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Defiant Saddam: The real criminal is
Bush
BAGHDAD, July 3 (Xinhuanet) -- The Iraqi people have
had mixed reaction to the trial of their former President Saddam Hussein, who
appeared in court on Thursday.
On Friday, hundreds of Iraqis staged a peaceful
demonstration in Samarra, 110 km north of Baghdad, denouncing the trial as
"ridiculous."
According to witnesses and media reports, the
protesters marched through the streets of the Sunni Muslim bastion, holding
portraits of their fallen leader.
"Saddam is the glory of the nation. We redeem you
with our blood and soul," chanted the protesters.
"The trial is ridiculous, because those who judge the
presidentand those who govern the country are named by the coalition forces,"
one demonstrator said, adding "They do not have the right to judge President
Saddam Hussein, who is the one who has legitimacy in the country."
There were some other slogans, including, "We support
Saddam" and "he continues to be our president."
On Thursday, while watching Saddam's appearance on
TV, Iraqis also expressed their diverse views on the legal proceedings.
"I think Saddam deserves to be sentenced to death for
the mass graves we have seen in Iraq," said Nawal Ahmed, a 30-year-old Kurdish
woman from northern Iraq.
Although Saddam was charged with poison gas attacks
on Kurds and the killings of numerous religious leaders, political figures and
dissidents during his reign, some Iraqis still thought the former ruler had some
merits and demanded a fair trial of him.
"At least Saddam provided us with security. We have
seen nothing good from the Americans," said Ali Hamza, a 47-year-old engineer.
Abdul Rahman Muhammed, 55, a secondary school teacher
in Baghdad, said it was not the right time for such trial "because itwill
provoke part of the Iraqi people and I don't think we need this to happen."
"We want a fair trial where Saddam can speak and
defend himselfagainst the fabricated charges against him," said Muhsen Ubaid, a
39-year-old shopowner in western Baghdad.
VIOLENCE PERSISTS IN IRAQI CITIES AFTER SADDAM'S
ARRAIGNMENT
Rockets hit central Baghdad on Friday morning, a day
after Saddam appeared before an Iraqi tribunal set to try him for his 35years of
rule.
Explosions rattled near a square where the American
forces pulled down the statue of Saddam more than a year ago. One rocket slammed
into the Sheraton Hotel, used by foreign journalists, causing minor damage to
the building.
Another rocket missed target toward the north and
exploded nearthe Baghdad Hotel nearby, used by Western security contractors, and
a van blew up outside a mosque just opposite the Sheraton Hotel, sending plumes
of smoke into the sky.
Meanwhile according to the US military, two US
Marines were killed in separate incidents near the flashpoint Iraqi town of
Fallujah.
"A Marine assigned to First Marine Expeditionary
Force was killed in action today (Friday) in the al-Anbar province while
conducting security and stability operations," the military said in a statement.
The second Marine died of wounds sustained in combat
action on the previous day in the same province near Fallujah, 50 km west
ofBaghdad, it added.
IRAQI INSURGENTS RELEASE TWO TURKISH HOSTAGES
Iraqi insurgents holding two Turkish hostages
announced Friday in a video footage showed by the Arab-language television
Al-Jazeera that the hostages were being released.
The insurgents who identified themselves as the
al-Mujahedeen Brigade (the holy warriors), said they would release the men
without conditions after their Turkish company promised to stop working for the
US forces in Iraq.
"To honor the Muslim Turkish people and upon the
repentance of the two hostages, and their pledge not to do such a thing again
...we decided to release them in return for nothing," one of three masked gunmen
appearing in the video said.
An official in the Turkish Embassy, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said, "They have been released and they are on the way
to their company in Iraq."
Earlier this week, three other Turkish hostages were
freed by militants who had threatened to behead them.
INDIA'S DIPLOMAT LIKELY TO BE NAMED NEW UN ENVOY TO
IRAQ
According to diplomatic sources in the United Nations
Thursday,Salman Haider, India's former foreign secretary, is likely to accept
the appointment as UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special representative to
Iraq.
Haider, a former ambassador to China and Britain, is
on a five-person list for the top UN envoy to Iraq, said a diplomat on condition
of anonymity.
"For the (UN) Secretariat, it has been agreed to
choose the candidates from developing Islamic countries," the source said.
"Preferably, the new envoy should be a Muslim and can speak Arabic."
Last Friday before his trip to the Sudan, Annan said
he would name his new envoy to Iraq "in one week," and the new envoy will be
based in Baghdad.
In the aftermath of last August's bombing attack
which killed Annan's special representative in Iraq, Sergio de Mello, along with
21 of his colleagues, the UN chief has decided to pull all his international
staff out of Baghdad.
Since the deadly bombing, the post of the top UN
envoy had beenleft open.
Annan has repeatedly said the world body can play a
role in Iraq, but it can play only after its role has been clearly definedand
when "the situation permits." Given the fact that the securitysituation in Iraq
remains disturbing, Annan has proposed a bureau to be set up outside the
war-torn country. Enditem |