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| Britain's tabloid newspaper The Sun ran new
photos Saturday after publishing controversial pictures of the former
Iraqi president Friday. (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
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| Some Iraqi people read the British
tabloid newspaper The Sun in Baghdad May 21, 2005. (Xinhua/AFP
photo) |
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| A man reads the British tabloid newspaper
The Sun in London May 20, 2005. The paper carries a front page picture
showing imprisoned former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein in his underpants
and has other pictures inside of various aspects of his life in prison.
(Reuters) |
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| A front page picture
of Sun newspaper shows imprisoned former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein
in his underpants and has other pictures inside of various aspects
of his life in prison.
(Reuters) | | LONDON,
May 21 (Xinhuanet) -- Despite outcries from the United States and a threat of
legal suit by Saddam Hussein's lawyers, Britain's tabloid newspaper The Sun ran
new photos Saturday after publishing controversial pictures of the former Iraqi
president Friday.
The new photos show a fully dressed Saddam in a white
robe-like garment at a prison compound. He is behind barbed wires in one of the
pictures.
The newspaper also ran photos of two top officials of
the former Iraqi regime, who were identified as Ali Hassan al-Majid, better
known as "Chemical Ali," and Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash dubbed "Mrs Anthrax."
The newspaper carried an article alongside the photos
in vindication of the controversial publication.
"This is a man who has murdered a minimum of 300,000
people and we're supposed to feel sorry for him because someone's taken his
picture? " asked the article written by the newspaper's defense editor, Tom
Newton Dunn.
"Our extraordinary photos yesterday of Saddam in jail
got the whole world talking - and wooly-minded liberals into a predictable
lather. They bleated on about infringing his rights - apparently forgetting who
this depraved monster is," said the article.
It is "an important news story the world deserves to
know," it said.
On Friday, the newspaper ran pictures of Saddam
wearing only his underpants and doing washing.
Graham Dudman, managing editor of the newspaper, said
Friday's pictures are a "fantastic, iconic set of news pictures that I defy any
newspaper, magazine, or television station who were presented with them not to
have published."
The newspaper said it obtained those pictures from a
US military source who hoped to deal a "body blow" to Iraq's insurgency.
It vowed to fight any legal action after Saddam's
chief lawyer threatened to sue it for one million US dollars.
Ziyad Khasawneh, head of Saddam's international
defense team, said Friday it would sue The Sun and those providing the photos to
the newspaper.
It is a "devaluation of the dignity of human rights
and against the Geneva Convention and international laws," he said.
The US military said it would "aggressively"
investigate the issue, questioning the troops guarding Saddam and prosecuting
the culprit if discovered. The White House also condemned the publication of the
photos.
It is suspected that the photographer was a prison
guard who took the pictures a year ago.
The 68-year-old former Iraqi leader has been in US
custody since he was captured in December 2003. He is facing trial on numerous
charges, including murdering rivals, gassing Iraqi Kurds and using violence to
suppress uprisings. Enditem
Related: Saddam's photos in underwear stir controversies in
Iraq
Saddam to sue over prison
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