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HarryKrause wrote:
Jim, wrote:
Dutch Iraq war crimes case opens

ROTTERDAM, Netherlands -- A Dutch court has opened hearings in the

case
of a businessman accused of helping former Iraqi leader Saddam

Hussein
commit genocide by selling materials for chemical weapons to

Baghdad.

Frans Van Anraat, 62, appeared in a Rotterdam court Friday to face
charges of complicity in war crimes and genocide.

"It was known since the mid-1980s that the Iraqi government was

using
poison gas in the war against Iran and against its own population,"


Reuters quoted prosecutor Fred Teeven as saying as he outlined the
charges at a pre-trial hearing.

Van Anraat faces up to life in prison if convicted.

The Dutch chemicals dealer is accused of supplying thousands of

tons of
raw materials for chemical weapons used in the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq

war.

Baghdad also used chemical weapons against Iraqi Kurds, including a

1988
attack on the town of Halabja in which an estimated 5,000 people

were
killed.

The United Nations has described Van Anraat as "one of the most
important middlemen in Iraq's acquisition of chemical material,"

Reuters
reported prosecutors as saying.

Van Anraat has said in the past that he sold chemicals to Saddam's
regime but that his actions were neither wrong nor illegal.

"The images of the gas attack on the Kurdish city Halabja were a

shock.
But I did not give the order to do that. How many products, such as


bullets do we make in the Netherlands?" Van Anraat told Dutch

magazine
Revu in 2003, according to Reuters.

He made similar statements in a 2003 interview with Dutch

television
program Netwerk, The Associated Press said.

"This was not my main business, this was something I did in

passing," he
was quoted as saying.

"Somewhere once back then, I got the request whether I could

deliver
certain products to them, which they needed," he said. "And because

I
had a very good relationship with the (Iraqi) Oil Ministry, and

that's
where the request came from, I tried to see if I could do it. And

that
was successful and we did deliver some materials."

Among the chemicals he is alleged to have shipped is thiodyglycol,

which
can be used in the production of mustard gas. It is alleged to be

the
lethal chemical that was used in the Halabja attack.

Prosecutors said Anraat "knew the destination and ultimate purpose

of
the materials he was shipping."

Van Anraat is alleged to have shipped the chemicals on a route via

the
United States and Europe to Iraq. Authorities in the United States,


Belgium, Germany, Italy and Switzerland contributed to the

investigation.

Dutch officials arrested van Anraat at his Amsterdam home in

December.

"The man is suspected of delivering thousands of tons of raw

materials
for chemical weapons to the former regime in Baghdad between 1984

and
1988," a December prosecution statement said.

Prosecutors say evidence against Van Anraat includes "official

Iraqi
documents" -- material which may also be used against Saddam when

he
goes before an Iraqi tribunal on war crimes charges, AP reported.

Van Anraat had been arrested in 1989 in Milan, Italy at the request

of
the U.S. government, prosecutors said. He fled to Iraq after being
released and remained there until 2003.

After the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003, van Anraat

returned
to the Netherlands via Syria.

The case is seen as a landmark because it would be the first time a


businessman has been prosecuted for war crimes by a national court,

AP
reported. His trial starts in November.



That's good. When does Cheney go on trial?


Whenever that is, it won't be soon enough.....