Iraqi former leader Saddam Hussein has been hospitalized due to a days-long
hunger-strike, a prosecutor said on Sunday.
Chief prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi told reporters that Saddam had been taken
to hospital on Sunday due to his hunger-strike and that he was
currently fed by a tube.
Moussawi also said that the former Iraqi president, who is on trial for
charges against humanity, might not be able to attend the court session
scheduled for Monday.
No further details were revealed.
But a U.S. military source said that Saddam was well enough to return to
court on Monday.
Saddam, along with three of his seven co-accused including his half brother
and once Iraqi intelligence chief Barzan Ibrahim, vice president Taha Yassin
Ramadan and head of Saddam's former revolutionary court Awad al-Bandar, has
started a hunger strike since July 7.
The move came in a protest against the Iraqi High Tribunal's procedures and
lack of security for the defense lawyers as three of them have been slain since
the trial of Saddam and his aides was launched last October.
The latest victim on the defense team was Saddam's deputy defense lawyer
Khamis al-Obaidi, who was kidnapped and killed in Baghdad last month.
The defense team has blamed Shiite militiamen for Obaidi's death and
boycotted the court while submitting a series of demands to the Iraqi High
Tribunal for better security. But the court rejected the demands.
Saddam and his seven aides are facing charges against humanity including the
killing of 148 Shiites in the northern village of Dujail after a failed
assassination attempt on Saddam's life therein 1982.
The defense team has begun giving closing statements on behalf of the
defendants.