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Updated: 2004-12-17 11:03

Saddam meets lawyer, aides due in Court

12月16日,伊拉克前总统萨达姆第一次见到了家人为他请的律师,这是他落网一年来首次见律师。据与萨达姆见过面的律师透露,萨达姆显得健康强壮精神头很足,显然对即将开始的审判“很有准备”。

Saddam meets lawyer, aides due in Court

Iraq Justice Minister Malek Dohan al-Hassan told a Swiss newspaper that Saddam Hussein will be the last of 12 leaders from the toppled regime to go on trial 'long after' next month's elections.(AFP)

Saddam Hussein met with a defense lawyer Thursday for the first time since his capture a year ago, days before several of his top aides are due to appear in court for hearings on alleged war crimes.

The unidentified attorney spent four hours with the 67-year-old former dictator at Saddam's undisclosed detention site, said his chief lawyer, Ziad al-Khasawneh.

"He was in good health and his morale was high and very strong," al-Khasawneh said. "He looked much better that his earlier public appearance when he was arraigned a few months ago."

The Iraqi interim government's push to get the trials for Saddam's former lieutenants under way before the Jan. 30 national elections has led to dissent even within the Iraqi Cabinet.

"Trials as symbolic as those against the dignitaries of the former regime should only start after the establishment of an Iraqi government with ballot-box legitimacy," Iraqi Justice Minister Malik Dohan al-Hassan told the Geneva daily newspaper Le Temps in an interview published Thursday.

Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said Tuesday that procedures could begin as early as next week before the Iraqi Special Tribunal.

Saddam will not be among the first to appear in court. But his notorious former right-hand man, Ali Hassan al-Majid — the ex-general known as "Chemical Ali" for his use of chemical weapons — is expected to appear along with 11 other former regime members at the initial investigative court hearing next week.

"The cases against his (Saddam's) henchmen are probably less complicated to prove than the cases against him," Stephen Orlofsky, a former federal judge who toured Iraq to assess its judiciary, told CNN.

He said Saddam will face a special tribunal of five judges that was created to try war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide .

(Agencies)

 

Vocabulary:

undisclosed: not made known(未泄露的)

morale: a state of individual psychological well-being based upon a sense of confidence and usefulness and purpose(士气,民心)

genocide : systematic killing of a racial or cultural group(有计划的灭种和屠杀)

 
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