The Nation.



Trying Saddam

By Balakrishnan Rajagopal

This article appeared in the April 5, 2004 edition of The Nation.

March 18, 2004

The capture of Saddam Hussein has raised the question of how best to hold him accountable for the horrendous human rights violations committed by his regime. The Bush Administration has come up with a proposal, approved in the form of a law adopted by the Iraqi Governing Council on December 10, under which he would be tried by a special tribunal of Iraqis appointed by the council, which may also include some foreign judges and foreign advisers. Following this the United States has sent several legal advisers to Iraq to help build the case against Saddam.

But this mixed-tribunal model, the first example of which was the Cambodia-UN tribunal created to hold the Khmer Rouge accountable--subsequently adopted in Sierra Leone and East Timor with modifications--is fundamentally inappropriate for Iraq. The tribunal is also flawed because it prevents any inquiry into the human rights violations committed by the West, including the United States, in Iraq. Human rights groups are right that a genuine international tribunal is necessary, but it would have to be different from what they have proposed.

There is no doubt that Saddam is one of the worst mass killers alive. His gassing of the Kurds in 1988, as well as his massacre of the Shiite rebels in 1991, are stark examples of his best-known atrocities, but there are many more ordinary ones. Indeed, given the number of enemies he has within Iraq, he is lucky to have been captured alive. His trial could have a positive educational impact on the region's many mass murderers still in power. However, the decision to ask the Iraqi Governing Council to deal with Saddam's crimes is like asking the Vietnamese-installed puppet regime in Cambodia in 1979 to try the Khmer Rouge. Like the latter, the Iraqi Governing Council is not independent and is controlled by a foreign occupier. In fact, the Cambodian regime held a show trial of the gang of Pol Pot and Ieng Sary in 1979 that commanded no legitimacy whatsoever, even though it, too, included the participation of foreign jurists. Why should the proposed Iraqi tribunal be any different?

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About Balakrishnan Rajagopal

Balakrishnan Rajagopal, a professor and director of the Program on Human Rights and Justice at MIT, is the author of International Law From Below (Cambridge). He proposed the creation of the Cambodia-UN mixed tribunal. more...

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