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Related: Trial of Saddam resumes
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| Former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein
speaks during his trial on Jan. 29, 2006. The brief court session was
stunned by a walkout by Saddam and his two co-defendants in protest
against the trial proceedings.(Xinhua/AFP) |
BAGHDAD, Jan. 29 (Xinhuanet) -- Trial of former Iraqi
president Saddam Hussein and his seven aides resumed in a Baghdad court on
Sunday, a brief session marred by a walkout by Saddam and his defense team in
protest against the court proceedings.
Raouf Abdul Rahman, the
newly-appointed Kurdish chief judge whose performance was in
the spotlight, announced a fresh adjournment of the trial until Wednesday.
Confrontation between Saddam, his codefendants and
Rahman showed up shortly after the trial resumed.
Rahman threw Saddam's half brother and former
intelligence chief Barzan al-Tikriti out of the courtroom after Tikriti argued
with him and refused to keep quiet.
"This court is illegitimate and I call it a daughter
of whore," Tikriti shouted before being dragged out.
Rahman also shouted at one of Saddam's defense
lawyers Salih al-Armouti when he made a legal point during Rahman's opening
remarks.
"Sit down and I will later give you the opportunity
to speak. Do not interrupt the court," Rahman said.
Saddam's chief defense lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi then
protested against Rahman's decision to dispel Tikriti, slamming the trial as"
not fair."
In a move seen as aimed to enforce his authority in
his court debut following the resignation of his predecessor Rizkar Mohammed
Amin, Rahman told the defense team that the court "is not a placefor political
speeches."
Rahman then ordered one defense lawyer to be removed
from thecourt, prompting a collective withdrawal by the defense team.
"If you leave the court, you won't come back for
futuresessions," Rahman warned.
The chief judge then appointed four new attorneys for
the defendants, which was rejected by Saddam.
"This is my right to reject an attorney," Saddam
said. "This is my right. Don't force me."
"I am not forcing you," Rahman replied and demanded
Saddam to obey orders of the court.
"I am the judge, you are the defendant, you have to
obey me,"he said.
But the toppled Saddam retorted, "You are an Iraqi,
you cannot order me like that. I led you for 35 years."
He then walked out of the courtroom in protest,
followed by histwo co-defendants, former vice president Taha Yassin Ramadan and
former chief judge Awad Hamed al-Bander.
Despite the walkout, the court went on hearing three
witnesses including a woman testifying from behind a curtain against Saddam and
his aides.
Saddam and his seven top aides are facing charges of
crimes against humanity including the killing of more than 140 Shiites in the
northern Iraqi town of Dujail following a failed 1982 assassination attempt on
Saddam.
Former chief judge on the five-member panel that
oversees the trial, Rizgar Muhammed Amin, also a Kurd, resigned earlier this
month amid mounting criticism, mainly from Shiite politicians, forbeing lenient
with Saddam and his co-defendants.
Rahman came from the town of Halabja, where 5,000
people were believed killed in a gas attack ordered by Saddam's authorities in
1988, a charge that Saddam might face in the future.
Sunday's session was the eighth in the high-profile
trial, which has been marred by the killings of two defense lawyers, resignation
of the chief judge and successive postponements.
If convicted, Saddam and his aides might face the
death penalty. Enditem |