President’s testimony sought in Iraq VP case

June 01, 2012

Sahoub Baghdadi

 


 


BAGHDAD — Lawyers for Iraq’s fugitive vice president Thursday asked judges in his terror trial to summon the nation’s president as a defense witness.

 


The three-judge panel immediately rejected the request but said the defense can appeal.

Vice President Tariq Al-Hashemi, Iraq’s highest-ranking Sunni politician, is accused of running death squads that targeted Shiite officials and pilgrims.

 


Al-Hashemi has denied wrongdoing and has said he is the victim of a political vendetta by Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki, a Shiite.

 


Al-Maliki is facing mounting allegations from within his broad-based unity government that he is excluding minority Sunni and Kurdish coalition partners from power.

 


The case against Al-Hashemi has fueled Sunni and Kurdish resentment against Al-Maliki, who critics charge is monopolizing power. A warrant for Al-Hashemi’s arrest was issued the day after the last US troops left Iraq in December.

 


At a session earlier this month, the defense team announced it was quitting the case after the court blocked a request for evidence the lawyers said could exonerate Al-Hashemi.

 


On Thursday, Al-Hashemi’s lawyers sat among the spectators, rather than at the defense table.

 


Even so, they interacted with the judges, including making the request to summon Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, and five Sunni lawmakers as defense witnesses. — AP


 


 


June 01, 2012
HIGHLIGHTS
Opinion
58 minutes ago

The strategic shifts behind Saudi Crown Prince’s visit to Washington

BUSINESS
hour ago

Syria’s General Authority of Civil Aviation signs final concession agreements for investment in development and operations of Damascus International Airport with an international consortium led by Qatar’s UCC Holding

SAUDI ARABIA
2 hours ago

Saudi, Pakistani interior ministers discuss enhancing security cooperation