http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/05/AR2006110500135.html?referrer=email

Saddam Hussein Sentenced to Death 

By John Ward Anderson and Ellen Knickmeyer 
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, November 5, 2006; 5:32 AM 


BAGHDAD, Nov. 5 -- Former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein was found guilty 
Sunday of crimes against humanity for the torture and execution of more than 
100 people from a small town north of Baghdad 24 years ago. He was sentenced to 
death by hanging.

Hussein, 69, was led into the courtroom by seven guards and immediately sat in 
his chair, refusing to rise for his verdict until Chief Judge Raouf Rasheed 
Abdel-Rahman ordered guards to force him to his feet.

"Long live the people!" Hussein shouted as the verdict began. "Down with the 
stooges! Down with the invaders! God is great!" 

Just before his appearance in court, one of Hussein's co-defendants, Awad Hamed 
al-Bander, the former head of Iraq's Revolutionary Court, repeatedly bellowed 
"God is great!" as he, too, was sentenced to death. "On the tyrants, God is 
great!" he shouted. "On the colonizers, God is great! On the agents, God is 
great!"

Celebratory gunfire rang out over Baghdad as jubilant Iraqis expressed their 
happiness with the outrcome by racing to rooftops, front yards and windows to 
fire into the air. National television showed smiling Iraqis dancing in the 
streets of some cities around the country.

Hussein was convicted of ordering the killings of 148 men and boys from the 
town of Dujail, about 35 miles north of Baghdad, following a failed 
assassination attempt against him there in 1982. Hussein's presidential convoy 
was passing through the town when it was shot at. In response, he and other top 
Iraqi officials at the time order the round-up of hundreds of people, and the 
town's buildings were razed and it's orchards destroyed.

Ten of the people executed were boys ranging in ages from 11 to 17 at the time 
of the incident. The government held them in jail until they were 18, then 
hanged them.

The verdict climaxed a 12-month trial, conducted by the Iraqi High Tribunal and 
backed by the U.S. government, that arose from one of many atrocities Hussein 
is accused of committing during 24 years of brutal, one-man rule.

It was unclear whether trial and verdict ultimately would act as a catharsis 
that can help bring reconciliation and peace to this embattled country, or 
would be a catalyst for further violence and sectarian clashes between Shiites 
Muslims, who make up about 60 percent of Iraq's population, and Sunni Arabs, 
who account for about 20 percent.

There were no immediate reports of violence.

Sajjad Abdul Hussein Ali, a Shiite Turcoman in the northern city of Kirkuk who 
had three brothers executed by Hussein in the early 1980s, called the verdict 
"the final show, and a triumph for all the families that were victimized by the 
Saddam regime."

"Reconciliation will not succeed without executing him and putting an end to a 
dark, dirty period of our modern history, so that this will be a lesson to all 
dictators and tyrants," he said. "Let them know that killers shall be killed, 
and tyrants shall be severely punished by God."



In Saddam's home town of Tikrit, a Sunni stronghold 90 miles north of Baghdad 
on the banks of the Tigris River, architectural engineer Younis Mahmoud, 37, 
accused the government of staging a show trial for Hussein while ignoring 
Shiite death squads that are "killing 150 to 200 people at least everyday, and 
some of their leaders are working as the head of political blocs in the 
government."

The trial -- often punctuated by outbursts and other antics from Hussein and 
his seven co-defendants -- was disparaged by some as a political show and 
victor's vendetta and hailed by others as a historic symbol of Iraq's fledgling 
democracy. The first chief judge quit, complaining of political interference in 
the case, and gunmen killed three defense attorneys during the trial. Many 
legal experts questioned the trial's fairness, saying Iraq's justice system was 
not equipped to handle such a significant case, and that it should have been 
held in a third country.

Hussein's defense attorneys warned that a guilty verdict and sentence of death 
would sparked renewed attacks against U.S. and other collation forces in Iraq 
and lead to a wider civil war. They also accused the Bush administration and 
the Shiite-dominated government of Nouria al-Maliki of colluding to scheduled 
the verdict so it came two days before crucial mid-term elections, hoping to 
give Bush's Republican Party an electoral boost. Iraqi and U.S. officials have 
denied the charge.

Hussein and his attorneys argued that whatever actions were taken after the 
attempt on his life in Dujail were legitimate measures by a government to 
investigate the attempted assassination of a head of state and punish those 
responsible.

"Where is the crime?" Saddam asked during one of more than 40 court sessions in 
the case, acknowledging that he ordered the trials of the 148 people who were 
executed. "Is referring a defendant who opened fire at a head of state, no 
matter what his name is, a crime?"

Hussein often was combative and theatrical during the trial, which was aired on 
Iraqi national television. He frequently stole the show, demanding that he be 
referred to as the president of Iraq, jabbing his finger in the air while 
lecturing the prosecutors and judges, staging hunger strikes and occasionally 
walking out of the courtroom in protest or being ejected for impertinence.

Typically dressed in a white shirt and dark suit, sporting a salt and pepper 
beard that he grew while on the run and before his capture from a hole in the 
ground on a farm near Tikrit in December 2003, Hussein still cut a charismatic 
figure.

The verdict and sentence will automatically be sent to a nine judge appellate 
panel for appeal. That panel has wide latitude to review the case and call for 
additional testimony, and it has an unlimited time to rule. But once it does, 
any sentence must be carried out within 30 days.

Of the seven co-defendents also on trial in the case, six were found guilty: 
Awad Hamed al-Bander, the former head of Hussein's Revolutionary, and Barzan 
Ibrahim, Hussein's younger half-brother and former security chief, were 
sentenced to death. Former Iraqi vice-president Taha Yassin Ramadan was 
sentenced to life in prison.

Three other defendants, who were relatively low-ranking member of Hussein's 
Baath Party, were sentenced to prison terms of 15 years. One defendant, 
Muhammad al-Azzawi, was acquitted, as requested by prosecutors, for 
insufficient evidence.

Hussein is currently on trial in a second case, charged with genocide and 
crimes against humanity for the killings of as many as 100,000 Kurds, many with 
poison gas, in the co-called Anfal campaign in 1987 and 1988. If the appeals 
panel rules against him and upholds his death sentence in the Dujail, Hussein 
could be executed before the conclusion of the second trial.




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