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Please a
note
Koffi Anan has stressed out that United nation as an
institution can not support sentencing Saddam Hussein to death for they do not
do it in all their courts, be it in Rwanda or Kosvo.
Em
Toronto
Ex-US Atty General Clark Ready To Defend
Saddam By
Mustafa Abdel-Halim IOL Staff 12-15-3
- CAIRO (IslamOnline.net) --
Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsy Clarke expressed readiness Sunday,
December 14, to act as defense lawyer for ousted Iraqi president Saddam
Hussein, with western analysts suspecting the captured leader would be
given fair trial.
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- "Certainly, why not. I am ready to act in his
defense," Clarke told IslamOnline.net shortly after the U.S. confirmed
the detention of Saddam near Tikrit.
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- Clarke, currently in Cairo to attend a two-day
international anti-occupation conference, stressed that Saddam � however
brutal � should be give a "fair, objective and impartial trial".
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- "Saddam must be domestically prosecuted first and - if
this fails - he should be referred to an international court," said the
former American official, known for his staunch opposition to the
U.S.-led invasion and occupation of Iraq.
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- He doubted, however, that the ousted Iraqi president
would be given such a fair trial.
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- Clarke averred that neither the U.S.-installed Interim
Governing Council (IGC) nor the occupation forces is eligible to try the
overthrown president.
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- "The IGC does not represent Iraq. It is Bush's
council," said the former U.S. attorney general.
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- He noted that the Iraqi body was quick to say that DNA
test proved the captured man was Saddam.
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- "Do you think that they can take the test themselves.
They are puppets," Clarke maintained.
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- For the occupation forces to take over the trial, he
dismissed this as a would-be ridiculous proposal.
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- "Occupation of Iraq is in itself an international
crime" and runs counter to common decency and moral integrity.
-
- Asked if Saddam could be taken to the International
Criminal Court, the former U.S. attorney general whimsically ruled out
the suggestion, noting Washington does not even recognize the
court.
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- U.N. Intervention
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- But former British lawmaker Tony Benn said that since
Bush ordered a mission to assassinate Saddam, the chances for him to
have a just trial would be "minimum".
-
- Benn, also a broadcaster, had made a televised
interview with Saddam days before the U.S.-led invasion, where the
former Iraqi leader denied possessing weapons of mass destruction or
having links to Al-Qaeda as propagated by Washington.
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- "He is a brutal dictator, never make any mistake about
that, but we are against war and occupation" of the oil-rich country,
Benn told IOL.
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- However, Saddam "must be treated respectfully, and
assumed innocent until proven guilty," he stressed.
-
- On his part, former U.N. envoy to Iraq Denis Halliday
appealed to U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to take action to secure
"a proper" tribunal to try Saddam.
-
- "I hope that Annan would stand up and express human
rights" of Saddam regardless of his earlier crimes against his people,
he said.
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- But there is no conditions for this with the continued
state of occupation, said Halliday, who resigned a few years ago
charging that the U.N. weapons program had much harmed Iraqi people than
their leaders.
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- "No Excuses Now"
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- For prominent British legislator George Galloway, the
Iraqi resistance could pick up after the news, as the people of the
occupied country have nothing to fear except a long-term foreign
occupation.
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- "I think the Iraqi resistance could be much stronger,
for two reasons," Galloway said.
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- Saddam�s supporters would be inflamed by humiliation
he suffered at the hands of the U.S. occupation forces during after the
detention, he elaborated.
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- For his opponents in the country, they no longer fear
his return to power - a possibility that deterred many Iraqis from
joining resistance operations - and would now join hands to liberate
their country, added the British lawmaker.
-
- The U.S. soldiers also have no excuse not to back up
and leave the country after Saddam�s capture, Galloway said.
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- "We have much bigger enemies now," the staunch http://www.islamonline.net/English/Views/2002/12/article10.shtmlanti-war campaigner noted.
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- He stressed that Arab leaders should watch their steps
"as they are all, without exception, corrupt kings and puppet
leaders".
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- They are fears, however, that Saddam�s capture might
distract attention from international mobilization to end the U.S.-led
occupation of Iraq.
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- "We must not be distracted by the propaganda that
would be built on this," said British Muslim activist Salma
Yaqoub.
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- http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2003-12/15/article02.shtml
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The
Mulindwas Communication Group "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in
anarchy"
Groupe de communication Mulindwas "avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans
l'anarchie"
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