Iraq: Saddam Hussein appeared to be headed for a showdown today with the court trying him, after the chief prosecutor said the former Iraqi leader would be forced to attend if he persisted in boycotting proceedings.
Saddam, whose trial for crimes against humanity resumes today following an 11-day break, did not turn up for the last two hearings after he and several of his seven co-accused staged a walkout on January 29th.
But chief prosecutor Ja'afar Moussawi indicated yesterday the court had lost patience."Tomorrow they will attend the trial. If they refuse they will be forced. The court has the authority," he said.
He also disclosed that six former high-ranking members of Saddam's government would testify during this week's two-day hearing, although he declined to name them.
It was not clear whether Saddam planned to attend today's hearing. His defence lawyers have not met him since they stormed out of the court on January 29th after clashing with new chief judge Raouf Abdel-Rahman. Saddam has refused court-appointed counsel.
The defence team walked out after the judge ejected a member of the team and a defendant for refusing to be quiet. They have refused to return to the US-sponsored court until certain demands are met, including the removal of the judge, whom they accuse of bias.
Abdel Rahman has taken a no-nonsense approach in his handling of Saddam, after his predecessor resigned amid accusations that he had been too lenient on the former president.
The trial has been marred by delays, the murders of two defence counsel, the resignation of chief judge Rizgar Amin, who complained of government interference, and the replacement of his deputy after he was accused of belonging to Saddam's ousted Baath party.
An application lodged by Saddam's defence team with Iraq's Bar Association threatens further complications. It seeks the removal of the court-appointed lawyers representing Saddam and his fellow defendants.
It argues that the lawyers are government employees and so are banned under Bar Association rules from practising law in a courtroom. The council will rule on the application today. New York-based Human Rights Watch has expressed concern about the quality of the court-appointed lawyers.
-(Reuters)