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Saddam Hussein's defence lawyers will argue that he has immunity from
prosecution at his trial in Iraq later this month, according to a London-based
member of his legal team.
Lawyer Abdel Haq Alani told the BBC the former president will challenge the
legality of the special tribunal, due to open inside Baghdad's fortified Green
Zone on October 19.
"He had full immunity under the prevailing Iraqi constitution
and you cannot have a retroactive legislation that removes that immunity,"
Alani said in an interview with the BBC's "Newsnight" programme late
on Thursday.
Iraqi officials say the only charge against Saddam so far is the killing of
more than 140 men in the mostly Shi'ite village of Dujail after a failed 1982
assassination attempt against him.
Alani said the defence will argue that those killed had been found guilty under
Iraq's laws and Saddam's only role was to sign their death warrants.
"These people were tried and found guilty and sentenced to death according
to the Iraqi criminal code," he told the BBC.
Alani, who told Reuters in September that Saddam had been denied his legal
rights, said he still thought the former Iraqi president would not have a fair
trial.
"A fundamental element of having justice is to see that there is a fair
and impartial trial," he told the BBC. "That I think is not happening
in Iraq now."
Despite concerns about the trial, Alani said Saddam had a positive outlook.
"He is in high spirits and is very defiant," he said.
The BBC said Saddam's defence team has just received an 800-page bundle outlining
the prosecution case.
The report said many of the pages they have been sent are unreadable and they
still have no charge details.
Saddam, who has been held by U.S. forces since they captured him in 2003, sacked
his defence team in August to bring in a more professional group.
Alani, an Iraqi born barrister, has assembled a legal team with Khalil Dulaimi,
who is based in Baghdad and is the only lawyer who has so far been allowed to
meet Saddam.
They have approached British lawyer Anthony Scrivener, who has been involved
in some of Britain's most high profile trials, to help defend Saddam, according
to the BBC.
No one at Scrivener's office could be reached for comment.
Scrivener helped quash the murder convictions of the so-called "Guildford
Four", a group of men who spent 15 years in jail wrongly convicted of an
Irish Republican Army bombing that killed five people in 1974.