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UNITED NATIONS, Dec. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- United Nations
Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Monday that the captured former Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein should be brought to account for "heinous crimes" he
was accused of having committed during his decades of rule.
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UN Secretary General Kofi Annan answers questions about the capture of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein at the UN headquarters in New York. | "Saddam Hussein has also been
accused of heinous crimes, including gross and systematic violations of human
rights and international humanitarian law. It is essential and absolutely vital
that all those responsible for these crimes should be brought to account," Annan
told reporters at the UN headquarters in New York.
"I think this should be done through open trials in
properly established courts of law, which will respect basic international norms
and standards," he said.
Saddam's arrest is a "positive" development because
he "has cast a rather long shadow over the transition process," the UN chief
said. "With his capture, that shadow has been removed."
Annan hoped that Saddam's fall will help move forward
the transition period and accelerate the process of reconciliation andattempts
to establish a provisional Iraqi government.
But the UN chief voiced his objection to imposing a
death penalty on Saddam, who was found by US troops Saturday in a hole in a town
south of his hometown Tikrit, northern Iraq.
"The UN does not support the death penalty. All the
courts we've set up have not included the death penalty," he said. "So, as
secretary-general, as the UN, as an organization, we are not goingto turn around
and support the death penalty."
Annan's statement came hours after US President
George W. Bush said the United States would consult with the Iraqi Governing
Council on an open trial of Saddam.
In Paris, Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, the rotating chair of
the Governing Council, said Saddam could face death penalty when he goes on
trial in Iraq.
Hakim said Saddam will be tried by the special
tribunal set up by the Council last week to hear cases against key associates in
his regime. When asked whether the death penalty could be applied,he answered,
"Yes. Absolutely."
It remains unknown whether the Iraqi Governing
Council would seek UN assistance in trying Saddam.
During his encounter with the press, Annan also
stressed that the capture of Saddam would not necessarily mean the return of UN
staff to Iraq.
"The only thing that will hasten the UN's return is
the establishment of a secure environment, and if the capture of Saddam Hussein
leads to that development, it will helpful," he said.
He said the key to restoration of stability in Iraq
would be end of the occupation. "My own judgment, the key will be the end of the
occupation, that will offer no incentive for those who are saying they are
fighting the resistance to continue fighting, if the occupation ends."
Also on Monday, President of the UN Security Council
Stephan Tafrov of Bulgaria said in a statement that council members welcomed the
capture of Saddam.
The council will hold an open meeting Tuesday to
discuss a report from Annan on Iraq. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari will
join the session and deliver a speech. Enditem |