UN urges stay of further Iraq executions

UN urges stay of further Iraq executions

NEW UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged Iraq to postpone the execution of two former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein’s co-defendants.

His appeal comes amid growing international criticism of the handling of Saddam Hussein’s hanging, at which he was taunted and filmed. Ban was criticised this week for failing to state the UN’s policy of opposing the death penalty.Saddam Hussein’s intelligence chief and chief judge are also due to be hanged.Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti and Awad al-Bandar were convicted along with Saddam Hussein for their part in the killing of 148 Shia Muslims in the Iraqi village of Dujail in the 1980s.Saddam Hussein was hanged on December 30 2006.In a letter to the Iraqi representative at the UN, Ban urged restraint in carrying out death sentences imposed by the Iraqi High Tribunal.”I think we can sum this up as a deplorable set of events…completely unacceptable”.The BBC’s Keith Adams says Ban’s comments on Saddam Hussein’s hanging caused a stir this week – his first in the job.He said capital punishment “was for each and every member state to decide” – words that seemed at odds with the UN’s policy of opposing the death penalty.Our correspondent says Ban now seems to be asserting the established UN stance.The UN said Ban’s letter “also refers to the secretary general’s view that all members of the international community should pay due regard to all aspects of international humanitarian and human rights laws”.Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has reacted angrily to the international outcry over the execution.He said his government could review relations with any country that criticised the action.Maliki said the hanging was a “domestic affair” for the benefit of Iraq’s unity, adding that the former president had received a fair trial.International protest has continued, however.On Saturday Rome’s mayor lit up the Colosseum to highlight Italy’s support for a global ban on the death penalty.Italy this week began a diplomatic push to have the issue taken up by the UN General Assembly.Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi called the execution a “political and historic error”.The UK’s finance minister, Gordon Brown, described the way Saddam Hussein was executed as “deplorable” and “completely unacceptable”.He said the manner of Saddam Hussein’s death would do nothing to ease the tension between Sunnis and Shias.Several Sunni Arab countries have criticised the hanging as sectarian.Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said it had turned the former leader into a martyr.BBCBan was criticised this week for failing to state the UN’s policy of opposing the death penalty.Saddam Hussein’s intelligence chief and chief judge are also due to be hanged.Barzan Ibrahim al-Tikriti and Awad al-Bandar were convicted along with Saddam Hussein for their part in the killing of 148 Shia Muslims in the Iraqi village of Dujail in the 1980s.Saddam Hussein was hanged on December 30 2006.In a letter to the Iraqi representative at the UN, Ban urged restraint in carrying out death sentences imposed by the Iraqi High Tribunal.”I think we can sum this up as a deplorable set of events…completely unacceptable”.The BBC’s Keith Adams says Ban’s comments on Saddam Hussein’s hanging caused a stir this week – his first in the job.He said capital punishment “was for each and every member state to decide” – words that seemed at odds with the UN’s policy of opposing the death penalty.Our correspondent says Ban now seems to be asserting the established UN stance.The UN said Ban’s letter “also refers to the secretary general’s view that all members of the international community should pay due regard to all aspects of international humanitarian and human rights laws”.Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has reacted angrily to the international outcry over the execution.He said his government could review relations with any country that criticised the action.Maliki said the hanging was a “domestic affair” for the benefit of Iraq’s unity, adding that the former president had received a fair trial.International protest has continued, however.On Saturday Rome’s mayor lit up the Colosseum to highlight Italy’s support for a global ban on the death penalty.Italy this week began a diplomatic push to have the issue taken up by the UN General Assembly.Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi called the execution a “political and historic error”.The UK’s finance minister, Gordon Brown, described the way Saddam Hussein was executed as “deplorable” and “completely unacceptable”.He said the manner of Saddam Hussein’s death would do nothing to ease the tension between Sunnis and Shias.Several Sunni Arab countries have criticised the hanging as sectarian.Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said it had turned the former leader into a martyr.BBC

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