Iraq’s Tareq Aziz sentenced to death

BAGHDAD, (Reuters) – Iraq’s high tribunal today  passed a death sentence on Tareq Aziz, once the international  face of dictator Saddam Hussein’s regime, over the persecution  of Islamic parties, the court’s media office said.
The death sentence was the first to be handed down to Aziz,  who was well known in foreign capitals and at the United Nations  before Saddam’s downfall. He rose to prominence at the time of  Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait and the 1991 Gulf War when he was  foreign minister.
Last year, Aziz was sentenced to 15 years in prison for his  part in the killings of dozens of merchants in 1992 and to a  further seven years for his role in the forced displacement of  Kurds from northern Iraq during Saddam’s rule.
He gave himself up to invading U.S. forces in April 2003 but  was handed over to Iraqi prison authorities this year. In August  he accused U.S. President Barack Obama in a jailhouse interview  with Britain’s Guardian newspaper of “leaving Iraq to the  wolves” because of U.S. plans to withdraw.
The high tribunal’s media office said two other defendants  in the case were also sentenced to death.
One was a former interior minister and intelligence chief,  Sadoun Shakir, and the other was Abed Hamoud, a former private  secretary to Saddam.
“Today the court issued a death sentence against Tareq Aziz,  Sadoun Shakir and Abed Hamoud for the crimes of trying to  eliminate the religious parties in Iraq before 2003,” said an  official in the media office.
“The evidence provided to the court and the statements of  witnesses sufficed to convict them.”
During Saddam’s rule, only the Baath party was allowed to  exist. The Sunni dictator crushed attempts to establish rival  political organisations, and in particular carried out constant   campaigns against Islamic parties.
Their leaders were assassinated, imprisoned or forced into  exile. One of his main targets was the Islamic Dawa party of  current Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi’ite Muslim.

Tareq Aziz
Tareq Aziz