Iraq to try Saddam aides in election run-up (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-15 08:41
Iraq will put some of Saddam Hussein's top lieutenants on trial next week, a
month before a national election many hope will lay the ghosts of his rule,
interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi said on Tuesday.
Hours earlier, a second suicide car bomber in 24 hours struck an entrance to
Baghdad's government compound where Allawi spoke, wounding 12 people and
possibly killing several.
![The bodies of four men lie close to a burning pickup truck at the side of a highway near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, December 14, 2004. The bodies of six young men, all shot in the head as if executed, were discovered in Mosul on Tuesday, bringing the total of such corpses found to 14 in two days. The vehicle was attacked and burned one hour after the men had been shot, witnesses said. [Reuters]](xin_10120115084549916681.jpg) The bodies of four
men lie close to a burning pickup truck at the side of a highway near the
northern Iraqi city of Mosul, December 14, 2004. The bodies of six young
men, all shot in the head as if executed, were discovered in Mosul on
Tuesday, bringing the total of such corpses found to 14 in two days. The
vehicle was attacked and burned one hour after the men had been shot,
witnesses said. [Reuters] | In a separate attack, guerrillas ambushed an Iraqi police convoy traveling
from the southern city of Basra to Baghdad, killing at least three police
officers, police said.
"I will tell you clearly and specifically that next week, God willing, the
trials of the symbols of the former regime will begin," Allawi told the National
Council government watchdog.
He did not say whether 67-year-old Saddam would take the stand, but officials
have said before that the former Iraqi president, captured a year ago and under
U.S. military guard, would be among the last to face justice.
Allawi's announcement initially took Iraq's Justice Ministry and U.S.
officials by surprise, but State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said:
"This is an Iraqi court run by Iraqi judges... We do expect it to be an open
process.
"It will be more and more visible to the general public. We'll see hearings,
we'll see legal motions and we'll see a prosecution conducted by the Iraqis."
NEW MASS GRAVE FOUND
Allawi said one of Saddam's cousins had been arrested and that a new mass
grave had been found in Kurdish northern Iraq that may form evidence against the
former Iraqi leader.
Recording a blow against an insurgency blamed by Iraqi and U.S. officials on
foreign Islamists and Saddam supporters, Allawi said police had killed an aide
to Jordanian al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and captured two others.
Putting members of Saddam's old government on trial during the election
campaign seems intended to rally all Iraqis behind the new U.S.-backed order,
though some have said it could inflame ethnic and sectarian divisions.
The Sunni Arab minority did well under Saddam, but elections will favor the
long-oppressed Shi'ite majority. Some Sunni leaders have called for a delay or a
boycott of the Jan. 30 poll, saying violence in Sunni areas makes voting
impossible.
A senior Iraqi official, who asked not to be named, said he regarded Allawi's
announcement as a pitch for pre-election attention and that more time was needed
to arrange the trials.
The most prominent Sunni grouping, the Iraqi Islamic Party, said it was among
79 parties and blocs that had submitted lists of candidates before a Wednesday
deadline.
But the party said it had yet to decide whether to campaign in the poll, in
which a 275-seat National Assembly will be elected to draft a constitution and
appoint a new government.
A resurgence of violence in the Sunni stronghold of Falluja, west of Baghdad,
has put pressure on the U.S. Marine force in the region, which suffered two more
deaths, bringing to 10 the number of Marines killed in action in three days.
"POCKETS" OF FALLUJA GUERRILLAS
U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Richard Myers said "pockets" of
guerrillas were active in Falluja, preventing residents going home.
He said during a visit to Baghdad an increase in U.S. troop numbers to
protect the election would be reversed after the vote -- depending on the course
of events.
Myers said failure to hold the election on time would be "a victory for the
insurgents."
But Allawi said: "We shouldn't think (the violence) will all stop on Jan. 30.
We are facing a battle between good and evil."
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, under U.S. pressure to provide more help
for the Iraqi election, would meet Secretary of State Colin Powell and national
security adviser Condoleezza Rice in Washington on Thursday, his spokesman
said.
The suicide bombing at an entrance to Baghdad's so-called "Green Zone"
government compound mirrored an attack on Monday at the same checkpoint on the
anniversary of Saddam's arrest.
Hospital staff said 12 civilians were wounded.
"Two of the people standing next to me were killed. I saw them cut to
pieces," said one wounded man, Feras Saher.
Zarqawi's group claimed responsibility for Monday's bombing, which a hospital
official said killed nine people.
The attack on the police convoy occurred near the town of Salman Pak, about
20 miles southeast of Baghdad.
Lieutenant Wahid Hameed of the Basra police Tactical Support Unit said three
officers were killed and two were wounded. Sixty-five policemen were in the
convoy.
Iraq's police force is frequently targeted by guerrillas, particularly when
lightly armed units are being moved from one part of the country to another or
are returning from training.
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