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View Full Version : Former US attorney-general Ramsey Clark is to join Saddam Hussein's defence team



cwohardy
Dec 29th, 2004, 1:38 PM
Ramsey Clarke to defend Saddam
by
Wednesday 29 December 2004 10:53 AM GMT

Ramsey Clark said Washington should also be put on trial

Former US attorney-general Ramsey Clark is to join Saddam Hussein's defence team, a spokesman for the ousted Iraqi president's lawyers says.

Ziad Khasawna said on Wednesday that Clark, who held the office of attorney-general under US president Lyndon Johnson, had "honoured and inspired" the legal team by agreeing to help defend Saddam.



The former top US justice official, who arrived on Tuesday in Jordan where the defence team is based, has become known as a left-wing lawyer and firm critic of US foreign policy since leaving office.



He visited Saddam in Baghdad in February 2003 just before the US-lead invasion and has also been involved with the defence of former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic, on trial for war crimes at a UN court in The Hague.



Clark comment



Clark said in the Jordanian capital Amman that his principle concern was protecting the former president's rights, who only saw a lawyer for the first time this month - a year after his capture.



"In international law, anyone accused of crime has the right to be tried by a confident, independent and impartial court, and there can be no fair trail without those qualities," he said.



"The special court in Iraq was created by the Iraqi governing council, which is nothing more than a creation of the US military occupation and has no authority in law as a criminal court," he said.



The Iraq Special Tribunal was established by the US-led administration in Iraq last December to try members of the former government.



Clark also said the US itself must be tried for the November assault on Falluja, destruction of houses, torture in prisons and its role in the deaths of thousands of Iraqis in the war. [/I]


Al jazeeranet link (http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/11388BFC-9290-4141-B0E1-BEA75A1B20F8.htm)

:2fu:

dutchie
Jan 3rd, 2005, 5:37 AM
Is it really appropriate for a US citizen to be defending Saddam?

MetalMilitia
Jan 3rd, 2005, 10:26 AM
Myabe it's a sense of irony - we help put em in power, then supply him with $$$ and weapons which he uses to do "terrible things" - even though he ain't really been charged with anything after '91....

You know how US lawyers are - they will defend a man that stuffed human body parts in his fridge to eat... for the right price.

cwohardy
Jan 3rd, 2005, 3:33 PM
I bet before it is over Clarke :dummy: will have the SOB suing us for
"pain and suffering"

:gtfo:

substand
Jan 3rd, 2005, 4:22 PM
Ramsey Clark! AHAHA! I called it the day we captured Saddam! (well, 2 days after to be technical)



Now, besides how many courts will try Saddam and where they are located, the only question remaining is "who will represent him at his trial?"
Can anyone say Ramsey Clark?
from http://www.constitutionallychallenged.com/home/slar-121503.cfm

This is great.

You should look up who Ramsey Clarke is and what he has done (what type of figures he often defends) before thinking there will be a conflict of interest in his defense of Saddam.


More recently, Clark is well-known for having unconventional political views and for providing support and legal advice to numerous controversial figures in conflict with the US or western governments, including:

Branch Davidian leader David Koresh
alleged former Nazis Karl Linnas and Jack Riemer
antiwar activist Father Philip Berrigan
Native American alleged political prisoner Leonard Peltier
Liberian political figure Charles Taylor during his 1985 fight against extradition from the United States to Liberia
Lyndon LaRouche, who faced charges of conspiracy and mail fraud
Slobodan Milosevic in the International Criminal Court.
Elizaphan Ntakirutimana, a leader of the Rwandan genocide
PLO leaders in a lawsuit brought by the family of Leon Klinghoffer, the wheelchair bound elderly tourist who was shot and tossed overboard from the hijacked Achille Lauro cruise ship by Palestinian terrorists in 1986
The state of Iraq, serving as legal counsel for the Hussein regime.
Saddam Hussein, former leader of Iraq who was removed from power during a 2003 invasion led by the US

from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramsey_Clark

He clearly is not acting as a pawn of Bush.

cwohardy
Jan 3rd, 2005, 7:14 PM
Ramsey Clark! AHAHA! I called it the day we captured Saddam! (well, 2 days after to be technical)

Quote:
Originally Posted by The Academy for the Constitutionally Challenged
Now, besides how many courts will try Saddam and where they are located, the only question remaining is "who will represent him at his trial?"
Can anyone say Ramsey Clark?

from http://www.constitutionallychalleng...slar-121503.cfm

This is great.

:2thumbs:
Way to go