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The conviction was the first against Aziz, who for years was the former regimes public face to West.
Saddam’s cousin "Chemical Ali" al-Majid also got a 15-year sentence for his role in the mass execution. Two of Saddam’s half-brothers, former Interior Minister Watban Ibrahim al-Hassan and director of public security Sabawi Ibrahim, were sentenced to death.
Wednesday’s conviction came just over a week after Aziz was acquitted of being responsible for a brutal crackdown on Shiite protesters that followed the 1999 assassination of a revered cleric, Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadeq al-Sadr - the father of anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Three other former regime officials were sentenced to death in that case, including Chemical Ali. It was his third death sentence for atrocities under Saddam’s rule.
Aziz, the only Christian in Saddam’s mostly Sunni Muslim regime, became internationally known as Saddam’s defender in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, the 1990 Iraqi invasion of
Aziz, who was No. 25 on the deck of cards of wanted regime figures issued after Saddam’s ouster, surrendered to American forces on April 25, 2003.
The trial, which opened in April of last year but faced many delays, deals with the execution of the 42 merchants accused by Saddam’s government of being behind a sharp increase in food prices when the country was experiencing hardships under strict U.N. sanctions.
The merchants were rounded up over two days in July 1992 from
Judge Raouf Abdul-Rahman - a Kurd who sentenced Saddam to death by hanging - presided over the trial.
Three other defendants got sentences of life in prison, 15 years and six years.
Abdul-Rahman said former Central Bank Gov. Issam Rashid Hweish was acquitted for lack of evidence.