Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November 2004,
pages 82-84
Human Rights
The People Judge Bush
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Ambassador Edward Gnehm
said actions speak louder than words when it comes to U.S.
policy in the Middle East (staff photo S. Kandil). |
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ACTIVISTS FROM around the world convened at New York City’s
Martin Luther King, Jr. High School on Aug. 26 for the Iraq War
Crimes Tribunal. The New York meeting was one of a series of such
tribunals, held in places as diverse as Kyoto, Istanbul and Belgium,
to hear witnesses’ accusations that the current U.S. administration
has committed war crimes in pursuit of its Middle East policy,
specifically with regard to Iraq. An earlier tribunal collected
evidence of alleged war crimes committed by the Bush administration
in Afghanistan. The current series will culminate in a tribunal
in Istanbul, Turkey in 2005.
Based on an indictment written by former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark, founding member of the International Action Center
(IAC), the tribunal accuses President George W. Bush, Vice President
Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, Attorney General John Ashcroft, Gen. Tommy Franks,
and his successors as commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, and George
Tenet, L. Paul Bremer, and John Negroponte, as well as others,
with 19 war crimes.
In summary, the charges are: 1. waging a war of aggression; 2.
using excessive force; 3. using illegal weapons; 4. using assassinations,
executions, kidnappings, and torture; 5. using mercenaries; 6.
destroying civilian infrastructure; 7. encouraging internal (Iraqi)
conflict; 8. maintaining a criminal occupation; 9. shutting out
the United Nations through unilateral action; 10. systematically
defying and undermining international law; 11. manifesting commitment
to world domination by directing a coup d’état in
Haiti; 12. threatening the sovereignty of nations by threatening
similar actions in Cuba, Iran, North Korea, the Philippines, Sudan,
Syria, and Venezuela, and supporting Israel’s illegal occupation
of Palestine; 13. destroying Iraqi sovereignty by imposing a U.S.-chosen
government in Iraq; 14. usurping the war powers of the U.S. Congress;
15. weakening human rights and the U.S. Bill of Rights through
illegal arrests and detentions; 16. illegally detaining foreign
nationals at Guantanamo Bay against international law and Cuba’s
will; 17. encouraging war profiteering; 18. censoring the press;
and 19. carrying out the above for the purpose of controlling and
exploiting Iraq and other nations through military and economic
force.
These acts, Clark points out, are in contravention of the Nuremberg
principals, the United Nations charter, international law, and
the Constitution of the United States.
Various panels ran concurrently on such topics as the struggle
against war and occupation, the planning and preparation for wars
in the Middle East and Africa, East Asia, and Latin America and
the Caribbean, the targeting of civilians and infrastructure in
Iraq, illegal detentions, torture and mass repression, the use
of illegal weapons, U.S. soldiers’ rights to refuse illegal
orders, the domestic cost of the war, and the rights of a people
to self-determination and resistance.
A number of distinguished speakers added their voices to the
panels. Testifying in the panel on civilian targeting were Maria
Penarroya and Javier Barandiaran of Spain and the Basque country,
respectively, both of whom witnessed the 2003 “shock and
awe” bombing of Baghdad, and Jo Wilding of Britain, who witnessed
the siege of Fallujah. Dr. Hans Rothe, a British kidney specialist
who treated soldiers for depleted uranium (DU) poisoning, spoke
on the panel about illegal weapons. Attorney Lynne Stewart, under
indictment for her defense of “The Blind Sheikh,” the
Egyptian implicated in the first World Trade Center bombings in
1992, spoke against illegal detentions, torture and mass repression,
while Fernando Suarez, Michael Hoffman and Maritza Castillo talked
about the GI struggle. Suarez is an anti-war activist whose son,
Jesus, was killed in Iraq, and Castillo’s son, Camilo Mejia,
is a war resister in jail for desertion. Hoffman is the founder
of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW). South African poet and
anti-apartheid activist Professor Dennis Brutus, once imprisoned
on Robben Island with Nelson Mandela, talked about self-determination
and the right of resistance on the GI panel.
The panel on preparing for wars in the Middle East and Africa
focused on U.S. support for Israel’s occupation of Palestine,
the U.S. occupation of Iraq, and the looming possibility of U.S.
intervention in the Sudan. Palestinian artist Samia Halaby gave
a brief history of the Israeli occupation and its support by the
West, including U.S. support that continues today. This writer
spoke about the concrete ways the U.S. supports Israel, in both
foreign and domestic policies. Palestinian lawyer and Al Awda organizer
Lamis Deek discussed issues and precedents under international
and U.S. law, and how they pertained to Palestine; Kadouri al Kaysi
of the Committee in Support of the Iraqi People discussed crimes
in Iraq; and the IAC’s John Parker pointed out hidden U.S.
agendas in the drive to label Sudan as genocidal of its own people.
The evening plenary featured a number of people known for their
struggles for civil rights, as well as international groups reporting
on their own tribunals and actions. In addition to many already
mentioned, Gerry Condon, who conscientiously refused orders to
fight in Vietnam and who now counsels Iraq refusers, added his
thoughts on the right to refuse illegal orders, and Iraqi-French
filmmaker Hana Al Bayaty spoke on the occupation. Her film “On
Democracy in Iraq” was screened.
Akira Maeda, professor of criminal law at Tokyo Zokei University,
discussed Japan’s tribunal on Iraq, as well as its previous
tribunal on war crimes committed in Afghanistan by the Bush administration,
and Japanese concerns (as the only people ever to withstand a nuclear
assault) with DU. Manik Mukherjee of the All-India Anti-Imperialist
Front that successfully opposed Indian troop deployment to Iraq
also spoke. Former Attorney General Clark concluded by outlining
and explaining the legal and moral issues of war crimes involved,
urging accountability for the Bush administration. A number of
papers presented at the conference are available online, as is
the full indictment, at <www.PeopleJudgeBush.org>.
—Sara Powell
ANERA Offers Hope
American Near East Refugee Aid (ANERA) held its annual
fund-raising dinner Sept. 17 at the Omni-Shoreham Hotel in Washington,
DC.
The evening opened with a silent auction at which items including
ceramics, jewelry, books, clothing, artwork and other collectibles
were sold to the highest bidder. Profits from the auction helped
raise funds for refugees.
ANERA later honored three of its most valued benefactors, including
Hasib J. Sabbagh and Said T. Khoury, founders of Consolidated Contractors
Group of Companies (CCC), and the Catholic Medical Mission Board
(CMMB).
“We urgently need to move from destruction to construction,” Khoury
told the more than 400 assembled guests. CCC is involved in construction,
engineering, development, and investment in the Middle East for
that very reason.
ANERA currently is working on three new unusual projects, one
of which is to help provide medical material for CMMB. Another
is constructing information technology centers in several Palestinian
cities, including the Said Khoury IT Center at al-Quds University
and the Sabbagh IT Center at the Arab American University of Jenin.
The third project is called Milk for Peace with Us, which addresses
malnutrition in young children and provides milk for pre-school
children. This project currently reaches an estimated 2,500 children,
and hopes to reach 10,000 children this year.
The evening’s honored speaker, Ambassador Edward W. Gnehm,
decried a “lack of leadership in Israel, Palestine and the
U.S.” In his first public appearance since his retirement,
Gnehm noted that the most effective communication between the U.S.
and the Arab world is done through actions, rather than words.
Although the United States must secure itself, he went on to say,
it should continue to welcome people from other countries, either
through student visas or as tourists, and generally have “a
positive view globally.”
The dinner’s theme was hope: Hope that one day there will
be peace instead of undernourished children. Ambassador Gnehm has
that hope, he said, and ANERA and its honored benefactors provide
the road to that hope.
—Shereen Kandil
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