http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/12/28/news/death.php

 



Saddam's death sentence exposes a rift 
By Doreen Carvajal

Thursday, December 28, 2006 

 
PARIS 
While Saddam Hussein faced death with a letter of farewell, the former Iraqi 
dictator's looming execution has exposed a deep divide between the United 
States and Europe, with opposition building in the Continent's major capitals.

Prime Minister Romano Prodi of Italy deplored the decision to execute Saddam, 
and Renato Martino, the cardinal who heads the Catholic Church's council for 
justice and peace, warned that "nobody can give death, not even the state." 
Opposition has also come from the governments of Britain, Denmark, France, 
Portugal, Spain and Germany.

But in most cases the criticism is qualified opposition directed at the 
morality of capital punishment rather than sympathy for Saddam or doubts about 
the fairness of his trial, an issue raised by groups like Human Rights Watch.

Saddam's chief lawyer on Thursday implored world leaders to prevent the United 
States from handing him over to the Iraqi authorities for execution, saying he 
should enjoy protection from his enemies as a "prisoner of war," The Associated 
Press reported from Baghdad.

"According to the international conventions, it is forbidden to hand a prisoner 
of war to his adversary," said the lawyer, Khalil al-Dulaimi.

Richard Dicker, director of the international justice program for Human Rights 
Watch, said he doubted that the opposition would create enough pressure to halt 
Saddam's sentence.

"I think that the imperative that has been driving the Iraqi leadership to 
execute Saddam is such that this train has left the station," said Dicker, who 
noted that the criticism of capital punishment was important "to take into 
account principled opposition to the death penalty regardless of the individual 
involved."

In Berlin, the German government rejected the death penalty, which is banned 
there and in the rest of the European Union. But Chancellor Angela Merkel's 
deputy spokesman, Thomas Steg, called a legal coming to terms with Iraq's past 
"necessary," saying that "there are no signs that both the trial and the appeal 
did not take place in accordance with the country's legal principles and rule 
of law."

In Italy, politicians from the center- right and left coalition found a rare 
issue for agreement and were almost unanimous in their opposition to the death 
sentence.

Marco Pannella, leader of Italy's Radical Party, offered Thursday to head to 
Baghdad to secure a pardon as he fasted on the third day of a hunger strike to 
protest the sentencing. A demonstration outside the Iraq Embassy in Rome is 
also being organized by the Green Party.

On Thursday, Prodi repeated his opposition to capital punishment after his 
year-end news conference, but denied a report that he intended to lead an 
international campaign against the sentence.

"The decision to condemn Saddam to death has in itself more risk of negative 
effects than positive for the stabilization of the country. I don't believe 
that the execution of Saddam will help even minimally the pacification of the 
country," said Prodi, who defeated Bush's close ally Silvio Berlusconi last 
April, and withdrew Italian troops from Iraq. "I don't believe that any 
solution of this type can resolve the questions of the Middle East."

The Vatican also generally opposes the death penalty, but in this case the 
church has not issued a formal statement about Saddam's sentence, and a church 
spokesman, the Reverend Federico Lombardi, said he did not expect one to be 
forthcoming.

"There are unfortunately many death penalty cases in the world, and the church 
has over time matured our position, which is in opposition to the death 
penalty, but it isn't like every time we will intervene," Lombardi said.

Not all of Europe shares the same doubts about capital punishment. In Eastern 
Europe, President Lech Kaczynski of Poland, who has sought to revive the death 
penalty in the European Union, has characterized Saddam's execution as the 
"only possible verdict."

And the Continent's citizens also appear to take a harsher view. In a survey of 
12,570 people in six countries by the new French international broadcaster 
France 24 and Novartis/Harris Interactive, most participants favored the death 
sentence for Saddam. With the exception of Italians, participants from Britain, 
France, Germany and Spain supported the execution, as did those from the United 
States.

That position was strongest in Britain and the United States, where 82 percent 
of the Americans polled supported the penalty, followed by 69 percent of the 
British, 58 percent of the French, 53 percent of the Germans and 51 percent of 
the Spanish.

"I am a bit stupefied," Carla Del Ponte, the United Nations war crimes 
prosecutor, said on the France 24 program "The Talk of Paris," where the poll 
results were discussed last week. "I think this comes more out of a spirit of 
vengeance, as the death penalty is naturally the final word to every story."



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