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Khalil al-Dulaimi, chief lawyer
for Iraq's former president Saddam Hussein, holds a letter indicating
that he will stop all dealings with the tribunal trying Hussein, during
an interview in Ramadi November 9, 2005. REUTERS/Stringer |
Lawyers for Saddam Hussein and his aides severed all contact with the
court trying the former Iraqi president on Wednesday after the second murder
of a member of the defence team since the trial began last month.
Attorneys representing Saddam and seven co-accused on charges of crimes against
humanity considered a second day of hearings set for November 28 to be "cancelled
and illegitimate", lead counsel Khalil al-Dulaimi told Reuters.
Interviewed in the Sunni Arab rebel stronghold of Ramadi, west of Baghdad,
he said he felt personally threatened and renewed demands for the United Nations
to intervene to stop the trial following Tuesday's killing of lawyer Adil al-Zubeidi.
"We're facing daily threats and these threats prevent us from going to
our offices and the court and from interviewing the witnesses," Dulaimi
said.
"We call on the international community, the U.N. Security Council, the
United States and all those involved to work on scrapping the criminal court
as illegitimate, and also to pressure it to release President Saddam Hussein
and his legitimate leadership team.
"The defence committee has decided to consider the November 28 date cancelled
and illegitimate."
Coming less than three weeks after the killing of another lawyer for one of
Saddam's co-accused, Tuesday's attack renewed international concerns about whether
the trial can be held in Iraq given the sectarian violence still plaguing the
country.
It was unclear what effect a defence boycott would have on the tribunal, which
has the power to appoint counsel. However it would clearly dent efforts by the
Iraqi and U.S. governments to show that the trial is entirely fair.
The defence team has said it is simply not safe to take part in the trial.
Zubeidi, who was defending Saddam's half-brother Barzan al- Tikrit and former
vice president Taha Yassin Ramadan, was buried on Wednesday, virtually in secret.
Police said close relatives interred him with a minimum of ceremony in the Shi'ite
holy city of Kerbala, south of Baghdad, in line with Shi'ite custom.
Gunmen shot Zubeidi in his car in Baghdad; Thamer Hamoud al -Khuzaie, a fellow
member of the defence team is in hospital with bullet wounds and head injuries
sustained when the car crashed, a medical source said.
RULE OF LAW
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the attacks undermined efforts to uphold
the rule of law.
"It is vitally important that the security of all involved with the tribunal
should be equally assured to ensure a trial free from intimidation and coercion,"
Annan said through his spokeswoman, Marie Okabe.
The anger dividing Iraq pervades the proceedings, but ministers refused to
consider a move abroad after the murder of lawyer Saadoun al-Janabi the day
after the trial opened on October 19. Tribunal and government officials made
no comment.
President Jalal Talabani urged the government to ensure the safety of those
involved in the trial.
The start of the trial was watched on television by millions of Iraqis -- both
Zubeidi and Janabi spoke heatedly -- but some of Saddam's fellow Sunni Arabs
called it "victors' justice" orchestrated by the Shi'ite- and Kurdish-led
government.
The government has denied involvement in the murder of Janabi, who was kidnapped
and killed the day after the trial opened by men who witnesses said identified
themselves as employees of the Interior Ministry.
In the latest burst of violence, a suicide car bomb in the mixed Shi'ite and
Sunni Arab town of Baquba, north of Baghdad, killed seven Iraqi policemen, army
and medical sources said.
With five weeks until December 15 elections that Washington hopes will steer
Iraq further along the path to stability and democracy, the Arab League stepped
up efforts to organise a national reconciliation conference in Cairo.
An Arab League delegation has been visiting Baghdad to persuade politicians
to attend the conference, which had originally been planned for November 15.
Billed as a way to heal deep sectarian rifts in post-Saddam Iraq, the conference
was put off while organisers tried to lure more people to the table.
Senior Arab League official Ahmed ben Hilli said there would now be a meeting
in the Egyptian capital on November 19 to prepare the ground for a main conference
to be held some time later.
In western Iraq, where U.S. and Iraqi forces have been conducting an offensive
since Saturday to clear the small frontier town of Qusayba of al Qaeda militants,
the U.S. military declared the main phase of the operation complete.
(Additional reporting by Faris al-Mehdawi in Baquba, Alastair Macdonald, Paul
Tait, Waleed Ibrahim, Aseel Kami, Lutfi Abu Oun and Ahmed Rashid in Baghdad,
Irwin Arieff at the United Nations)