Judge in Saddam trial stable force (Reuters) Updated: 2006-01-16 09:05 STABLE FORCE AMID MAYHEM
A slight figure charged
with trying one of world's most ruthless leaders in modern times, Amin has
presided over a trial that has been upset by the killings of two defence
lawyers.
Courtroom dramas have included Saddam's half-brother and former
intelligence chief Barzan al-Tikriti spitting at officials and yelling
pro-Saddam slogans and Saddam himself tussling with his guards during one
recess.
Amin's job is a far cry from a career with humble beginnings in
his home city of Sulaimaniya, near the northern Kurdish town of Halabja, where
Saddam is expected to be charged with ordering a gas attack that killed 5,000
people in 1988.
People in Sulaimaniya say Amin was known for the same
even handedness there that he exhibits in the Saddam trial, standing up to
officials in the autonomous region of Kurdistan.
Born in 1957, he
graduated from law school in Baghdad in 1980 and worked as an investigating
magistrate for 10 years in his home city.
He was promoted to the senior
ranks of the judiciary in 1993, after the Kurds had secured virtual independence
from Baghdad, and was named to the special tribunal trying Saddam and his
supporters in 2004.
Amin's aquiline features, white-haired and with a
grey moustache, remained implacable as Saddam has lectured him.
When the
trial started, questions were raised about whether his Kurdish identity would
prevent him from being impartial.
But three months after Saddam took the
stand -- something once unthinkable for Iraqis -- Amin's commitment to a fair
trial free of government interference may be prompting him to walk away from the
most important job of his life.
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