Saddam's judge is longtime Kurdish lawyer (AP) Updated: 2005-10-20 09:35
Silver-haired and patient, the judge presiding over Saddam Hussein's trial is
a longtime Kurdish lawyer and judge who has worked under both Saddam's
government and under his own people's self-rule.
Rizgar Mohammed Amin, 47, the top judge of a five-judge tribunal overseeing
the Saddam case, is from the town of Sulaimaniyah, about 160 miles north of
Baghdad. He was asked about a year ago by Kurdish government officials to
participate in the Iraqi Special Tribunal, local officials said.
It was unclear if Amin's Kurdish background played any role in his selection
as presiding judge. But it is sure to hold symbolic power, because Kurds and
Shiite Muslims were the two main groups that Saddam oppressed. The case Amin
will oversee concerns Shiite victims of a 1982 massacre.
This image taken from video shows presiding
judge Rizgar Mohammed Amin addressing former Iraqi president Saddam
Hussein at his trial in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone in Iraq
Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2005. Nearly two years after his capture, Saddam
Hussein went on trial Wednesday for alleged crimes against fellow Iraqis,
appearing in a tightly secured courtroom accused in a 1982 massacre of
nearly 150 Shiites. [AP] | Under the Iraqi court
system, Amin and the four other judges will both hear the case and render a
verdict. The names of the other judges have not been released, and Iraqi court
officials did not allow television cameras to show their faces.
Amin, wearing a black robe with a white collar, maintained a calm demeanor
throughout the three-hour hearing, then adjourned the proceedings until Nov. 28.
Saddam Hussein defiantly speaks to the
Presiding Judge Rizgur Ameen Hana Al-Saedi as his trial begins in a
heavily fortified courthouse in Baghdad's Green Zone October 19, 2005.
Nearly two years after he was found in hiding, former Iraqi president
Saddam Hussein goes on trial Wednesday charged with crimes against
humanity for the death of more than 140 Shi'ite Muslim men over two
decades ago. [Reuters] | As the trial began, Saddam asked him bluntly: "Who are you? I want to know
who you are."
Amin then tried to get Saddam to identify himself formally, but the former
president refused and finally sat. Amin read his name for him, calling him the
"former president of Iraq."
Among the many Iraqis glued to their televisions to watch the trial, Amin's
manner was the subject of much discussion. Some were impressed, others thought
he was letting Saddam get away with too much.
Rizgar Mohammed Amin, 47, the presiding judge
of a five-judge tribunal overseeing the Saddam case, conducts the trial
held under tight security in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone in
Iraq October 19, 2005. Saddam Hussein defiantly challenged the legitimacy
of the U.S.-backed court, but then entered a plea of not guilty as he went
on trial on Wednesday for crimes against humanity committed two decades
ago. [Reuters] | Amin "was very gentle," said
Amira Ali, a Sunni Arab woman in Baghdad. "He treated all the defendants with
respect, while the prosecutor was so mean and was talking in a strange accent —
and in a very sectarian way. I hope they will keep (Amin) at the head of this
court so that we can be sure of an honest trial."
In the northern city of Kirkuk, Zainab Wali was overjoyed to see a fellow
Kurd leading the trial of the ousted president. "I feel like my own brother is
judging Saddam since the judge is Kurdish," she said.
But that didn't stop her from screaming at the television when Saddam made
his arguments: "Why are you even giving him the chance to talk?"
Amin's name was made known shortly before the trial began.
He is a 1980 graduate of Baghdad University who first worked as a law school
teacher in his hometown and then became a judge in the region's courts. He was
appointed deputy head of a regional appeals court and then director of Kirkuk's
criminal court.
In the first years of his career, he would have thus worked under Saddam's
government.
But by 1992, the Kurdish areas in northern Iraq were autonomous, operating
outside Saddam's sway.
During Saddam's earlier court hearings, a different judge presided. That
judge, Raid Juhi, was the top investigating judge in the case. His role was more
like that of a prosecutor in the U.S. federal court system, seeking a grand jury
indictment.
|