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A Case of Great Misfortune!

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A Case of Great Misfortune!

Postby Basra- » Mon Jun 19, 2006 8:46 am

The infamous case between the Grandiose Kambuli & the intelligent Arabman was set before a supreme court.Kambuli in her usual ostentatious reserveness, wore an attire of modest cheap Gabasar, conveniently hiding her bling bling diamond earings & necklace underneath, that she just demanded from her long distance Fiancee.Her round chuby face beaming a light of lazy existance, & much unnecessary consumption of Canjeero with extra saliid.Her Cadar scent could be detectable - miles away-her over use of this vulgar smelling Cadar-- was to disguise yet another thing; her BO. Laughing Arabman in his tight to body Khamiss--acompanied with a walking caine,looked presentable despite his short height not matching his tall statue or brilliance of mind.The case was a bizarre one, however the Plaintiff was not new to the courts.Her continuous lamentations are infamously known to the judges who preside to her frivolous law suits that she has in the past presented !



"Kambuli now what is your problem' Asked the impatient large fat judge.



Kambuli was silent for a while ---appeared offended at the impatient tone of the judge;she viewed him with a contempt look--rationalized to herself that he was beneath her--purely because he was a Jew & he had a rather ugly terrible large nose.After self rationalizing to stay to the point & not complain to the judge about his tone- Kambuli began to present her woes or wars?


"Your honor -- my case is simple.I not ask for more.I not very demanding, although think i am ver difficult. I only here to ask Arabman to stop his hypocrisy.I did not know the word hypocrisy until a friend described him as one, so i went & looked at the dictionary, & your honor--that is exactly how he is.HE made me cry. Crying or Very sad "



" Kambuli---Get to the point please! " Another impatient judge screamed.



Meanwhile arabman in his austere presence remained resolutely silent--he would not speak, unless spoken to.In his fantastic smug look, his hands folded behind, not even glancing at Kambuli on his left as she yapped, yapped about her terrible omens & misfortunes.Suddenly, Kambuli got his full attention when she uttered the following sentence that struck the stern Arabman to a disorder of profuse sweating. She said...

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The prosecutor asked for the death penalty for Saddam Hussein and two of his co-defendants, saying in closing arguments Monday that the former Iraqi leader and his regime committed crimes against humanity in a "revenge" attack on Shiite civilians in the 1980s.

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The arguments brought the eight-month-old trial into its final phase. After Monday's session, the court adjourned until July 10, when the defense will begin making its final summation.

Saddam, dressed in a black suit, sat silently, sometimes taking notes, as chief prosecutor Jaafar al-Moussawi delivered his arguments, listing the evidence against each of the eight defendants.

Concluding his remarks, al-Moussawi asked for the death penalty against Saddam, his half brother Barzan Ibrahim — the head of the Mukhabarat intelligence agency at the time — and Taha Yassin Ramadan, a former senior regime member. The method of execution is hanging.

"The prosecution asks for the harshest penalty against them, because they spread corruption on earth, they showed no mercy even for the old, for women or for children, and even the trees were not safe from their oppression," he said. "The law calls for the death penalty and this is what we ask be implemented."

"Well done," Saddam muttered sarcastically.

The defense will likely take several sessions for its closing arguments. Then the five-judge panel is expected to call an adjournment to consider its verdicts against the eight defendants.

It is not known how long it will take for the judges to reach a decision. But the timeframe could mean verdicts as early as August or September.

Al-Moussawi asked for lenient sentences for three of the lower-level defendants — Abdullah Kazim Ruwayyid, his son, Mizhar Ruwayyid, and Ali Dayih — saying they committed their "acts to carry out orders issued by their superiors." He asked for the release of another defendant, Mohammed Azawi Ali, saying the evidence was not sufficient against him.

He did not specify a sentence for Awad al-Bandar, the former head of Saddam's Revolutionary Court, which sentenced 148 Shiites to death. Al-Moussawi said al-Bandar's actions "supported the crimes" committed by the others and asked that he be sentenced "according to the tribunal's law," which could include the death penalty or imprisonment.

The defendants are accused of charges of crimes against humanity for a crackdown against Shiites in Dujail, launched after a shooting attack on Saddam's motorcade as he visited the town in 1982. They are accused of arresting hundreds of people in the crackdown, including women and children, torturing some to death and killing the 148.

In his arguments, al-Moussawi cast doubt on whether there was a real attempt to kill Saddam. But he said even if there was, the regime's response went far beyond a real investigation into the shooting — which he said consisted only of at most 15 shots that hurt no one.

"The military operation that followed the assassination attempt was a revenge attack in which excessive force was used as a response to this simple incident," he said.

The argument aimed to counter the defense's contention that the crackdown was a legitimate response to what the defendants described as an attempt to eliminate Saddam by Shiite rebels backed by Iraq's enemy Iran.

Al-Moussawi said Saddam ordered Ibrahim and Ramadan to carry out "a systematic, wide-scale attack" against Dujail. "Entire families were imprisoned, including old men, women and children .. They were taken to Mukhabarat headquarters in Baghdad, and they suffered from physical and mental torture, including electrical shocks."

Forty-six people died from torture or the harsh conditions of imprisonment, he said. The Revolutionary Court then sentenced 148 to death after a "show trial in which the defendants did not appear and had no chance for defense," he said. Among the 148 were some of those already killed, and a number of children, al-Moussawi said.

Hundreds of people remained in prison for years "without charge" while the regime retaliated by destroying their homes and leveling their farmlands in Dujail, he said.

The prosecutor showed a videotape of a December session of the trial in which Saddam stood and proclaimed to the court that he alone was responsible for the crackdown in Dujail. In that session, the former Iraqi leader insisted he had done nothing wrong in responding to the shooting attack, saying, "Where is the crime?"

Throughout the trial, the defense has tried to argue that the crackdown was justified, even while denying the scope of the sweep that the prosecution has portrayed. At one point, the defense put witnesses on the stand contending that some of the 148 were still alive and that the prosecution may have fabricated parts of its case.

But chief judge Raouf Abdel-Rahman effectively shut down that argument, arresting four defense witnesses and accusing them of perjury.

The prosecution has put forth documents detailing the crackdown, including orders signed by Saddam putting the 148 on trial and approving their death sentences. Saddam himself has admitted in court that he ordered the 148 tried before the Revolutionary Court

Many of Iraq's Shiite majority and Kurdish minority are eager to see Saddam and his cohorts executed in revenge for his regime's oppression of their communities.

But the perceived fairness of the trial will be a key question. Many Sunni Arabs see the court as a case of "victors' justice" carried out by the Shiites and Kurds who dominate Iraq's government after the fall of Saddam in 2003.

Laughing Laughing Laughing Laughing
Last edited by Basra- on Mon Jun 19, 2006 9:41 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Postby zulaika » Mon Jun 19, 2006 9:22 am

basra,

nice of u to bring us another story. Monday morning syndrome is preventing me from reading it through. I shall offer my review later as the day proceeds when I am better inclined to attend to all things rubbish. Laughing

happy black monday naayaa Very Happy

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Postby Basra- » Mon Jun 19, 2006 9:41 am

Zulaika aawww How swweeet Happy Monday nayaa! Wake up! Laughing Laughing


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