Special report: Saddam Hussein's Fate
Saddam Hussein sentenced to death by hanging
Saddam verdict arouses mixed reactions
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Former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein
addresses the court during his trial inside the heavily fortified Green
Zone in Baghdad Nov. 7, 2006. Saddam was back in court on Tuesday for the
first time since he was sentenced to hang for crimes against humanity,
facing separate charges of genocide of the Kurds. (Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo Gallery
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BAGHDAD, Nov. 7 (Xinhua) --
Former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein returned to court to face trial on genocide
against Kurds on Tuesday, two days after being sentenced to hang in a separate
trial, and urged Iraqis "to forgive, reconcile and shake hands."
Saddam and two of his senior aides were on Sunday
sentenced to death on crimes against humanity in the trial of Dujail, in which
148 people were executed in the aftermath crackdown on the town following a
failed assassination attempt against Saddam in 1982.
In Tuesday's trial, Saddam and six former senior
aides are facing charges of genocide for their roles in the 1988 Anfal (Spoils
of War) military campaign against ethnic Kurds. Prosecutors say up to 180,000
Kurds were killed, many of them by gas.
Chief Judge Muhammed Ureybi begun the session and
called the first witness, Qahhar Khalil Mohammad, 52, who was forced to live in
a den with his seven-member family because the Iraqi army destroyed their
village in 1986.
Mohammad and other Kurdish witnesses told the court
that they were deceived by the government promises of amnesty and many of their
fellow Kurds only got shot by the Iraqi soldiers.
He said that he and many people surrendered
themselves to the authorities after a government amnesty, but only to find
themselves ended up in a military camp.
"One Iraqi army officer gathered 37 detainees,
including me, and ordered the soldiers to shoot us," Mohammad said.
"A soldier then shot everyone with a bullet. He hit
me on my forehead and my back," the witness said, showing his scars to the
court, adding "I want the whole world to see my wounds."
The witness continued his testimony, saying that
after the soldiers left the scene, he checked his father and two brothers, but
they were dead. Only his nephew was still alive, so he took the latter's hand
and fled the place, he said.
Mohammad said that he and many others were detained
later and were held in a camp for three years before they were released by
another amnesty.
During the session, the first after he was found
guilty in the separate case of Dujail, Saddam appeared unusually calm and he
quietly listened to witnesses. After the first witness' testimony, he complained
that the court should adequately cross-examine the witnesses.
Saddam also challenged the witness. "When he says
there are two officers, what do they look like? Does this bring us to the
truth?" Saddam politely addressed judge Ureybi.
Ureybi approved the demand but said it is for the
court to decide which testimony to take into consideration.
Another witness, Abdul-Karim Nayif Hassan, also told
the court that they were deceived by promises of amnesty, and were dragged to
mass killing by the Iraqi soldiers. He submitted a video showing human remains
in a mass grave found near his village after the Kurds gained self-rule in 1991.
A third witness, Abu Bakr Ali Sa'id, 54, a member of
the Kurdish guerrilla (Peshmerga) gave account of the same incident when Iraqi
soldiers killed detainees near his village.
"The soldiers were ordered to shoot us. We were 33
people, only six survived and I was one of them but we were also wounded," he
said.
The witness said that Saddam was describing the
Kurdish people as "saboteurs", which prompted Saddam to request the Judge Ureybi
to verify the claim.
"All my writings, speeches and government decisions
were recorded in the former Information Ministry. I don't recall that I have
said any thing wrong against any group of my people," Saddam said.
Saddam then called for reconciliation among Iraqis
saying, "I call on Iraqis, Arabs and Kurds, to forgive, reconcile and shake
hands," Saddam said.
After hearing a fourth witness, the trial was
announced to adjourn till Wednesday.


Analysis: Saddam verdict difficult to bring peace to
Iraq