Special report: Trial of Saddam Hussein
BAGHDAD, Oct. 11 (Xinhua) -- The genocide trial of
the ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein and six of his aides adjourned Wednesday
until next Tuesday after hearing three witnesses.
"The court has decided to adjourn until Oct. 17," said chief judge Muhammad al-Ureybi, without giving the reason
for his decision.
On Wednesday's session, Judge Ureybi switched off the
microphone of defendants as Saddam was arguing with the judge about Tuesday's
session, during which Saddam was ordered out.
Complaining about the cutoff, Saddam heckled the
judge, "When the complainer and prosecutor talk, the world listens. When the
so-called defendant speaks, you switch off the microphone. Is this fair?"
Judge Ureybi replied, "I switched off the microphone
to keep order in the courtroom."
"You can talk if you want to defend yourself, but not
to get into the political maze," he added.
After the argument, the court summoned the first
witness Abdul Khaliq Aziz, who accused Saddam's intelligence (Mukhabarat) of
doing white slaver when they allegedly sent 18 Kurdish women to Egyptian
intelligence to sell them to nightclubs.
"According to an article published by Kurdish
newspaper after the collapse of Saddam's regime. I learned that my sister and 17
women, were sent in 1989 by Iraqi intelligence to its Egyptian counterpart to be
sold to nightclubs there," Abdul Khaliq Aziz told the court in the 15th session.
Aziz presented a document allegedly issued by local
Mukhabarat of Kirkuk City, in which names of 18 women were listed, including his
sister and 14 of his relatives in his village.
A court-appointed lawyer questioned the authenticity
of the document, saying "we may see a formal letter of selling a house or
property, but we haven't heard of a formal letter of selling women,besides how
come does the Egyptian intelligence trade such things with night clubs of
private sector."
The witness said that Iraqi President Jalal Talabani
tackled the issue with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who denied the
allegation.
Two more witnesses also took the stand on Wednesday
session, claiming torture and rape crimes against the Kurdish detainees in the
Saddam's detentions.
The second witness was a female who said that she was
tortured when she was detained in Nuqrat al-Salman in southwestern Iraq desert
and that her four-year-old son died there after drinking poisoned water.
The third witness Fakhriyah Muhammad Baba, who is
also a female,said that she was detained and transferred to Nuqrat al-Salman
where she was tortured and raped along with several women detainees.
Baba made her complaints against Saddam, his cousin
Ali Hassan al-Majid and all their aides, as well as a man named Hajaj, who she
said tortured her during detention and forced several other detainees to dance
in front of the guards or imitate animals' sounds.
Saddam and his codefendants face charge of genocide
for their role in Anfal (Spoils of War) military campaign against Iraq's Kurds
in the 1980s, which the chief prosecutor said left some 182,000 people dead or
missing.
Saddam is also awaiting a possible death sentence
verdict for a separate case involving killing of some 148 Shiites.
All the main charges in Anfal carry death penalty.
Enditem