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Uproar in court as judge ejects Saddam lawyer (Reuters) Updated: 2006-05-22 15:49
BAGHDAD - Iraqi guards at the trial of Saddam Hussein manhandled a Lebanese
lawyer from the court on Monday, ignoring her loud protests, as witnesses
prepared to give testimony for the former president's co-accused.
Defence lawyer Bushra Khalil threw her robe as she was bundled from the
chamber by guards.
(1st row L to R) Abdullah Kadhem Ruaid,
Mohammad Azawi Ali, Saddam Hussein, (2nd row L to R) Awad Hamed al-Bander,
Mizher Abdullah Rawed, (3rd row L to R) Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, Ali
Daeem Ali, Taha Yassin Ramadan attend their trial held in Baghdad's
heavily fortified Green Zone May 22, 2006. The trial of Saddam Hussein and
seven others accused of crimes against humanity resumed in Baghdad on
Monday, with defence witnesses for some of the more senior defendants
expected to take the stand. [Reuters] | Amid the clamour, Saddam stood to object and
declared: "I am the president of Iraq", only to be told sharply by Judge Raouf
Abdul Rahman: "No you are a defendant."
Khalil objected at the start of
the hearing to her ejection from court in a previous session. After the argument
with Abdul Rahman rose in pitch, he ordered her removed from court and described
her behaviour as "an insult to justice".
Proceedings in the
heavily-guarded courtroom in Baghdad's Green Zone, which have seen occasional
such ejections in the past, then moved ahead with two witnesses speaking in
favour of Baathist judge Awad-al Bandar.
Following testimony last week
for the four local officials on trial with Saddam, Bandar was the first of the
four senior Baath party figures on trial to present defence witnesses.
One man, speaking openly without the protection of a screen used by many
other witnesses, praised Bandar's running of the Revolutionary Court that
sentenced 148 Shi'ite men to death over an assassination attempt on Saddam at
Dujail in 1982.
"Did I ever kick any defence lawyer out of court?"
Bandar asked his witness, a former court employee, making ironic capital of the
earlier scenes of uproar.
"No. You never did," witness Murshid Mohammed
Jasim said, turning to the judge to add: "He always gave the lawyers time to
speak and was never angry with them, whatever they did."
He also said
the charge that Bandar ordered 32 Dujail youths under 18 to be executed in
defiance of Iraqi law was untrue.
A week ago, all eight defendants were
charged with crimes against humanity over the killings and detentions,
deportations and tortures to which 399 people from Dujail were subjected in
reprisal for the attempt on Saddam's life.
Saddam refused to plead and
like the others a not guilty plea was entered for him. Witnesses were also
expected to be heard on Monday for Saddam's half-brother Barzan al-Tikriti, his
then intelligence chief. Barzan complained to the judge that some of his
witnesses could not appear because they were in a U.S. military prison in
southern Iraq.
Also on trial is former vice president Taha Yassin
Ramadan.
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