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Saddam trial tackles Kurdish genocide: grim test for historical memory
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Wed, 08/23/2006 - 14:53.
The trial of Saddam Hussein is once again in the headlines. The first case against him, concerning the 1982 mass arrests and killing of Shi'ites at the town of Dujail, has been concluded. Presiding Judge Raouf Abdel-Rahman charged Saddam with the deaths of nine villagers, torture of women and children, ordering the razing of farmlands and arresting nearly 400 Dujail residents. He was not charged in connection with the deaths of 148 people who were executed after being found guilty by Saddam's Revolutionary Court for their involvement in an assassination attempt against him. (Jurist, May 15) Now the second phase opens, concerning the far more horrific attacks on the Kurds in the 1987-8 "Anfal" campaign. Saddam could continue to be tried posthumously if he is found guilty and sentenced to death on the Dujail charges, in which a verdict is expected in October. If a death sentence is upheld on appeal, it must be carried out within 30 days, and this could occur before the second trial is concluded. (Jurist, Aug. 19) In the new trial, Saddam and six co-defendants are charged with genocide and crimes against humanity in connection to the "Anfal" operation that led to the killings of as many as 100,000 Kurds in northern Iraq. Iraq President Jalal Talabani has called for Saddam to be tried on all charges before any verdict is enforced. Talabani has previously expressed opposition to the death penalty, saying last year that he would refuse to sign a death warrant for Saddam. (Jurist, Aug. 19) Talabani's supposed reluctance to use the death penalty is a sign of hope, as a martyred Saddam could prove far more dangerous in death than in life. What is really ominous here—with grave implications for historical memory—is how the case against Saddam is being delegitimized. As John Laughland writes for the UK's fairly right-wing Daily Mail, Aug. 22:
All this just loans comfort to those sectors of the idiot left who deny that the Anfal genocide ever happened—seizing on dubious claims that the Halabja poison gas attack of March 17, 1988, which left some 5,000 dead, was actually carried out by Iran. Meanwhile, Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which rules one half of Iraq's Kurdish autonomous zone, is facing a wave of popular unrest, with Kurdish survivors of the genocide reacting angrily to the corrupt PUK's cyncial exploitation of Halabja for propaganda purposes. The Bush administration, of course, is engaging in its own blatant revisionism of the facts of the massacre. Even if the claims about Iran's culpability in Halabja turn out to be accurate, it is often forgotten that Halabja was but the biggest and most spectacular act of mass murder in the Anfal campaign. Testimony from Kurdish survivors in the trial have also recalled lesser-known incidents. Adiba Oula Bayez, a Kurdish woman, described the Aug. 16, 1987 attack on the village of Balisan, where Saddam's warplanes dropped bombs that spread smoke smelling of "rotten apples" which caused vomiting, burns and blindness. Helicopters bombed caves where villagers sought refuge from the bombings. Bayez, a mother of five, awoke in a military prison camp to find her children with "eyes swollen, their skin blackened." Both Saddam and his cousin "Chemical" Ali Hassan al-Majid face genocide charges for the Anfal campaign. Genocide is difficult to prove as prosecutors must show intent to exterminate an ethnic group. Chief Judge Abdullah al-Amiri on Aug. 23 adjourned proceedings until Sept. 11, allowing time for the defense to file an appeal challenging the Iraqi High Tribunal's legitimacy. When the genocide trial opened on Aug. 21, in addition to refusing to enter a plea, Saddam questioned the legitimacy of the tribunal, calling it "the law of the occupation." (Jurist, Aug 23). It will be a very sad turn of events if history winds up vindicating him. But it is important to recall that the legitimacy of the tribunal and Saddam's guilt or innocence are two very distinct questions. See our last posts on Iraq, the Saddam trial and Kurdistan. Also note that by early accounts in the aftermath of the 2003 invasion, "Chemical" Ali is dead. This Aug. 21 Reuters account portrays him as very much alive—and as intransigent as his master Saddam in his defiance of the tribunal. The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), which rules the other half of the Kurdish zone, also makes propaganda use of the Halabja massacre, of course, although the city is not actually within their area of control. This page is not for the squeamish. |
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