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  Saddam trial to resume; Clark arrives   (AP)  Updated: 2005-11-28 06:44  
 Iraqi law permits foreign lawyers to act as advisers but requires that those 
arguing cases in court must be members of the local bar association. 
 Clark, who served as attorney general under President Johnson, wrote last 
month that Saddam's rights had been systematically violated since his December 
2003 capture, including his right "to a lawyer of his own choosing." 
 Clark and others say a fair trial is impossible in Iraq because of the 
insurgency and because, they argue, the country is effectively under foreign 
military occupation. U.S. and Iraqi officials insist the trial will conform to 
international standards. 
 Still, the trial has unleashed passions in an Iraqi society deeply divided in 
its judgment of Saddam and his rule. 
 Many of the Sunni Arab insurgent groups include Saddam loyalists, including 
members of the former ruling Baath party and veterans of both Saddam's personal 
militia and the Republican Guard. 
 
 
 
 
   One of the last three giant remaining statues 
 depicting former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein is seen covered with dust 
 and dry mud, at US army base inside Baghdad's heavily fortified Green 
 Zone.[AFP] |   The ousted leader, meanwhile, is vilified by Iraq's Shiite Muslim majority 
and its Kurdish community, which were oppressed during his rule. 
On Saturday, hundreds of supporters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr 
rallied in Baghdad to demand Saddam's execution. 
 Separately, the leader of the biggest Shiite party, Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, 
accused the court of "weakness" for not having sentenced Saddam to death 
already. He also complained that media attention over allegations of torture by 
the Shiite-led security services had belittled Saddam's alleged crimes. 
 "The court will need all of its strength to resist the pressure," said 
Miranda Sissons of the International Center for Transitional Justice, an 
observer at the trial. 
 In an interview with a German magazine, chief judge Rizgar Mohammed Amin said 
he pondered moving the trial to Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq because of poor 
security in Baghdad. Iraqi law provides legal steps for moving the court 
elsewhere in the country. 
 However, Amin, a Kurd, said he decided the capital was secure enough for 
"regular and fair proceedings," even if "they are admittedly difficult." 
   
  
  
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