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Saddam Hussein (Xinhua/
File)
Profile: ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein
BAGHDAD, Oct. 18 (Xinhuanet£¬by Jiang Xiaofeng, Jamal Hashim) -- On the eve of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's trial on Wednesday, many Iraqis remain skeptical about motives behind the trial.
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(Xinhua/
File) |
After being kept in custody for nearly two years,
Saddam, 68,along with seven associates, will stand trial in the US-installed
Iraqi Special Tribunal on charges against humanity.
"US and Iraqi politicians wanted to try Saddam and
focus on his brutal crimes to deviate the world public opinion from their
failure in discovering Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) in Iraq,"Muhammed Salih
al-Aswad, an Iraqi lawyer, told Xinhua.
"They want to say it is worth invading Iraq to save
the Iraqi people from his brutality and to cover their failure in proving that
Iraq was hiding WMD," he said.
Saddam, known for his cruelty, had spent half of his
life ruling Iraq since 1968 when the Baath Party took power in a coup.The former
Iraqi strong man was toppled by US-led troops which invaded the oil-rich country
under the pretext of Iraq's possession of WMD in
2003.
However, after two years of occupation and search for
WMD, US forces failed to prove that Saddam's regime had any such weapons. On
Wednesday, Saddam will mainly face the charge of killing 143 Shiites in Dujail,
some 60 km north of Baghdad, in 1982, when he survived a rebel attempt on his
life.
It is widely expected that the court will hold a
single sessionto inform Saddam of charges brought against him before the
courtadjourns.
Muhamed Baqir al-Sehiel, secretary-general of the
Iraqi Democratic and Liberal Party, said, "People want the trial to be public."
He expected violent reaction from Saddam's followers who have fought US and
Iraqi forces.
Meanwhile, some Iraqis showed apathy to the trial as
there are more urgent issues to be addressed.
"I don't think this would be an interesting issue for
us. Weare suffering from the acute shortage of basic necessities, like water,
electricity and food, in addition to the worsening security," retired teacher
Amal Ali said.
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| The TV grab shows a scene of the
US-installed Iraqi Special Tribunal. (Xinhua
photo) | "The government
should focus on its duties by providing security, stability and a pleasant life.
The media's hoopla on th etrial is a tactic from the government to distract the
people's attention on bad situation here," she said.
Abu Ali, a grocery owner, said, "The Iraqi government
is using Saddam's trial for political goals. For us, Saddam has gone sincethe
occupation. He is a prisoner in a US-run prison. Our hope is that he can have a
fair trial as any Iraqi."
Akram al-Dulaimy, a retired officer, did not believe
that Saddam's trial will make difference.
"It seems that the Americans and the Iraqi government
are serving drugs to satisfy some people who claimed to have been oppressed
during Saddam's era," Dulaimy said.
Two years later, many started to be sympathized with
or evenmiss Saddam when they see no way out of their adversity, whichthey say is
worse than in Saddam's era.
For those who dislike current leaders who came behind
US tanks,Saddam is still head of the country, at least in their mind."This trial
is legally baseless as Saddam Hussein is the legitimate president of Iraq,"
Muath al-Ubaidi, a bookshop owner,said.
"This trial is more about a political show than
justice being done. We can not trust a court run by sectarian parties, so I hope
that Saddam will be tried at an international court," he said.
US officials are afraid of further deterioration of the already precarious security in Iraq as they expected Saddam's supporters from Baathists and officers from the former army might step upattacks against US forces in the country. Enditem [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] |