Saddam Hussein and his seven co-defendants went on a hunger strike Wednesday
to protest the shooting death of an attorney on the ousted Iraqi leader's
defense team ¡ª the third such killing in the 8-month-old trial.
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 Saddam Hussein and
Abdullah Kazim Ruwayyid, left, listen as the prosecution begins giving its
closing arguments, at the trial of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
and seven members of his regime in Baghdad, Iraq Monday, June 19, 2006.
[AP]
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In other violence, gunmen kidnapped
roughly 85 workers north of Baghdad, forcing them into a bus and a minivan, and
later released about 30 women and children. About a dozen people were killed
across Iraq, and an al-Qaida-led insurgent group announced that it will execute
four Russian hostages.
Lawyer Khamis al-Obeidi, a Sunni Arab who represented Saddam and his half
brother Barzan Ibrahim, was abducted from his home Wednesday morning by men
wearing police uniforms, his colleagues said. His body was found riddled with
bullets on a street near the Shiite slum of Sadr City. Police provided a photo
of al-Obeidi's face, head and shoulders drenched in blood.
Saddam's chief attorney, Khalil al-Dulaimi, blamed the killing on the
Interior Ministry, which Sunnis have alleged is infiltrated by so-called Shiite
death squads.
"We strongly condemn this act and we condemn the killings done by the
Interior Ministry forces against Iraqis," he said.
There was no comment from the ministry. Hit squads and other gangs are known
to often disguise themselves as police officers.
Married with six children, al-Obeidi was the third member of Saddam's defense
team to be killed since the trial began Oct. 19.
Al-Dulaimi and his colleagues said the brutal slaying was an attempt to
intimidate the defense before it begins final arguments July 10, a process that
will take about 10 days.
"We consider his killing a message to us in the defense: 'To continue what
you are doing will result in death in broad daylight on the streets of Baghdad.'
It is a message that's written in blood," said Mohammed Moneib, an Egyptian
lawyer retained by Saddam.
Chief prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi said the trial would continue.
"We will defy terrorism," al-Moussawi told The Associated Press. "We will
continue with the trial and will not be deterred," he said. The prosecution has
demanded the death penalty for Saddam in the killing of 148 Shiites during a
crackdown against the town of Dujail in the 1980s.
Despite the killing, Saddam's lawyers said they would forge ahead with their
closing arguments.
However, al-Dulaimi told the AP in Amman, Jordan, that Saddam and his
co-defendants "went on a hunger strike today to protest the killing of Khamis
al-Obeidi."
"They pledged not to end the strike until international protection is
provided to the defense team," he said.
Al-Moussawi noted that members of the defense team had turned down an offer
to live with their families in Baghdad's heavily protected Green Zone, home to
the Iraqi government, parliament and the U.S. Embassy.
Unlike al-Dulaimi, who shuttles between the Jordanian and Iraqi capitals,
al-Obeidi lived in the predominantly Sunni Arab neighborhood of Azamiyah in
northern Baghdad.
State Department deputy spokesman Adam Ereli said "every form of protection
and assistance" is offered to the prosecution and defense, but "unfortunately,
in the case of this individual, he refused" them.
The U.S. Embassy urged the lawyers and their families to "accept the full
range of security measures offered for their protection."
"The U.S. considers defense counsel a vital part of the judicial process.
This criminal act will not prevent the defendants before the tribunal from
continuing to receive a full and fair defense, or halt the tribunal's efforts to
restore justice and rule of law for the Iraqi people," it said.
The State Department expressed its condolences to al-Obeidi's family and said
"any attack that kills a participant in a judicial process is to be condemned,
and we condemn this murder."
"We are committed to helping the Iraqi government bring those responsible to
justice," Ereli said.
A spokeswoman for Amnesty International said both Iraqi and U.S.-led
coalition authorities need to investigate the assassination.
The kidnapping of the 85 workers north of Baghdad was only the most recent
case involving mass abductions.
Police said it was unclear why gunmen seized the workers as they left the
al-Nasr General Complex, a former military plant that now makes metal doors,
windows and pipes, but noted that the assailants apparently looked at their
captives' identity cards. In Iraq, it is often possible to determine someone's
ethnic, sectarian and tribal affiliation from their names. The workers were
thought to be mostly Shiite, while the plant is located in Taji, a predominantly
Sunni Arab area with insurgent activity.
Kamel Mohammed, a plant engineer, said he saw gunmen in three sedans
intercept two of the factory's buses and a minivan. The buses are used to ferry
workers from the plant to the Shiite areas of Baghdad.
An al-Qaida-led insurgent group said in a Web statement that it has decided
to kill four Russian Embassy workers kidnapped in Baghdad on June 3. It said
Moscow failed to meet its demands for a full withdrawal of troops from Chechnya.
The statement by the Mujahedeen Shura Council came a day after the same group
claimed responsibility for killing two U.S. soldiers whose bodies were found
south of Baghdad.
At least one and possibly both of the soldiers was beheaded, a U.S. military
official in Washington said Wednesday. The official requested anonymity because
the final report on the bodies' conditions has not been formally released.
In other developments:
Trade Minister Abdul Falah al-Soudani called for suspending trade with
Australia because he said Australian security guards killed two people ¡ª
including one of his guards ¡ª and wounded three after a misunderstanding at his
ministry's parking lot.
The U.S. military said Iraqi forces arrested a high-level insurgent in
Baghdad. Noori Abu Hayder Al-Oqabi was wanted for running an assassination cell
in the capital that was responsible for kidnapping and killing 14 Iraqi soldiers
last month, it said.