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Iraq's Tareq Aziz sentenced to death

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Iraq's Tareq Aziz sentenced to death


By Ahmed Rasheed
BAGHDAD | Tue Oct 26, 2010 8:29am EDT

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraq's high tribunal on Tuesday passed a death sentence on Tareq Aziz, once the international face of dictator Saddam Hussein's regime, over the persecution of Islamic parties, the court said. The death sentence was the first to be handed down to Aziz, who was well known in foreign capitals and at the United Nations before Saddam's downfall. He rose to prominence at the time of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and the 1991 Gulf War, when he was foreign minister.

"The court today issued the death sentence on Tareq Aziz and four others for committing crimes against humanity. The charge of elimination of religious parties was classified as crimes against humanity," Judge Mohammed Abdul-Sahib, a spokesman of the Iraqi High Tribunal, told Reuters. "The nature of the crimes is willful killing, torture and the enforced disappearance of persons." Last year, Aziz was sentenced to 15 years in prison for his part in the killings of dozens of merchants in 1992 and to a further seven years for his role in the forced displacement of Kurds from northern Iraq during Saddam's rule.

He surrendered to invading U.S. forces in April 2003 but was handed over to Iraqi prison authorities this year. In August he accused U.S. President Barack Obama in a jailhouse interview with Britain's Guardian newspaper of "leaving Iraq to the wolves" because of U.S. plans to withdraw. Aziz's Amman-based lawyer, Badie Arif, said the decision was politically motivated. "It is a political verdict and not legal. He (Aziz) expected that, especially when the U.S. administration handed him over to the Iraqi government," Arif told Reuters by telephone from Amman.

RIGHT TO APPEAL


Sahib said Aziz, as well as four other defendants in the case who were also sentenced to death, were expected to appeal the decision. Iraqi law provides for an automatic appeal for all death-sentence and life-imprisonment cases, even if the defendants do not lodge an appeal themselves.

The four other defendants sentenced to death were former interior minister and intelligence chief, Sadoun Shakir, Abed Hamoud, a former private secretary to Saddam, Saddam's half brother Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hasan and, a former top Baath party official, Abdul Ghani Abdul Ghafour. An official in the court's media office said the evidence provided to court and the statements of witnesses had proved sufficient to convict them.

During Saddam's rule, only the Baath party was allowed to exist. The Sunni dictator crushed attempts to establish rival political organizations, and in particular carried out constant campaigns against Islamic parties. Their leaders were assassinated, imprisoned or forced into exile. One of his main targets was the Islamic Dawa party of current Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi'ite Muslim.

(Additional reporting by Waleed Ibrahim; Writing by Serena Chaudhry and Michael Christie; Editing by Michael Roddy)

 

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Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz salutes during the national anthem in Baghdad in this November 24, 1999 file photo.


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A video grab shows former Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz attending his trial in a courtroom in Baghdad April 29, 2008.


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Iraq's former deputy prime minister Tareq Aziz appears before an Iraqi tribunal in Baghdad in this July 1, 2004 file photo.


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Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz is pictured on the eight of spades playing cards, handed out to U.S. Troops during the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq , in this undated handout.



 
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Russia appeals to Iraq to not execute Aziz


Russia appeals to Iraq to not execute Aziz


MOSCOW | Wed Oct 27, 2010 5:41pm EDT

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia called on Iraq on Wednesday not to carry out the death sentence on Tareq Aziz on humanitarian grounds, its foreign ministry said. The Vatican has also appealed against the sentence which was passed by Iraq's high tribunal on Tuesday on Aziz, once the international face of late dictator Saddam Hussein's government and Iraq's foreign minister. He is also a Christian.

"From a basic humanitarian point of view, it is obvious that his situation requires mercy," the ministry said in a statement on official site mid.ru, adding that Aziz, who was born in 1936, suffered from health problems and was of an advanced age. Russia strongly opposed the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. In New York, United Nations spokesman Martin Nesirky indicated the world body would also oppose the death sentence being carried out, citing a standing U.N. policy.

"The United Nations position on the death penalty is well known -- that is, that we oppose the death penalty, and certainly ... as in other cases, we would be suggesting that a death penalty should not be carried out," Nesirky said when asked about the Aziz case. U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley declined to join the call for Aziz to be spared. "Our position is that Tareq Aziz was convicted through a legal process that is consistent with the Iraqi constitution.

The final disposition of this case is up to Iraq," he told a news briefing. Last year, Aziz was sentenced to 15 years in prison for his part in the killings of dozens of merchants in 1992 and to a further seven years for his role in the forced displacement of Kurds from northern Iraq during Saddam's rule. He surrendered to invading U.S. forces in April 2003 but was handed over to Iraqi prison authorities this year.

(Reporting by Amie Ferris-Rotman in Moscow and Patrick Worsnip at the United Nations; Editing by Doina Chiacu)


 
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