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Prosecutor: Hang 'Chemical Ali'
02/04/2007 16:08 - (SA)
Baghdad - An Iraqi prosecutor said on Monday Saddam Hussein's cousin and four other former regime officials deserve the death penalty for crimes against humanity during a 1980s crackdown on Kurds.
But, he asked for a sixth defendant to be released.
Those being tried in the so-called Anfal trial include Ali Hassan al-Majid, also known as "Chemical Ali" for allegedly ordering poison gas attacks against the Kurds.
Al-Majid, Saddam's cousin and the former head of the Baath Party's Northern Bureau Command, has acknowledged in court that he gave orders to destroy scores of villages during the Anfal campaign, saying the area "was full of Iranian agents".
If convicted, the defendants could be sentenced to death by hanging.
In his closing remarks, prosecutor Munqith al-Faroon asked the court to convict and give the harshest penalty to al-Majid and four co-defendants because they "did not have mercy on elderly people or women or children - not even animals or plants or the environment."
But, he said, Taher Tawfiq al-Ani, the former governor of Mosul and head of the Northern Affairs Committee, should be released because the evidence against him was insufficient.
Face war crimes charges
The defence, meanwhile, read a letter from defence attorney Badie Arif Ezzat, who was ejected from the court for contempt last month, complaining that he is still in custody in the heavily fortified Green Zone but no interrogation has taken place.
Judge Mohammed Oreibi al-Khalifa ordered the microphones turned off at that point so the exchange that followed could not be monitored by the media.
The trial was adjourned until April 16, when the defence was to make its closing remarks.
The six defendants faced charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity arising from their roles in a military crackdown on Iraq's Kurdish population in 1987-88.
The prosecution says 180 000 people, mostly civilians, were killed.
The others include former director of military intelligence Sabir al-Douri; Sultan Hashim Ahmad al-Tai, a former defence minister and head of the Iraqi Army 1st Corps during the Anfal campaign; Hussein Rashid Mohammed, former deputy director of operations for the Iraqi Armed Forces; and Farhan Mutlaq Saleh, former head of military intelligence's eastern regional office.
Saddam was a defendant in the case but was sentenced to death and hanged on December 30 after his conviction for the killing of 148 Shi'ite Muslims in Dujail after a 1982 attempt on his life.
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