Achieving Justice for Saddam Hussein

Hosted by
Saddam Hussein is now in the legal custody of Iraq-s new government, although US forces will have physical control for the foreseeable future. He-s scheduled to be formally charged tomorrow. To prove genocide, torture and mass executions, there are 30 tons of documentary evidence-and tens of thousands of potential witnesses. Yet, despite Prime Minister Iyad Allawi's vow "that it will be a just trial and a fair trial, unlike the trials that he inflicted on his enemies on the Iraqi people,- with new leaders really in charge, can Saddam get a fair trial in an Iraqi court? Warren Olney looks at the obstacles facing a new government with limited power and a restive population. How much will politics get in the way? What about security? Is this a case for the International Court at The Hague?
  • Making News: Secretary Powell Leaves Sudan
    Secretary of State Colin Powell has left Sudan, after visiting Darfur, the western province of Sudan, where Arab militias backed by the government have made refugees of a million black Africans. Tom Masland, African regional editor for Newsweek magazine, is traveling with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. Masland reports the two world leaders advised Sudanese officials of what needs to be done to ward off international sanctions.
  • Reporter-s Notebook: New Travel Curbs to Cuba Strand Travelers at Miami Airport
    Cuban-Americans jammed the Miami Airport today hoping additional charter flights would take them to Cuba before the Bush administration's tough new travel restrictions took effect. Hundreds found themselves out of luck, when the planes took off empty. Madeline Bar- Diaz, who is covering the story for the Sun-Sentinel, has more on the new rules that leave Cuban-Americans sharply divided, and the possible impact on November's election.

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan meets US, Sudanese officials on Darfur

Secretary Powell's remarks en route to Khartoum

Doctors Without Borders (Medecins Sans Frontieres) on Sudan

UN International Criminal Court

UN on Iraq

US Travel Restrictions to Cuba

Florida International University's Cuba Poll

Bar- Diaz's article on stranded tourists, new travel restrictions

Credits

Host:

Warren Olney