BAGHDAD, Dec. 3 (Xinhua) -- The ousted Iraqi leader
Saddam Hussein's lawyers Sunday filed formal appeal against the death sentence
to Saddam and two of his senior aids ruled by the Iraqi High Tribunal over the
Dujail case, a court official told reporters.
The defense lawyers of Saddam officially appealed to
the higher court today against the death penalty imposed on Saddam and another
two co-defendants, said the official.
He added that the appeal was also submitted on behalf
of all seven defendants, including those with imprisonment verdicts.
On Nov. 5, Saddam and his two senior aids were found
guilty of crimes against human and sentenced to death by hanging over the
execution of 148 people of Dujail during the crackdown on the town after a
failed assassination attempt against Saddam in 1982.
According to Iraqi law, defense lawyers have to file
the formal appeal to the higher court within 30 days of the verdict, although
the appeal should take effect automatically within 10 days.
Despite the death sentence Saddam got from the Dujail
case, theformer Iraqi president and his co-defendants are on another trial of
Operation Anfal (Spoils of War), which could bring Saddam the second death
penalty if convicted.
Saddam and his aides are facing charges of genocide
against Kurds in the trial of Operation Anfal, a military campaign in which
prosecutors said that up to 180,000 Kurds were killed, many of them by poison
gas and mass killings.