Trial hears voice alleged to be of Saddam

A top aide allegedly told Saddam Hussein in a phone conversation in the 1980s that he intended to "change the social reality" …

A top aide allegedly told Saddam Hussein in a phone conversation in the 1980s that he intended to "change the social reality" in a Shia town where the former Iraqi leader came under an attack, according to a tape played today by prosecutors in Saddam's trial.

Taha Yassin Ramadan — a co-defendant in the trial — allegedly said "suspicious elements" in Dujail would be moved out and "replacements" brought in.

In the tape, a voice said to be Saddam's replied, "Fine."

Prosecutors played the tape in a Baghdad court today in the trial of Saddam and seven of his former regime members over a crackdown launched in Dujail after the former Iraqi leader's motorcade was shot at in July 1982.

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Hundreds were arrested in the sweep, some allegedly tortured, and 148 were killed.

One defendant, Barzan Ibrahim, denounced the tape as a fake, and the defence stepped up its attempts to cast doubt on a series of documents prosecutors have presented to show Saddam and his co-defendants' role in the sweep against Dujail.

Top defence lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi demanded prosecutors give more detail on how the documents — including memos from Saddam's office and Ibrahim's Mukhabarat intelligence agency — were obtained and repeated his call for international handwriting experts to check signatures.

A team of Iraqi experts have authenticated Saddam's and other signatures on the documents in the past two sessions. But today, a report by the team read to the court questioned signatures purported to be those of one defendant, Mizhar Abdullah Ruwayyid.

AP