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« U.S. moves to abolish visa lottery | Main | I want to be remembered as teacher -- Shagari »

December 22, 2005

'No evidence' Saddam was tortured

The Iraqi judge who prepared the case against Saddam Hussein says there is no evidence he was beaten in US custody. Iraq's former leader has claimed he has been tortured, and accused the US of "lies" for denying it abused him.

His trial went into closed session on Thursday afternoon, after one of his co-defendants said he needed to speak to the judge privately.

He and seven others are on trial over the killing of 148 people in Dujail in 1982. They all deny responsibility.

On Thursday, Iraq's former leader repeated claims in court that he had been beaten "all over my body" while in US custody.

The US has dismissed the idea as "preposterous".

The former president said the US denials could not be believed.

He cited as proof America's pre-war claims that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, and the fact that none were found.

"We don't lie. It is the White House that lies," he told the court.

Investigating magistrate Raed Juhi said Saddam Hussein had never before said he had been mistreated.

"My job requires me to ask each of the defendants if he has been abused, and... I have received no complaints," the judge told reporters on Thursday.

'Grandstanding'

The US said Saddam Hussein was treated very well in custody.

State department spokesman Sean McCormack said his allegations that he was beaten and tortured were "highly ironic".

"Look, he's been given to grandstanding in this trial, but where the focus should be is on the testimony of those people who were victimised.

"That's what people should be listening to."

In the courtroom on Thursday, the judge dismissed a guard the defendants said had threatened them.

There was a stand-up row between Saddam's co-defendant Barzan al-Tikriti and a prosecutor, whom he accused of being a former member of the governing Baath party.

The prosecutor called the accusation an insult and asked to be relieved of his duties. The judge refused.

Barzan al-Tikriti - Saddam Hussein's half-brother and former intelligence chief - praised the judge as "brave", "educated" and "smart", but repeatedly defied his order to sit down.

He complained about the trial being televised with a 30-minute delay, which he said was an "undemocratic" means of editing out parts the authorities did not want heard.

He later said he wanted to speak to the judge in private, prompting Rizgar Amin to clear the court.

Families taken away

Three witnesses testified on Thursday, speaking from behind a curtain to conceal their identities.

The first said he was eight years old during the killings in Dujail.

He said his grandmother, father and uncles had been arrested and tortured. He said his male relatives were taken away and he never saw them again.

Saddam Hussein said the witness was too young at the time of the incident for his testimony to be reliable.

On Wednesday, witnesses had described being taken away and tortured by Iraqi security forces.

Saddam Hussein said on Thursday that he was sorry to hear accounts of torture.

"When I hear that any Iraqi has been hurt it hurts me too," he said.

"The wrongs that were done to those people were wrong and, according to law, those who did it should get what they deserve."

The ousted president is expected to face further charges relating to his tenure as Iraqi leader and could be hanged if found guilty.

Posted by Publisher at December 22, 2005 03:51 PM

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