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Saddam verdict could be delayed for some days
29 Oct 2006 13:32:10 GMT
Source: Reuters

BAGHDAD, Oct 29 (Reuters) - A court trying Saddam Hussein for the killing of Shi'ites in the 1980s could delay delivering a verdict, due next Sunday, for a few days to give judges more time to review testimonies, the chief prosecutor said on Sunday.

Jaafar al-Moussawi said the U.S.-backed Iraqi High Tribunal was still working on the judgement, which could send the ousted leader to the gallows if he is found guilty of crimes against humanity over his role in the killing of 148 villagers.

"We will know a day or two before the trial if they are ready to announce the verdict," he told Reuters.

Delaying the sentence, which was originally due for Nov. 5, could be a disappointment for U.S. President George W. Bush and his Republican Party.

Polls suggest Republicans could lose control of Congress in elections on Nov. 7 and a guilty verdict against Saddam could be used by Bush and his allies as a vindication of their policy to overthrow him.

Moussawi expected the verdict -- the first ruling against Saddam by the court -- to include detailed legal reasoning to support the judges' conclusions.

Prosecutors have asked for the death penalty if Saddam is found guilty over his role in the killings which occurred after an attempt on his life in the village of Dujail in 1982.

Iraqi law states an execution must be by hanging. Saddam, 69, has said he deserves to meet this fate by firing squad because he is a military officer.

Any execution could be delayed by appeals and by the up to a dozen other cases the toppled leader could face.

Saddam is also on trial separately on charges of genocide for the "Anfal" (Spoils of War) military operation against the country's ethnic Kurds in the late 1980s that killed tens of thousands. Hearings for Anfal are due to resume on Monday. (Reporting by Mariam Karouny, editing by Paul Hughes)
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A demonstrator from Stop the War Coalition stands outside the Houses of Parliament in London as Member of Parliament debate a motion calling for an inquiry into the Iraq war October 31, 2006. British Prime Minister Tony Blair, U.S. President George W. Bush's strongest ally in the Iraq war, may face a damaging defeat in parliament on Tuesday over his handling of the conflict.