The chief judge in Saddam Hussein's trial said Tuesday's session would be the 
last day to hear defense witnesses, suggesting he wants to quickly wrap up the 
proceedings despite defense complaints about being rushed. 
 
 
 |  Saddam Hussein testifies during his trial in 
 Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, June 13, 2006. Saddam and seven co-defendants are 
 on trial for torture, illegal arrests and the killing of nearly 150 people 
 from Dujail after a 1982 assassination attempt on Saddam in the 
 town. [AFP]
 | 
 
 
   
One of Saddam's top co-defendants, Barzan Ibrahim, was absent after being 
thrown out of the court the day before for arguing with chief judge Raouf 
Abdel-Rahman. The judge said Tuesday that Ibrahim was being kept out "for his 
violations against the order of the court." 
Abdel-Rahman scolded the defense team, telling them to stop what he called 
"political speeches." 
"This is the last session to hear the testimony of defense witnesses," he 
said. "We don't want speeches ... So chose one -- speeches or hearing 
witnesses." 
If Abdel-Rahman sticks to that stance, it could mean that the end of 
proceedings is near in the nearly 8-month-old trial. After the defense witnesses 
are finished, the prosecution and defense would present their closing statements 
and the five-judge panel would adjourn to consider their verdicts. 
Saddam and seven former members of his regime are charged with of crimes 
against humanity for a crackdown against Shiites in the town of Dujail, which 
was launched after a 1982 assassination attempt against the then-Iraqi leader. 
They are accused of illegally arresting hundreds of Shiites -- including women 
and children -- torturing some to death and killing 148 people who were 
sentenced to death in the attack on Saddam. 
They could face execution by hanging if convicted. 
The court Tuesday heard a quick series of defense witnesses, including three 
former bodyguards of Saddam who were with him on the day of the shooting attack 
on his motorcade in Dujail. The witnesses testified anonymously from behind a 
curtain to protect them from reprisals. 
They said Saddam ordered his guards to stop firing back when gunmen in a 
nearby palm grove shot at his car. "My understanding at that time the president 
did not want ... even an animal in the groves to be hurt by the bodyguards' 
fire," one of the witnesses said. 
Another of the witnesses said some Dujail residents approached Saddam after 
the attack "and they were crying to apologize. I remember, he told them, 'They 
(the attackers) don't represent you, you are good people.'" 
Tensions have grown in the court after the tough-talking Abdel-Rahman 
effectively shut down a defense attempt to discredit the prosecution's case. 
Last month, three witnesses testified that some of the 148 Shiites were still 
alive and living in Dujail. 
The defense argued that, if the claims were true, the prosecution's portrayal 
of the crackdown was deeply flawed and that all the documents it presented 
should be reviewed for accuracy. 
Abdel-Rahman, however, had the three witnesses arrested for perjury, along 
with a fourth witness who claimed that the chief prosecutor tried to bribe him 
to testify against Saddam.