From Deseret News archives:
Saddam faces trial but by which court?
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"I hope he eventually will be tried by the new Iraqi government in a public trial that publicly reviews his decades of ruthlessness in power," Hatch said, adding it would "greatly empower the new Iraqi government and help cleanse the residue from decades of dictatorship."
"He ought to stand trial for his life," he added.
In addition, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, a staunch supporter of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, also said the capture "gives an opportunity for Saddam to be tried in Iraqi courts for his crimes against the Iraqi people."
But that may be easier said than done. Utah State University President Kermit Hall, a former member of the John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Review Board and constitutional law scholar, and law professors from Brigham Young University and the University of Utah all agree that the justice system in Iraq, along with that country's government, is unstable at best. They see Iraq as a country without a constitution or a court system capable of handling a case like Saddam's.
To bank on a "fair" trial in Iraq at this point might not be the path for justice, according to U. professor Wayne McCormack, who teaches a course in terrorism and international law. He sees four possibilities for bringing Saddam to justice.
- Iraqi courts, such as the war crimes tribunal the U.S.-appointed interim government recently established. >
- U.S. military tribunal, which would deal with crimes in which its own forces were involved, such as Saddam's invasion of Kuwait in 1990, the catalyst for the Gulf War.
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