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Saddam, Defense Team To Boycott Trial

Saddam Hussein and his lawyers will boycott the next session of the deposed leader's trial in Baghdad to protest the alleged "bias" of the new chief judge appointed to hear the case, his chief lawyer told The Associated Press Monday.

"There is an unanimous decision by the defense team to not attend Wednesday's hearing because of the comedy we witnessed in yesterday's trial," Iraqi lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi said as he arrived in Jordan from neighboring Iraq.

Al-Dulaimi said the ousted leader would refuse to attend. "If he was forced to attend, he won't sit in the place designated for him, but will stand in a corner to protest against the measures taken by the judge."

"The court hearing yesterday lacked the basics of a fair and honest trial, and the judge was biased against the defendants, who under the law are innocent until proven guilty," al-Dulaimi said.

On Sunday, a new judge cracked down on a chaotic session of Saddam's trial, ordering a co-defendant and Jordanian lawyer Saleh Armouti expelled from the courtroom. The entire defense team left in protest and Saddam was escorted out after a shouting match in which he yelled, "Down with America!"

Despite the turmoil in the courtroom, chief judge Raouf Rasheed Abdel-Rahman pushed ahead, replacing the defense lawyers with court-appointed attorneys and heard three prosecution witnesses before adjourning the trial until Wednesday.

In other developments:

  • ABC News anchor Bob Woodruff, seriously hurt by a roadside bomb in Iraq, has shown signs of improvement and may be airlifted to the United States as soon as Tuesday, the network's news president said Monday. Cameraman Doug Vogt, also hurt in the explosion, is in better shape than Woodruff but doctors were pleased with how both are doing.
  • The new U.S. general who runs the Iraq war plans to pursue a strategy aimed at improving Iraqis' quality of life to undercut the support base for the insurgents among disaffected Iraqis. Army Lt. Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli, who became the No. 2 commander in Iraq last week, said he would employ across Iraq many of the strategies he used to quell uprisings in Baghdad when he led the Army's 1st Cavalry Division in 2003 and 2004.
  • In eastern Ramadi, two armed men fired at least five rocket-propelled grenade rounds and small arms fire at a group of U.S. Army soldiers, said U.S. Marine Capt. Jeffrey S. Pool. "The soldiers returned fire and called in a jet nearby to attack the insurgents' position with their main gun," Pool said. The two insurgents were killed in the clash, but there were no U.S. casualties.
  • A suicide car bomber slammed into a commando headquarters were police were training in Nasiriyah, about 200 miles southeast of Baghdad, killing one policeman and wounding more than 30 others, said an Iraqi police official who declined to be identified further because of fears of retaliation from insurgents.

  • A roadside bomb Monday targeted a joint Danish-Iraqi patrol near the southern city of Basra, wounding one Iraqi policeman, military officials said. The attack was the first involving Danish troops since protests flared recently against a Danish newspaper for publishing widely criticized caricatures of Islam's prophet.

    It was Abdel-Rahman's first session at the helm after replacing a jurist who stepped down under criticism that he was not doing enough to stop Saddam and his half brother, co-defendant Barzan Ibrahim, from dominating the trial with frequent outbursts and disruptions.

    Defense lawyers criticized the tough approach, saying it was preventing Saddam and his seven co-defendants from getting a fair trial. The eight could face death by hanging if convicted in the killing of at least 140 Shiites after a July 1982 attempt on Saddam's life in the town of Dujail north of Baghdad.

    On Monday, Armouti demanded that the chief judge be dismissed "because he has harmed the Iraqi justice system."

    He told The AP that he also submitted a demand to the Iraqi Bar Association "to take disciplinary measures against the court-appointed attorneys because they want attend the hearings without the consent of the President (Saddam) and this is illegal."

    Al-Dulaimi declined to say when the lawyers would resume attending court sessions, but he insisted several demands first be met.

    He said the chief judge must apologize to Armouti for "offending" the Jordanian lawyer, ensure "complete protection" to the lawyers and their families, which the defense team had been promised but that has not been given, and the transfer of the trial to a venue outside Iraq.

    "We appeal to international human rights organizations and all peace-loving forces to hear our pleas for transferring the court to any place outside Iraq, to anywhere outside Iraq and Iran, even if it was in the United States," he said. The lawyer said he would prefer Qatar.

    "The United States has a (military) base there and it may be possible to hold the trial there," he said.

    Al-Dulaimi also rejected the appointment of new lawyers.

    "It's illegal to have new lawyers appointed. My client has rejected those lawyers. Also the judge can't appoint lawyers, while the defendants already have legal representation."

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