Cambridge UK, Sept.25 ANI: Nearly two years after an Iraqi
court sentenced Saddam Hussein to
death, Western
lawyers who helped guide the
court, have contended that Hussein was railroaded to the gallows by vengeful officials in Iraq's new
government.According to The Telegraph, these
lawyers say Iraqi
Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki forced the resignation of one of five judges in the trial only days before the
court sentenced Hussein.The purpose, the
lawyers say, was to avert the possibility that judges who were wavering would spare Hussein the
death penalty and sentence him to life imprisonment instead.The disclosures, made amid a steep decline in violence in
Iraq, seem likely to raise fresh
questions about the
degree to which the Bush administration has succeeded in promoting democratic principles, including the rule of
law, among Iraq's new leaders. Inevitably, they
will also lend new momentum to
die-hard Baathists who regard Mr. Hussein as a martyr.Long before Mr. Hussein was hanged on Dec. 30, 2006, with supporters of Iraq's new Shiite-led
government taunting him as the noose was tightened around his neck, a pattern of intervention by powerful Iraqi officials had been established. But until now, only officials involved with the court's inner workings knew that a third judge, Munthur Hadi, was forced from the judges' panel less than a week before the
court delivered its verdicts, on November 5, 2006. Another judge, Ali al-Kahaji, who had heard none of the evidence in the nine-month trial, replaced him. The replacement was favored, the Western
lawyers say, because of his links with Maliki's Dawa religious
party, which had lost thousands of its members to Mr. Hussein's repression, and because of Kahaji's readiness to approve Mr. Hussein's hanging.A spokesman for Maliki on Wednesday denied any involvement by the Iraqi
government in the judicial proceedings. Judge Hadi could not be reached for
comment. Three other judges who served on the
court refused to
comment, as did Haider al-Abadi, a member of Parliament and a close political ally of Maliki. ANI