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  Saddam Hussein quiet as trial resumes   (AP)  Updated: 2006-03-01 18:22  
 Saddam Hussein and his co-defendants calmly entered the courtroom Wednesday 
for the latest session of their trial, a day after prosecutors presented their 
most direct evidence yet pinning the former Iraqi leader to executions of 
Shiites in the 1980s.  
 For the second straight day, the session had a quiet start, a sharp contrast 
to the outbursts, insults and arguments that characterized past proceedings. 
 The trial, which began Oct. 19, appears to have entered a new phase, after 
chief judge Raouf Abdel-Rahman imposed control on the stormy tribunal and 
prosecutors began presenting the core of their case: documents they say prove 
Saddam and his co-defendants led a campaign of arrests, torture and executions 
in which 148 Shiites died following a 1982 attempt to assassinate Saddam in the 
town of Dujail. 
 Prosecutors on Wednesday planned to bring several former regime officials to 
the witness stand. 
 Saddam's defense team on Tuesday ended a boycott of the proceedings that had 
aimed to remove Abdel-Rahman, who they claimed was biased against the former 
Iraqi leader. Abdel-Rahman rejected the demand to step down Tuesday, though the 
defense said it would appeal. 
 The turn in the case 锟斤拷 including the defense team's participation and the 
order in the room 锟斤拷 boosted hopes the controversial trial will be seen as 
credible in a country still sharply divided by Saddam's legacy. 
 But those splits have only gotten wider amid a surge of bloody sectarian 
violence between Iraq's Sunnis and Shiites. At least 68 people were killed 
Tuesday in bombings and mortar barrages, mainly against religious targets, in 
continued violence sparked by an attack last week on a major Shiite shrine. 
 In court on Tuesday, chief prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi presented on an 
overhead screen a series of documents 锟斤拷 presidential orders, court rulings and 
internal memos of the Mukhabarat intelligence agency, some handwritten, some 
with the letterhead of the agency 锟斤拷 detailing executions following the Dujail 
crackdown. 
 Chief among them was a June 16, 1984, presidential decree approving death 
sentences against 148 Shiites from Dujail. The document had a signature that 
al-Moussawi said was Saddam's. 
 A document issued two days earlier by the Revolutionary Court announced the 
death sentences and listed the 148. Among those sentenced to hang was an 
11-year-old boy and nine other juveniles 17 years old or younger, though it was 
not clear Saddam was aware of their ages since the court document had only their 
names. 
 The sentences were passed after an "imaginary trial," al-Moussawi told the 
court. 
 "None of the defendants were brought to court. Their statements were never 
recorded," he said. 
 Other documents showed that about 50 of those sentenced died during 
interrogation before they could go to the gallows. One man, his brother and two 
sons were executed by mistake, and Saddam allegedly ordered them declared 
"martyrs" to cover up the error. 
 When it was discovered that the 11-year-old and nine other juveniles were not 
executed but were still in prison years later, they were ordered killed and 
their bodies buried in secret 锟斤拷 an order approved with a signature the 
prosecution said was that of the intelligence agency chief at the time, Barzan 
Ibrahim, who is Saddam's half brother and a co-defendant in the trial. 
 Saddam, Ibrahim and six other members of the former regime are on trial for 
torture, imprisonment and the killings in the crackdown. They face death by 
hanging if convicted.  
  
  
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