Saddamites Sob: Spare the Mass Murderer
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2003
LONDON – President Bush said Saddam Hussein deserves the
"ultimate penalty" for his crimes, but he faced objections from
European countries, the United Nations and the Vatican, which
adamantly oppose capital punishment.
Though most European countries have abolished the death penalty,
it's not clear how vociferously they would object to a death
sentence for the captured Iraqi president.
A day after saying his opinion on Saddam's fate didn't matter
and it was a decision for Iraqi citizens, Bush stepped forward with
an unequivocal statement of his views.
"Let's just see what penalty he gets, but I think he ought to
receive the ultimate penalty ... for what he has done to his
people," Bush told ABC News' Diane Sawyer in an interview
broadcast Tuesday. "I mean, he is a torturer, a murderer, they had
rape rooms. This is a disgusting tyrant who deserves justice, the
ultimate justice."
Bush said Saddam's punishment "will be decided not by the
president of the United States but by the citizens of Iraq in one
form or another."
Britain's left-leaning Guardian newspaper said Saddam should be
tried by a United Nations-approved tribunal that would not impose
the death penalty. "The last thing Iraq needs is another corpse -
or a martyr," the paper said in an editorial.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair's spokesman said earlier this
week that Britain opposed the death penalty, but it would have to
accept an Iraqi decision to execute.
Yet Britain's top representative in Iraq, Sir Jeremy Greenstock,
said his country would not participate in a tribunal or legal
process that could lead to execution.
The Vatican's Cardinal Renato Martino stressed the Roman
Catholic Church's longtime opposition to capital punishment.
He said he felt "compassion" for Saddam, despite his crimes,
after seeing images of "this destroyed man" being "treated like
a cow, having his teeth checked" by an American military medic.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said the world body opposed
the death penalty. The European Union shares his view.
"We believe there are no circumstances that can justify the
death penalty," said Diego Ojeda, the EU's spokesman on external
relations.
Claudia Roth, the German government's top human rights official,
called for a fair trial for Saddam. "No death penalty must be
imposed. That demonstrates the contrast to the dictator's system,"
she told the newspaper Bild.
Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen, who supported the
U.S.-led war that ousted Saddam, also emphasized his country's
opposition to execution.
The world and the Iraqi leadership "must show
the Iraqis that an alternative to the past decades' terror regimes
exists," Denmark's Berlingske Tidende newspaper said.
Bush has long been a proponent of capital punishment. During his
six years as governor of Texas, 152 convicts were put to death. All
15 member nations of the European Union have abolished capital
punishment, and they often encourage other countries, most notably
the United States, to eliminate it.
Members of the U.S.-appointed Iraq Governing Council have
predicted a quick trial and a quick execution for Saddam. The U.S.
occupation authority suspended using the death penalty, and Iraqi
officials have said they will decide whether to reinstate it when a
transitional government assumes sovereignty, scheduled on July 1.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Yuri Fedotov, whose country
opposed the war, said only Iraqis could decide Saddam's fate.
Australia's Prime Minister John Howard, who sent troops to fight
in Iraq, said he would support the death penalty for Saddam. "If
it were imposed, absolutely," he said.
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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