By PATRICK QUINN, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - British and American newspapers published photos
Friday showing an imprisoned Saddam Hussein clad only in his underwear
and washing his laundry, prompting an angry U.S. military to launch an
investigation and the Red Cross to say the pictures may violate the
Geneva Conventions.

Britain's The Sun and the New York Post said the photos were provided
by a U.S. military official they did not identify. The photos angered
the U.S. military, which issued a condemnation rare for its immediacy.

President Bush said Friday he did not believe the photos would incite
further anti-American sentiment in Iraq, which is edging toward open
sectarian conflict.

"I don't think a photo inspires murderers," Bush said at the White
House. "These people are motivated by a vision of the world that is
backward and barbaric."

He added, "I think the insurgency is inspired by their desire to stop
the march of freedom."

Bush was briefed by senior aides Friday morning about the photos, and
he "strongly supports the aggressive and thorough investigation that
is already under way" that seeks to find who took them, White House
press spokesman Trent Duffy said.

Both The Sun and the Post are controlled by Rupert Murdoch. Sun
managing editor Graham Dudman told The Associated Press in London the
newspaper paid "a small sum" for the photos. He would not elaborate
except to say the paper paid more than 500 British pounds, which is
equal to about $900.

The paper also said it was publishing more photos Saturday.

"These are iconic images of the world's most notorious war criminal,"
the paper said in a statement. "The Sun is proud to run the pictures
and we will be running more tomorrow."

Saddam's chief lawyer, Ziad al-Khasawneh, said his legal team would
sue The Sun because the photos represent "an insult to humanity, Arabs
and the Iraqi people."

"It is clear that the pictures were taken inside the prison, which
means that American soldiers have leaked the pictures," he said by
telephone from Amman, Jordan. "We will sue the newspaper and everyone
who helped in showing these pictures."

He said the photos were part "of a comprehensive war against the
Islamic and Arab nations" that included the abuse at Baghdad's Abu
Ghraib prison and allegations by Newsweek, which were later retracted,
about Quran desecration at the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Iraqis gathered in coffee shops in Baghdad and elsewhere watched as
some Arab satellite networks � including Al-Arabiya � showed the front
page of The Sun, with its picture of Saddam standing in his underwear.
Other published photos show him clothed and seated on a chair doing
some washing, sleeping and walking in what is described as his prison
yard.

"This is an insult to show the former president in such a condition.
Saddam is from the past now, so what is the reason for this? It is bad
work from the media. Do they want to degrade the Iraqi people? Or they
want to provoke their feelings," said Abu Barick, a 45-year-old
Baghdad businessman.

In northern Kirkuk, Marwan Ibrahim, a 31-year-old civil servant, said
the pictures were a "humiliation for a man who in the near past was
the leader of Iraq and a top Arab leader in the region."

Others, however, were not so kind.

"Saddam Hussein and his regime were bloody and practiced mass killing
against the people, therefore, whatever happens to Saddam, whether he
is photographed naked or washing his clothes, it means nothing to me.
That's the least he deserves," said Hawre Saliee, a 38-year-old Kurd.

Jihad Ballout, a spokesman for the Al-Jazeera network, said his
network did not show the pictures because it had ethical and
professional concerns.

"The photo is demeaning to Iraqis," he said, adding that "from the
professional side, it is not news."

The U.S. military in Baghdad said the photos violated military
guidelines "and possibly Geneva Convention guidelines for the humane
treatment of detained individuals."

"The specific issue here is that these images are against (Department
of Defense) policy. It's not the content of the photo that is the
issue at hand, but it is the existence or release of the photos," U.S.
military spokesman Staff Sgt. Don Dees said.

He added that the military would question the troops holding Saddam as
part of its investigation.

"We take seriously our responsibility to ensure the safety and
security of all detainees," a military statement said.

The military said the source of the photos was not immediately known.
Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the photos possibly were at
least a year old, and officials were trying to determine whether they
were taken from a surveillance camera or hand-held camera.

The International Committee for the Red Cross, which is responsible
for monitoring prisoners of war and detainees, said the photographs
violated Saddam's right to privacy.

"Taking and using photographs of him is clearly forbidden," ICRC
Middle East spokeswoman Dorothea Krimitsas said. U.S. forces are
obliged to "preserve the privacy of the detainee."

Aside from U.S. soldiers, the only others with access to Saddam are
his legal team, prosecuting judge Raed Johyee and the ICRC.

Saddam was captured in December 2003 while hiding in a concealed hole
in the ground near his hometown of Tikrit, 80 miles north of Baghdad.
He is charged with war crimes, but no date has been set for his trial.

It is not the first time there has been an outcry over images of Saddam.

Pictures and video images of Saddam being examined by a medic after
his arrest were widely criticized � even by the
Vatican. A top Vatican cardinal said at the time that American forces
treated the captured Iraqi leader "like a cow."

___

Associated Press reporters Bassem Mroue in Baghdad and Jill Lawless in
London contributed to this report.

___

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050520/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_saddam_photos_6




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