Iraqis Offer Mixed Take As Saddam in Court
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Friday, July 2, 2004
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Clustering around small TV sets in cafes,
hotel lobbies and shops, Iraqis watched raptly as Saddam Hussein
appeared in court Thursday, some seething with anger, others in
unease.
Many people called for his execution, and some said he doesn't
deserve a trial. Others felt the time isn't right to seek justice.
A few defended the former dictator.
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"I just hope they will try him by his own law. He knew nothing
but executing people for even minor or imaginary offenses," Khaled
Mohammed, 28, said as he watched with two friends at a cafe on
Baghdad's Saadoun Street.
"Saddam should be put in an iron cage at the zoo, so all the
Iraqis could come to see him," Mohammed added, his eyes fixed on
the picture broadcast by the U.S.-funded TV Iraqiya.
When Saddam appeared, the cafe fell silent.
"Such a person shouldn't be tried. Standing a trial is an honor
he doesn't deserve," said Rahman Aziz, 27, owner of a CD and
cassette shop. "He should be sent directly to the gallows."
Aziz said he was tortured in one of Saddam's prisons for seven
months, after the secret police found CDs of Shiite Muslim
literature in his shop.
"Watching him today is more saddening than joyful, because this
coward maniac is the one who humiliated us and made our lives hell
for 35 years," he said.
Not everyone was happy about the judicial proceedings against
Saddam.
"This is not the time," said Mohammed Mahdi, watching with
several co-workers at a hotel. "Yes, he needs to be brought to
justice. But the country has too many other problems now that
should be fixed first."
Mohammed Kazem, a 32-year-old laborer, disputed the need for any
trial. "Saddam only hurt those who tried to harm Iraq -- the
traitors -- not the Iraqi people," he said.
A prominent Sunni Muslim cleric said there was plenty of blame
to go around for Saddam's excesses, alluding to U.S. and Western
support of the regime during the war against Iran.
"We want all the files to be opened so that the Iraqi people,
the Arabs and all the world will be able to see the facts," the
cleric, Mohammed Ayash al-Kubaisi, said on Al-Arabiya television.
"The Iraqi people will never trust any court as long as there is
one American soldier on the Iraqi land."
For some, it was a day they long waited for, but didn't expect
to come.
"Saddam Hussein is the enemy of God, humanity, children and
mothers of Iraq. I'm so glad to see him humiliated like this in
front of the whole world," said Hamid al-Yasseri.
He said he had prayed God would rid Iraq of Saddam, but never
imagined he would see the dictator toppled, let alone stand trial.
"Execution is not enough punishment for him," al-Yasseri said.
Qassem Jaber, a businessman, said the law in Iraq is that he who
kills one person, should be killed. "But Saddam killed more than
one million, so he should be executed, without trial, in a public
square."
Some people refused to comment, apparently fearful even now of
making statements about the former regime.
"We won't say anything," said a woman who runs a handicrafts
shop. "Even if the pictures were of him being executed, we
wouldn't talk." An elderly man standing beside her nodded in
agreement.
As Saddam appeared in court, some of the 25 million people who
spent the better part of their lives under his authority voiced
mixed emotions -- sympathy or disgust -- depending largely on where
they lived.
For Najib Khaled, a Kurd from the northern city of Kirkuk, the
images were poetic justice -- Saddam in the dock before a young
judge.
"I felt as if Baghdad had fallen again and that the regime was
once again toppled," said Khaled, 40, who lives in a region where
the deposed leader reportedly authorized the killing of thousands.
"In his day, Saddam killed thousands of Iraqi youths. Today, I am
happy because I saw the day when Saddam was being judged by a young
judge."
In the central city of Ramadi, a Sunni Muslim area where support
for Saddam has been strong, Odai Faleh voiced doubts that the
former president was guilty of much beyond punishing those who
deserved it.
"At least Saddam provided us with security. We have seen
nothing good from the Americans," he said.
Under Saddam, security was one element virtually guaranteed -- if
only out of fear of the regime's security apparatus.
"He knew how to rule Iraq," said Khaled Moufak, 21, a former
soldier living in Baghdad. "He robbed us from our rights, but we
and our women were able to be safe at the streets. He was executing
those who are now sabotaging our country with the help of CIA."
For some, Saddam and his era are over.
"All I can say is that Saddam is already in the garbage of
history," said Khalil Jumaa, a worker at a Baghdad hotel.
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