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Judge in Saddam trial stable force
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-01-16 09:05

BAGHGAD - With seemingly endless patience and disarming politeness, Rizgar Amin has appeared to legal experts as an ideal judge to preside over the high-profile trial of Saddam Hussein.


Presiding Judge Rizgar Mohammed Amin is seen in this November 28, 2005 file photo during the trial of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad. [Reuters]
Saddam's tirades never seem to faze Amin, who has remained even-handed despite the fact that many of his fellow Kurds would like to see their former tormentor in Baghdad hang soon.

But pressure from the Shi'ite-led government on Amin to get tough with Saddam may have proved too much for a man who has gone to some lengths to show the defendants having a fair trial.

Amin tendered his resignation last week, telling associates he was fed up with pressure from a government eager to see a quick hanging for the former leader. It is unclear how far the threat is a negotiating tactic to defend the court's freedoms.
The trial is scheduled to resume on January 24.

One trial prosecutor said Amin had complained that his main sanction for disciplining the defendants -- barring them from the courtroom -- was a double-edged sword that would dent public confidence in the court if the trial played to an empty dock.

Amin has treated Saddam with firm politeness, allowing him to speak at length in defiance of legal niceties and winning the respect of a man whose word was law in Iraq for decades.

"Despite my opinion of this court and its legitimacy, I respect you because I know you are a judge, and were a judge before the occupation," Saddam told Amin during one session.

Amin has patiently listened to outbursts from Saddam and his co-defendants and also let witnesses tell of their sufferings for hours, rarely questioning the relevance of their testimony.
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