




The five-judge panel, which heard more than nine months of testimony in the case, also issued death sentences for two of his seven co-defendants: Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti, Hussein’s half-brother, who was head of Iraq’s domestic intelligence agency; and Awad al-Bandar, president of Hussein’s revolutionary court.
Under Iraqi law, death sentences automatically trigger an appeal to the appellate chamber of the trial court, so any executions would likely be subject to a delay of at least several months and possibly as much as a year.
Taha Yassin Ramadan, a former vice president under Hussein and the leader of the Popular Army, a Baath Party militia at the time of the Dujail events, was sentenced to life in prison for his involvement in the crimes. Three local Baath Party officials — Abdullah Kadhim Ruweid, his son Mizher Abdullah Ruweid and Ali Dayeh Ali — were sentenced to 22 years of prison for murder and torture. Another defendant and minor Baath party official, Mohammed Azawi Ali, was acquitted.
But in some predominantly Sunni Arab areas, the mood was one of anger and resentment. Immediately following the verdicts, fighting broke out between gunmen and the Iraqi Army in the Sunni neighborhood of Adhamiya in northeastern Baghdad, according to an Interior Ministry official. American forces swarmed the district, however, suppressing the violence.
Fighting also erupted between supporters of Hussein and American troops near Bayji, north of Tikrit, Hussein’s birthplace and a bastion of support for the Sunni-led insurgency, according to witnesses there. In a national televised address, Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki said Hussein’s execution would not compare with “one drop of the blood” of the people who died opposing his rule. “The execution could partially appease the victims,” he continued. “The martyrs of Iraq now have the right to smile.”
... contd.


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