The chief judge in the trial of Saddam Hussein plans to step down, a source close to the judge said today, in a development that could throw an already turbulent process into further disarray.
"He wants to withdraw," the source said of Kurdish judge Rizgar Amin, who is due to preside over the next sitting of the court on January 24th.
"He will oversee the next sitting and then announce his reasons for withdrawing," the source said.
The source declined to explain why the judge, based in the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniya, wanted to pull out of a trial which has made his face one of the best known in Iraq after several days of live television coverage.
All he would say was: "It is too difficult."
The killings of two defence lawyers for some of Saddam's seven co-accused in the trial for crimes against humanity had already highlighted the difficulties of a legal process in a country mired in a virtual civil war.
Another of the panel of five judges pulled out earlier in the trial, which opened on October 19th in a heavily fortified courtroom in Baghdad. He withdrew because he discovered he was related to an alleged victim of one defendant and was replaced.
Initially only Mr Amin, whose dry wit marked the early days of the trial, was seen on camera, although one of the other five judges has since been identified. Critics have questioned, however, why Mr Amin has allowed the former president and other defendants to speak at great length.