duration of the present phase of the trial is still unclear.
It is likely but not certain that the court will grant the
defence a delay of several weeks after initial proceedings.
Questioned about this, the investigative judge Raed Jouhi would
only say the judges will themselves decide if the full trial is
to go ahead immediately.
The Iraqi government and the US are nervous that Saddam Hussein
will be able to launch an effective counterattack against them,
denouncing the court as a puppet of the occupation. He can point
to the failure of the present Iraqi government to provide
security, electricity or employment, accusations likely to
resonate with many Iraqis.
The chief judge will question the former leader but five judges
will decide on his guilt or innocence. Iraqi courts have no
juries.
The court will also decide on how far the proceedings are to be
televised. Officials at one point asked for a half-hour delay so
they could make sure that the identity of witnesses would not be
revealed, but Western television companies fear this may be an
excuse to censor proceedings.
The attitude of Iraqis in Baghdad towards the trial depends on
the community to which they belong. At the main gate leading to
Baghdad University yesterday Shia students said Saddam Hussein
should be executed while Sunnis generally said he should not be
on trial.
Hassan Fahum, a Shia and a student of engineering, said: "All
the Iraqi people hate him and want him dead." Abdullah Qassem
Mustapha, a Sunni and another engineering student, said: "Saddam
didn't commit any crimes against the Iraqi people. The bodies in
the mass graves are all Iranian soldiers killed in battle. In
the end, the Americans will decide even if the verdict comes
from an Iraqi judge." Other Sunni students said that the trial
was illegal under the occupation.
Maha Jaber Ali, a Shia woman working for the college of
engineering, said: "We want our revenge and I believe the judge
will order him executed."
As Baghdad was engulfed in a dust storm yesterday the war
continued across Iraq. The US military said its planes had
killed 70 "terrorists" in two attacks near Ramadi but locals
said 39 were innocent civilians. Some 20 were killed as they
stood near an American Humvee destroyed by a bomb. The US said
they were planting a second bomb. Chiad Saad, a tribal leader,
denied this, saying they were looking at the wreckage out of
curiosity.
Patrick Cockburn was awarded the 2005 Martha Gellhorn prize for
war reporting in recognition of his writing on Iraq over the
past year. His new memoir, The Broken Boy, has just been
published in the UK by Jonathan Cape.
=========================================

CLICK:
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