Trial of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein on charges including genocide
against Kurds resumed in a Baghdad court on Tuesday.
The ousted leader was in the dock with his six codefendants. The trial of
Saddam and his six top commanders for their alleged roles in the anti-Kurdish
Anfal campaign in the late 1980s started on Monday.
Saddam's co-accused include his cousin Ali Hassan al-Majid, popularly known
as "Chemical Ali" for allegedly ordering poison gas attacks against Kurds.
The defendants are all charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Saddam and al-Majid also face the graver charge of genocide.
If convicted, Saddam might face death penalty. At the beginning of Tuesday's
session, one of the defendants, former defense minister Sultan Hashim Ahmad,
claimed that the Anfal campaign in 1987-1988 only targeted Iranian troops and
Kurdish rebels instead of Kurdish civilians.
Ahmad, who was also commander of Task Force Anfal and head of the Iraqi Army
1st Corps, said, "The goal was to fight an organized, armed army ... The goal
was not civilians. "The first batch of witnesses including survivors of the
Anfal campaign are expected to testify against Saddam and his co-accused in the
court later.
During Monday's session, Saddam and Majid refused to enter a plea and Chief
Judge Abdullah al-Amiri, a Shiite, then entered a plea of not guilty on behalf
of them.
Many Kurdish villages were razed and some 100,000 Kurds were reportedly
killed in the campaign code-named Anfal which means "Spoil of War."
It is the second trial Saddam is standing.
The former Iraqi leader and seven others have been on a separate trial for
allegedly killing 148 Shiites in the village of Dujail following a failed
assassination attempt against Saddam near the village in 1982.
A verdict for the Dujail case is expected in October. Saddam will also face
death penalty by hanging if found guilty in the case.