British Prime Minister Tony Blair said on Monday that the conviction of
former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein was a reminder of his "barbaric
brutality".
"What I think is important about this is to recognize that this trial of
Saddam, which has been handled by the Iraqis themselves and
they will take the decision about this, does give us a reminder of the total and
barbaric brutality of that regime," Blair said at his monthly press conference.
Asked whether or not he personally thought Saddam should be executed, Blair
declined to condemn the death sentence passed on Saddam - even though Britain is
opposed to capital punishment, saying "we are against the death penalty, whether
it's Saddam or anybody else."
"The trial of Saddam gives us a chance to see again what the past in Iraq
was: the brutality, the tyranny, the hundreds of thousands of people that he
killed, the wars in which there were a million casualties," said Blair.
There were "other and bigger issues to talk about" in Iraq than the possible
execution, he said.
On Sunday, British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett welcomed the
announcement of the death sentence of Saddam Hussein, saying the verdict was
just for the Iraqi people.
"I welcome that Saddam Hussein and the other defendants have faced justice
and have been held to account for their crimes," Beckett said in a statement.
"Appalling crimes were committed by Saddam Hussein's regime. It is right that
those accused of such crimes against the Iraqi people should face Iraqi
justice," she said.
On Sunday, Saddam was found guilty by the Iraqi High Tribunal of crimes
against humanity and sentenced to hang. The case surrounded the deaths of
Shi'ite men from the town of Dujail.