By Gwynne Dyer Occasionally, like any doomed man, Saddam Hussein played with the notion of a last-minute reprieve. “He’s told us many times that we won’t be able to [avoid a death sentence in his trial],” said Khalil al-Dulaimi, one of his lawyers, in June. “He knows that the sentence has been issued from Washington.” But at that point he was still indulging in the fantasy that this was part of an American plan to restore him to power. “He’ll be the last resort; they’ll have to knock on his door,” said Dulaimi. “The United States will use this sentence to pressure Saddam to save it from this mess.” By July, however, Saddam seems to have accepted the fact that he was going to be killed, for he asked the court that he be shot by a firing squad, as is the right of a military man, and not hanged like a common criminal. More fantasy, since Saddam never served as a regular soldier. On Sunday, the sentence of death by hanging was pronounced on Saddam and two of his fellow defendants. He respond- ed with a clearly rehearsed tirade — “Long live Iraq! Long live the Iraqi peo- ple! Down with the traitors!” — and then left the courtroom with a little smile play- ing on his face, as if he had won. Which he had, within the narrow confines of what remains possible for him. Unless the second trial that is now underway on other charges takes priority (which is not yet clear), it will take only ten to twenty days for an appeal to be con- sidered by a panel of nine judges, and then the death sentence must be carried out within thirty days. But Saddam still wins, because in the eyes of most Sunni Arabs in Iraq, and of many elsewhere, he dies a martyr to the cause of Arab nation- alism. His sons are dead, his country is in ruins, and he will die at the end of a rope — but he defied the West and he kept his dignity, so he dies a hero. He is not a hero, and Iraq would be a better place if he had never been born. In any properly constituted international court, he would have been found guilty of the same charges he faced in Iraq. But in an international court there would have been due process of law, and the Iraqi government could not have replaced judges who wanted to respect the rights of the defendants, and the defence lawyers would not have been murdered, and as a result the trial would have had some cred- ibility. The trial in Iraq did not. There was one obvious reason why the United States did not want Saddam to face the same kind of impartial international tribunal that tried Serbia’s President Slobodan Milosevic and will soon try Charles Taylor of Liberia. Such a tribu- nal would have the right to see documents and hear testimony that would reveal the extent of US complicity in Saddam’s crimes in the earlier phase of his career, when the Reagan administration was sup- porting Iraq in the 1980-88 war against Iran. Hence the kangaroo court in Baghdad, and all the grotesqueries that ensued. The first chief judge, Rizgar Amin, resigned last January after government complaints that he had failed to impose order in his court (i.e. had allowed Saddam to speak in his own defence too often). Five weeks later his successor, Sayeed al-Hammashi, was removed when it was discovered that he had been a Baath Party member. And the chief judge appointed to run the second trial, Abdullah al-Amiri, was removed in September for being too sympathetic to Saddam. Meanwhile, Saddam’s defence lawyers died like flies. The first to go, Saadoun Janabi, was “arrested” last year by men claiming to be from the Shia-controlled Interior Ministry police and later found dead in Sadr City, the Shia stronghold in Baghdad. The second, Adel al-Zubeidi, was shot shortly afterwards, whereupon another fled the country. And the chief defence lawyer, Khamis al-Obaidi, was abducted in June. He, too, was arrested by men in police uniforms, and his body was found, with both arms broken and eight bullet wounds, dumped in the same place in Sadr City. After Obeidi’s murder Saddam’s lawyers withdrew from the trial entirely, demanding that it be transferred outside Iraq, and Saddam himself went on hunger strike. He gave that up after six- teen days of being force-fed by tubes pushed up his nostrils, and sat through the remainder of his trials with no legal representation other than a court- appointed lawyer who refused to be filmed or photographed, spoke through a microphone that deliberately distorted his voice, and was rejected as “an enemy of the people” by Saddam. Saddam has not had a fair trial, although that, too, would certainly have found him guilty. He is the victim of a state-sponsored lynching, and so, for many people, he will die a martyr. That will make little difference in Iraq, where people have more immediate things to worry about, but it certainly does not help the cause of international law. 5 Tuesday 7th November, 2006 Due to popular public demand to introduce lottery tickets to be drawn everyday of the week, the Development Lotteries Board re- launches “Jayoda” today. For the first time in Sri Lanka’s Lotteries System, in addition the snowballing jackpot, a consolation prize of Rs. 1 million or a house worth over a million would be on offer. The face of the ticket is also distinct as it has two colour schemes, to distinguish between two different draws. Tickets with yel- low background will be drawn every Monday and tickets with orange background every Thursday. The “Jayoda” jackpot will be drawn from six lucky numbers using six different cages containing numbers that range from 0-9 with an additional super number ranging from 1- 26 and of which will be drawn from a sepa- rate machine as to determine the winner of the snowballing super jackpot that starts with an initial amount of Rs. 10 million. In addition to cash prizes on offer, every non-winner will be included in a special draw to be held soon after the main draw. This draw will have prizes that make up of Motorcycles worth over Rs. 65, 000 and with the winners being drawn from eight different districts, through the brocade of the non-win- ning tickets. DLB has always been at the forefront of innovation in Sri Lanka’s Lottery Industry as it was the first to introduce instant winnings with the scratch and win feature and with Saturday Fortune tickets being one of the highest contributors towards the President’s Fund. Uniquely DLB with this novelty concept after conducting wide and stringent market research on its lottery ticket “Jayoda”, has designed a new and different prize structure as well, with prizes being awarded as long as the matching numbers are identified from left to right, right to left or from both sides, thereby giving purchasers more chances to win. High end security systems and instant delivery of prizes are DLB’s key strengths. The tickets are printed overseas in a safe and state-of-the-art computerized environment and with draw procedures being tamper proof with constant back checks. Development Lotteries Board was estab- lished in 1983 and over the years has assist- ed in the economic development of the coun- try by contributing all of its profits to the President’s Fund, and of which 50% is direct- ed to the Mahapola Scholarship Fund. With this re-launch of “Jayoda”, DLB aims to surpass Rs. 1 billion from all it’s lottery brands and further contribute towards the President’s Fund which supports numerous projects to enhance the living conditions of the rural communities in Sri Lanka as well in the areas of education and health-care. The fund also contributes to the develop- ment of all religious institutions, welfare organizations, arts, sports bodies and most importantly creates self-employment to thou- sands through their strategic islandwide deal- er network. The Lynching of Saddam Hussein Jayoda to be drawn every day on public demand