http://cbs2chicago.com/topstories/topstories_story_309095639.html

World Reacts To Saddam Verdict
Death Sentence Unleashes Fears Of Violence, Questions About Trial's Fairness

(CBS News) In a world sharply divided on Iraq since the U.S.-led war 
began in 2003, Saddam Hussein's death sentence Sunday unleashed fears of 
fresh violence and new questions about the fairness and impartiality of 
the tribunal that ordered him to hang.

Underscoring the fault lines that split the international community and 
widened the divide between Muslims and Christians, Islamic leaders 
warned that the verdict could inflame those who revile the United States 
? undermining U.S. policy in the volatile Middle East and inspiring 
terrorists to strike.

"The hanging of Saddam Hussein will turn to hell for the Americans," 
said Vitaya Wisethrat, a respected Muslim cleric in Thailand, where a 
bloody Islamic insurgency is raging in the country's south.

"The Saddam case is not a Muslim problem but the problem of America and 
its domestic politics," he said. "The Americans are about to vote in a 
midterm election, so maybe Bush will use this case to tell the voters 
that Saddam is dead and that the Americans are safe. But actually the 
American people will be in more danger with the death of Saddam."

Iranians are praising today's death sentence against ousted Iraqi leader 
Saddam Hussein.

The verdict was announced across Iran by the country's state-run 
television, which interrupted regular programming to give the word. One 
parliamentary spokesman called Saddam a "vampire" and the verdict "a 
matter of happiness."

For many Iranians, memories remain of destruction suffered after Saddam 
invaded their country in 1980, launching a deadly war that would last 
eight years.

"I am happy that finally he got what he deserved," said Ahmad 
Gharakhani, who lost a leg in the Iran-Iraq war.

But Robab Safdarzadeh, 65, said Saddam's verdict and sentencing will not 
reverse the past. "The death of Saddam will not bring our dead children 
to life," she said.

Iranian leaders hailed the death sentence and said it hoped that Saddam 
? denounced by one lawmaker as "a vampire" ? still would be tried for 
other crimes. Meanwhile, one Iranian political commentator is linking 
today's verdict to U.S. politics and the upcoming midterm elections; he 
says Saddam's death sentence will be helpful for Republicans.

In Kuwait, the tiny emirate that Saddam occupied from August 1990 to 
February 1991, many were jubilant.

"This is justice from heaven. He should have been hanged a long time 
ago. This is the smallest punishment for someone who executed tens of 
thousands of people," said Abdul-Ridha Aseeri, who heads the political 
science department at Kuwait University.

Kholoud al-Feeli, 40, a Kuwaiti communications specialist, said death 
was too good for the former dictator.

"Death to him is merciful," she said. "I wanted life in prison. He will 
die but people (he hurt) will continue to suffer."

Reaction was mixed across the Arab world. Some Muslims saw the sentence 
as divine justice, but others denounced it as a farce, maintaining that 
Iraq is more violent now than it was under Saddam.

"If Saddam is condemned to death, then they must make it fair and 
sentence Mr. Bush to death ... and they should send Israel's Ehud Olmert 
to death, too, because of what he did in Lebanon," said Ibrahim Hreish, 
a jeweler in Amman, Jordan.

Key U.S. allies welcomed Sunday's verdict, which had been widely 
expected, and said Saddam got what he deserved for crimes against 
humanity committed during years of brutal dictatorship.

"I welcome that Saddam Hussein and the other defendants have faced 
justice and have been held to account for their crimes," British Foreign 
Secretary Margaret Beckett said in a statement. "Appalling crimes were 
committed by Saddam Hussein's regime. It is right that those accused of 
such crimes against the Iraqi people should face Iraqi justice."

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt called the verdict "deeply 
satisfying," despite the EU's distaste for capital punishment, but 
stressed that it won't solve Iraq's problems.

Australia's foreign minister, Alexander Downer, called Saddam "an evil 
tyrant" and said the death sentence ? which will be subject to an 
automatic appeal before he can be hanged ? came as no surprise.

But Amnesty International questioned the fairness of the trial, and 
international legal experts said Saddam should be kept alive long enough 
to answer for other atrocities. Only then, they said, will Iraqis 
brutalized by years of his despotic rule see true justice done.

"This was an opportunity to turn the page in Iraq, after thirty years 
when unfair trials were the norm ? if there were any trials at all this 
was a chance to set the tone for the future of Iraq," Malcolm Smart 
Director of Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Program 
told CBS's Sunday Morning. "And it's failed miserably because of 
inadequate planning, inadequate attention to the basic human rights 
needs of a fair trial."

Sonya Sceats, an international law expert at the Chatham House foreign 
affairs think tank in London, said that postponing Saddam's execution 
will allow the tribunal to find out about other crimes the former 
dictator is said to have committed. She also said that the tribunal "has 
not shown itself to be fair and impartial ? not only by international 
standards, but by Iraqi standards."

"There is significant evidence of political pressure," she said.

Chandra Muzaffar, president of the Malaysian-based International 
Movement for a Just World, also voiced concerns that Saddam's trial was 
flawed because it "violated many established norms of international 
jurisprudence, such as in the way the court was constituted and how the 
charges were brought against Saddam."

"But Saddam was undoubtedly a brutal dictator, and even though I 
wouldn't subscribe to the death penalty, he deserves to be punished 
severely for the enormity of his crimes," said Chandra, a well-known 
Muslim social commentator.

Chandra said there was bound to be a violent reaction in Iraq to the 
verdict.

"We would expect a reaction from the resistance in Iraq, whether it is 
immediate or not, in the form of suicide bombings or other violence," he 
said.

In Russia, the Kremlin-allied head of the international affairs 
committee in the State Duma, or lower house of parliament, told Ekho 
Moskvy radio the sentence will deepen divisions in Iraq.

But the official, Konstantin Kosachyov, said he doubted that Saddam 
would actually be executed.

"A death sentence will apparently split Iraqi society even further," 
Kosachyov said. "On the other hand, it seems to me that the death 
sentence against Saddam Hussein will probably not be carried out. It 
will be stopped one way or another, either by the president of Iraq or 
by other means. It is most of all a moral decision ? retribution that 
modern Iraq is taking against Saddam's regime."

In Pakistan, the opposition religious coalition claimed that American 
forces have caused more deaths in Iraq during the past 3 1/2 years than 
Saddam during his 23-year reign, and insisted President Bush should 
stand trial for war crimes.

"Who will punish the Americans and their lackeys who have killed many 
more people than Saddam Hussein?" asked Hafiz Hussain Ahmed, a senior 
lawmaker from the Mutahida Majlis-e-Amal coalition, which is critical of 
Pakistan's military cooperation with the United States.

"What goes around comes around. ... in the future, Bush must face the 
same fate," Ahmed said.

Some saw the verdict as intentionally timed to coincide with Tuesday's 
pivotal midterm elections in the U.S. Congress, where Democrats are 
fighting to regain control.

"The Bush administration, which has lost the trust of the American 
people, needs some sort of victory," said Abbas Khalaf, Iraq's 
ambassador to Russia during the Saddam era, denouncing the proceedings 
as "a purely political trial."

(© 2006 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not 
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated 
Press contributed to this report.)

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