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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Hussein trial descends into a legal farce
By Peter Symonds
31 January 2006
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When it resumed last Sunday, the trial of Saddam Hussein soon
became a shambles, once again underlining the bogus character
of the court set up and managed by the Bush administration.
Under pressure to speed up proceedings, the newly-installed
chief judge, Raouf Abdel-Rahman, told the court that he would
not tolerate political speeches. Any irrelevant remarks
will be struck from the record, and anyone who breaks the rules
will be removed from the courtroom and tried as if he were present,
he declared.
Abdel-Rahman ordered Barzan Ibrahim al Tikriti forcibly removed
when the former Iraqi intelligence chief questioned the legitimacy
of the court, describing it as a bastard child. Tikriti,
who has cancer, was complaining over the lack of proper medical
treatment. Four bailiffs seized Tikriti and physically dragged
him out of the courtroom.
Amid shouts of Down with the traitors! Down with America!
by the defendants, Abdel-Rahman threatened to prosecute one of
the defence lawyers, Salih Armouti, a Jordanian. You have
incited your clients and we will start criminal proceedings against
you, the judge declared, ordering that the lawyer also be
removed from the court.
The rest of the defence team walked out in protest, ignoring
repeated threats from Abdel-Rahman that they would not be allowed
to return. Hussein protested over the imposition of court-appointed
lawyers as his defenders and left the court, denouncing the chief
judge.
When the proceedings finally resumed, the four main defendants,
along with their defence lawyers, had either been removed or left
the courtroom in protest. Yet the chief judge continued with the
trial for the next three hours, taking evidence from witnesses,
which went unchallenged by the court-appointed defence lawyers.
Hussein and his co-defendants have been charged with the killing
of 148 men and teenage boys from the mainly Shiite town of Dujail
in 1982. The murders took place following an assassination attempt
on Hussein by members of the Shiite-based Dawa Party in
the midst of the Iran-Iraq war.
The court and its US advisers narrowly defined the charges
against Hussein quite deliberately. For the Dawa Party,
which is prominent in the current Iraqi puppet regime, the prosecution
of the Dujail massacre will help to bolster its flagging support
among Shiites. For Washington, the atrocity conveniently has no
obvious connection to the US administration of the day.
The Bush administration has been concerned from the outset
to prevent Hussein from using any trial, as former Yugoslav president
Slobodan Milosevic has done, to expose the complicity of the US
in the crimes alleged against him. Washington insisted that Hussein
be tried in Iraq, rather than by an international tribunal, so
as to maintain tight control over the proceedings.
However, the trial, which began on October 19, has gone from
one crisis to the next. The former chief judge, Rizgar Muhammad
Amin, tried to give the trial a veneer of legitimacy by appearing
to be even-handed and allowing Hussein and his defence lawyers
the opportunity to challenge proceedings. He was bitterly criticised
by government ministers and in the US for failing to control proceedings
tightly enough.
Visiting Baghdad in late December, Senator Arlen Specter, chairman
of the US Senate Judiciary Committee, told Amin that he was disappointed
that Hussein had been allowed to dominate the trial.
You have a butcher who has butchered his own people, a torturer
who has tortured his own people. The evidence ought to be presented
in a systematic way which would show that theres been quite
an accomplishment in taking [Hussein] out, he declared.
In other words, the purpose of the trial was not to determine
Husseins guilt but to politically justify the illegal US-led
occupation of Iraq.
Amin resigned as chief judge on January 9, saying he was fed
up with criticism from high-ranking government officials. The
remainder of the five-judge panel hearing the case designated
Judge Said Hammashi to replace Amin but he quickly came under
fire. Ali Lami, head of the governments de-Baathification
commission, accused Hammashi of being a former member of Husseins
Baath Party. Hammashi denied the accusation but was transferred
off the case and Abdel-Rahman appointed in his place.
This blatant political manipulation of the court provoked warnings
from the US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) last week that the
entire process may be seen as illegitimate. The demand for
Presiding Judge Rizgar Amins dismissal, which contributed
to his resignation, was nothing less than an attack on judicial
independence, Richard Dicker, HWT International Justice
Program director, stated.
The removal of Judge al-Hammashi from the trial created
the appearance of a court that is continually subjected to political
interference. Sitting judges cannot be shuffled around as though
they were deck chairs on the Titanic, Dicker added.
Law professor Michael Scharf, one of the US advisers who trained
the tribunal officials, expressed similar concerns to the Los
Angeles Times. The game of musical chairs that is unfolding
at the trial is bound to take its toll on local and world opinion
about the credibility of the proceedings in Baghdad, he
said, adding hopefully: But the tribunal is far from critically
wounded. I think it will pull through the latest setback.
However, it is impossible to obscure the basic fact that the
court is the product of an illegal US-led invasion. The efforts
of Washington and the Baghdad regime to muzzle Hussein and his
lawyers will only make its character as a political show trial
more apparent. While Hussein and the Baathist regime are undoubtedly
guilty of crimes, this court is not designed to provide justice
for the victims, but to justify the continuing neo-colonial occupation
of the country.
The trial is due to restart on Wednesday. The defence team
has declared that it will boycott the proceedings. The court
hearing yesterday [Sunday] lacked the basics of a fair and honest
trial, and the judge was biased against the defendants, who under
the law are innocent until proven guilty, defence lawyer
Khalil al-Dulaimi said. He called for the trial to be moved out
of Iraq to an international court.
Hussein has also declared that he will not attend court. Without
defence lawyers and the chief defendants, the proceedings are
a rather naked legal sham.
See Also:
Saddam Hussein hearings:
a show trial orchestrated in Washington
[10 December 2005]
Saddam Hussein trial
resumes: a grotesque display of imperial justice
[30 November 2005]
Legal lynching of
Saddam Hussein begins in Iraq
[19 October 2005]
Iraqi interior ministry
accused of assassinating defence lawyer in Hussein trial
[25 October 2005]
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