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Saddam Could Be Tried in `A Few Weeks'

Saddam Could Be Tried in `A Few Weeks'


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BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Saddam Hussein could be tried "in the next few weeks" and could be executed if convicted, an Iraqi Governing Council member said Monday. Other council members said the televised trial would likely begin later, perhaps by summer.

The trial will begin "very soon, in the next few weeks," Mouwafak al-Rabii, a Shiite Muslim council member, told The Associated Press.

He and other council members said they were sure the United States would hand Saddam over to the new Iraqi special tribunal for crimes against humanity, but differed on how soon a trial could be mounted against the former dictator.

"I can tell you he is going to be the first," al-Rabii said.

But Dara Noor al-Din, another council member, told AP that the order of trials would depend on the evidence.

"Maybe he will be the first one, maybe he won't," he said.

Noor al-Din, a leading Kurdish judge, offered a more conservative estimate for the trial date: "Maybe four to six months." A third council member, Adnan Pachachi, said he expected the trial to start "sometime in March."

That would still be close to the July 1 deadline for the U.S.-led occupation authority to hand over sovereignty to a new, transitional Iraqi government. The occupation authority has suspended executions in Iraq, but al-Rabii said it wouldn't take long for them to be reinstated -- especially for Saddam.

"We will get sovereignty on the 30th of June, and I can tell you, he could be executed on the 1st of July," said al-Rabii, a longtime human rights activist.

He said Saddam would have a fair trial, and that Saddam will have "the right to employ the best lawyers in the world, if he wants."

All three council members said the trial would be televised.

Saddam was captured Saturday night in a raid by U.S. soldiers in northern Iraq. At least 300,000 people are believed to have been killed during his 23-year presidency, many of them buried in mass graves.

(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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