[Deathpenalty]death penalty news------worldwide

Rick Halperin rhalperi at mail.smu.edu
Tue Nov 22 23:11:46 CST 2005




Nov. 22



IRAQ:

Death Penalty Possible in Hussein Trial


Former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein speaks at his trial

The trial of former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein is scheduled to resume
in Baghdad next week (Nov. 28). If convicted, Saddam Hussein could face
the death penalty, a punishment strongly opposed by human rights groups
and unavailable to international tribunals.

The statutes of the Iraqi Higher Criminal Court, set up to try Saddam
Hussein and others, are a mixture of international law and domestic, Iraqi
legislation.

Experts say it is a domestic trial because it has Iraqi judges, Iraqi
prosecutors and is taking place in Baghdad. At the same time, it has an
international flavor because it uses the statutes of various international
tribunals - such as the one trying former Yugoslav president Slobodan
Milosevic in The Hague.

On October 19, Saddam Hussein and seven others appeared before the court
charged with crimes against humanity, the torture and killing of more than
140 people after a 1982 assassination attempt against him in the town of
Dujail. The former Iraqi leader pleaded not guilty. After a 3-hour
session, the trial was adjourned until November 28, to give lawyers more
time to work on Saddam Hussein's defense.

Linda Malone is an international law expert at the College of William and
Mary. She explains why prosecutors decided to start with the Dujail case.

"In many ways, the Dujail incident and massacre was one of the easiest to
prosecute in terms of the clarity of the evidence, the gathering of the
evidence, the basis for the legal charges, the lack of strong defenses to
the charge. And so as a result, it's the neatest package to proceed with,"
she said.

Ms. Malone says the former Iraqi leader will also be charged with genocide
stemming from other atrocities, such as the 1981 campaign against the
marsh Arabs of southern Iraq and the Anfal operation (1988) in which
180,000 Kurds were killed. And she says that Saddam Hussein will also face
charges of war crimes as a result of the invasion of Kuwait (1990).

If convicted, Saddam Hussein could face the death penalty.

Laurel Miller, international law expert with the U.S. Institute of Peace,
says the death penalty option is the main difference between the Iraqi
court and other tribunals.

"The international criminal tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and for
Rwanda are courts that were created by the United Nations and they operate
under U.N. auspices. And for that reason they do not - among others - they
do not have the death penalty option," said Laurel Miller.

Experts say in setting up the tribunal trying Saddam Hussein, Iraqi
officials were adamant about having the death penalty as an option.

Michael Scharf is a leading U.S. expert on international criminal law at
Case Western Reserve School of Law. He helped train some of the Iraqi
judges sitting on the tribunal and he says they explained to him their
rationale for having the option of putting Saddam Hussein to death.

"First of all, they said 'we are fiercely proud of our [Iraqi] legal
traditions that go all the way back to the Code of Hamurabi, the first
ever criminal code that was invented for the world, in our country. All
during that period we had the death penalty and it is part of our legal
tradition and we are not going to give it up.' Secondly, they said, look,
these are the worst crimes known to humankind and the people at Nuremburg
were executed for these crimes and even the human rights treaties allow
for the death penalty in very serious cases," he noted. "Thirdly, they
said, they were very worried about what they called 'the Napoleonic
precedent' which was basically that if Saddam Hussein was convicted, but
not executed of the worst crimes, then he would probably be pardoned some
day or given amnesty or escape and come back and take over Iraq again and
start his reign of terror all over again' just as Napoleon did after he
escaped the 1st time he was captured 100 or 200 years ago."

Various experts and human rights organizations have criticized the Iraqi
tribunal's decision to have the death penalty.

Richard Dicker is Director of the International Justice Program for "Human
Rights Watch."

"The death penalty, from a human rights perspective, is a cruel and
inhuman punishment. It should not be applied," said Mr. Dicker. "It is not
applied by any of the international tribunals for Yugoslavia, Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, the International Criminal Court. It should not be applied
here. Our concern is that it is a cruel and inhuman punishment, as I said,
but also [that it's] a continuation of punishment carried out by the
former regime. Moreover, there is no possibility in the law that a death
sentence can be commuted to life imprisonment. That violates very basic
international law guarantees that insist there must be the right to
commutation of sentence once it's issued."

A fallout from the decision to have the death penalty option has been that
many countries have refused to provide legal assistance to the special
Iraqi tribunal trying Saddam Hussein. Because of that, U.S. experts have
stepped in and helped train Iraqi judges in international law. And as
Linda Malone says, some of her students have offered their support as
well.

"So my William and Mary law students have been working extremely hard to
write very lengthy memos, just as law school students in the U.S. do for
judges in the U.S. court system on some of the issues that the tribunal is
addressing, trying to give them an impartial assessment of what the law is
on whatever issue needs to be addressed," she explained.

Ms. Malone and other experts say its is essential for Saddam Hussein to
get a fair trial. They say if the special tribunal conducts fair
proceedings, that will be a major step in showing the international
community that Iraq can deliver world-class justice.

(source: Voice of America)






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