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  Saddam judge offers resignation - official   (AP)  Updated: 2006-01-15 09:00  
 The chief judge in Saddam Hussein's trial has submitted his resignation after 
becoming fed up with criticism that he had let the proceedings spin out of 
control, a court official said Saturday.  
But it wasn't clear if Rizgar Mohammed Amin's resignation had been accepted 
amid behind-the-scenes efforts to change his mind. 
 
 
 
 
   Presiding Judge 
 Rizgar Mohammed Amin presides over the trial of Saddam Hussein inside the 
 Green Zone in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2005. 
 [AP] |   Amin is the head of a five-judge tribunal 
overseeing the case against Saddam and seven co-defendants for the deaths of 
more than 140 Shiite Muslims in the town of Dujail in 1982 in retaliation for an 
assassination attempt. 
The chief prosecutor in Saddam's trial, Jaafar al-Mousawi, told The 
Associated Press that Amin's resignation — if accepted — would not affect the 
proceedings because he could be quickly replaced. 
 "There are substitutes. If any judge wanted to resign it wouldn't hinder the 
trial process," he said. 
 Amin would be the second judge to step down in the case. Another member of 
the panel recused himself in late November because one of the co-defendants may 
have been involved in the execution of his brother. That judge was replaced. 
 A court official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the 
sensitivity of the case, said Amin had offered to resign but efforts were under 
way to get him to reverse the decision. 
 The U.S. military, meanwhile, said a Marine was killed Friday by small-arms 
fire during combat in the western town of Ramadi, raising to at least 2,215 the 
number of American troops who have died since the Iraq war started in March 
2003. 
 Electoral officials also said results from the Dec. 15 parliamentary vote 
could be certified by next week after repeated delays, opening the way for 
negotiations to formally get under way for the formation of a broad-based 
coalition government. 
 In the Saddam case, the chief judge — who is the only one of the five to be 
identified publicly due to security concerns — has been dismayed by the way he 
had been attacked in the media by critics who said he allowed the proceedings to 
get out of hand, the official said. 
 Saddam has often grabbed the spotlight during the nearly three-month-old 
trial. He has railed at the judge, refused to show up at one session, claimed he 
was tortured and openly prayed in court when the judge would not allow a recess. 
   
  
  
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