Untitled Document
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Saddam: "The man in the White House is a liar"
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Saddam Hussein has accused the White House of lying about his alleged
stockpiles of chemical weapons as well as the claim that he was tortured in
US custody.
Speaking on Thursday at the start of the seventh session of his trial on charges
of crimes against humanity, the former Iraqi president rekindled his battle
of words with Washington.
"Zionists and Americans, I mean officials, hate Saddam Hussein,"
Saddam said. "The man in the White House is a liar. He said there are chemical
weapons in Iraq.
"He later said that, 'We did not find anything in Iraq'."
Referring to a White House statement that his claims that he had been tortured
were preposterous, Saddam said: "They lied again when they said that what
Saddam said was wrong."
On Wednesday, Saddam accused the Americans of beating him in custody and said
he had the bruises to prove it.
Saddam said: "I had my injuries documented by three American [medical]
teams." He did not say where or when he was allegedly beaten.
Theatrics
There were other theatrical moments during Thursday's hearings: the judge dismissed
one of the courtroom guards after the defendants complained that he had threatened
them.
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Barzan al-Tikriti accused his
jailers of abuse
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prosecutors of being former fellow members of the Baath party and a prosecutor
asked to be relieved of his duties because of insults from the dock - a request
dismissed by the judge.
Barzan also accused his jailers of abuse.
"They asked me questions and when I asked to be able to explain things
they demanded that I reply by yes or no and slapped me across the face while
I had handcuffs on," he said.
It was not immediately clear if he was referring to US or Iraqi interrogators.
Witness too young
The first witness to testify on Thursday - speaking from behind a curtain and
with his voice disguised - said he was eight during the killings in Dujail.
He said his grandmother, father and uncles had been arrested and tortured.
The witness said he had never again seen his male relatives, implying that they
had been killed.
Saddam said the court should not depend on the testimony of witnesses who had
not reached adulthood at the time of the alleged crime.
Defence lawyers also questioned the reliability of the witness.
"This is a waste of time," one said. "He was only a child."
A second witness also gave evidence on Thursday and a third
was due after a recess.
Video editing
Barzan repeatedly interrupted the court, protesting at one stage that much
of what he was saying was being edited out of video footage of the trial which
is being broadcast on televisions with a 20-minute delay.
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Judge Amin was accused of not
keeping proper order in the court
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"If the sound is cut off once again, then I don't know about my comrades
but I personally won't attend again, this is unjust and undemocratic," he
said.
Prosecutors have accused the defendants of grand-standing in an attempt to
turn the trial into a political forum for their views.
A prosecutor then offered to resign, saying the presiding judge
was not keeping proper order in the court and was allowing
defendants to speak out of order.
Rizkar Mohammed Amin, the presiding judge, would not accept his resignation.
Barzan then accused the prosecutors of being former members of the Baath, the
ruling party under Saddam.
"This is the biggest insult there is, accusing me of belonging
to the bloody Baath," one of the prosecutors answered.
Barzan then stood up shouting: "Long live the Baath."
This incident was edited out of video footage broadcast from the courthouse.
Bailiff ejected
In another courtroom incident, Amin ejected a bailiff after
defendants alleged he had threatened them.
It was not immediately clear who had allegedly been threatened or in what way.
Saddam and his seven co-defendants are charged with ordering the killing of
148 people from the mainly Shia village of Dujail, north of Baghdad, in the
1980s.
Prosecutors say Saddam ordered the killings in reprisal for a failed attempt
to assassinate him in the village in 1982.
Scores of families from Dujail were rounded up and shunted between jails around
Iraq for four years after the attack.
The trial was adjourned until 24 January.