The following is an archived copy of a message sent to a Discussion List run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq.

Views expressed in this archived message are those of the author, not of the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq.

[Main archive index/search] [List information] [Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Homepage]


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Reminder: ACTION 4TH AUGUST



Hope people don't mind me re-posting this, but I thought it would be a good
idea to remind people - fax the PM today!

All the best
Glenn

-----Original Message-----
From: David Rolstone <rolstone@freenetname.co.uk>
To: CASI <soc-casi-discuss@lists.cam.ac.uk>
Date: 31 July 2000 22:02
Subject: ACTION 4TH AUGUST




Please note update for phone number the original phone number that was given
is no longer in use.

ACTION


FRIDAY 4TH AUGUST


IRAQ UNDER SIEGE - NOT IN OUR NAME!

It has been called Genocide by Denis Halliday, first UN Humanitarian
Coordinator to resign.

Infanticide masquerading as policy by US congressman David Bonior.

The Crime of the century by Ramsey Clark, former US Attorney General.

It kills more children than the entre population of Dunblane every month.

It’s been going on for 10 years in your name.

August 6th is the 10th anniversary of the UN sanctions on Iraq. They are
devastating the civilian population both physically and psychologically.
Only the will of Britain and America is holding them in place. They
contravene all international humanitarian law and their continuation is one
of the gravest crimes against humanity of modern times.

Please, on August 4th will as many people as possible fax, phone or e-mail
Tony Blair on the numbers below in protest against this continued policy of
mass murder.

One Iraqi child dies every 6 minutes! As civilised people we cannot allow
this situation to continue. Please use your political voice! If this is the
price of oil, it isn’t worth it. Make sure he understands that you want the
sanctions lifted and the bombing stoped

Also make it clear to him that Britain’s involvement in any military
escalation over the weapons inspection issue would be quite unacceptable.

Tony Blair

Fax office:- - 0207 925 0918

Fax private:- 0207-930-9572

Tel:- - - - - - 0207-270-3000

E-mail:- tblair@no10.gsi.net


Please copy and send this message to as many people as possible.

"voices in the wilderness uk"

Tel:- 01865-243-232. e-mail:-voices@viwuk.freeserve,co,uk

 and Tel. :- 01994-419-678 e-mail :- voices@hamdden.co.uk

Background Information

UNICEF reported in August 1999 that, ‘if the substantial reduction in child
mortality throughout Iraq during the 1980s had continued through the 1990s,
there would have been half a million fewer deaths of children under-five in
the country as a whole during the eight year period 1991 to 1998’.
(http://www.unicef.org/newsline/99pr29.htm)

700,000 children under five suffer from chronic malnutrition in Iraq. (UN
Secretary-General’s report, 10 Mar. 2000, S/2000/208)

Call upon Tony Blair to accept the scale of the humanitarian crisis in Iraq.

Responsibility

‘Even if not all suffering in Iraq can be imputed to external factors,
especially sanctions, the Iraqi people would not be undergoing such
deprivations in the absence of the prolonged measures imposed by the
Security Council and the effects of war.’

The conclusion of a special ‘Panel’ of experts set up by the UN Security
Council to inquire into the humanitarian crisis in Iraq. (30 March 1999,
http://www.un.org/Depts/oip/panelrep.html)

‘We are in the process of destroying an entire society. It is as simple and
terrifying as that. It is illegal and immoral.’ (Denis Halliday, former UN
Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq, resignation statement, Independent, 15
Oct. 1998)

Call upon Tony Blair to accept that the economic sanctions are the main
cause of the current humanitarian crisis in Iraq.

Disarmament

UN Security Council Resolution 1284 offers to suspend economic sanctions
‘with the fundamental objective of improving the humanitarian situation in
Iraq’. In other words, economic sanctions are a fundamental obstacle to the
improvement of the humanitarian situation.

1284 re-affirms the primacy of disarmament issues over humanitarian issues;
the suspension of economic sanctions can only take place after several
months of Iraqi compliance ‘in all respects’ with the new inspection agency
UNMOVIC.

Richard Butler, the former head of UNSCOM, said on 15 June 2000, ‘we now
know that using economic sanctions to bring about compliance in the weapons
area does not work... ‘So de-linking [military sanctions from economic
sanctions] would address the need to stop doing something that isn’t
working.’
(http://discuss.washingtonpost.com/zforum/00/freemedia061500_butler.htm)

The government has consistently prioritised disarmament issues over
humanitarian issues. Call upon Tony Blair to support the ‘de-linking’ of the
inspection crisis from the humanitarian crisis, as suggested by former UN
Humanitarian Coordinators for Iraq Denis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, and
supported by Richard Butler.

Suspension of sanctions

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation reported in 1995 that the solution
to the nutritional crisis in Iraq ‘lies in adequate food supplies in the
country, restoring the viability of the [Iraqi Dinar], and creating
conditions for the people to acquire adequate purchasing power [ie jobs].
But these conditions can be fulfilled only if the economy can be put back in
proper shape enabling it to draw on its own resources, and that clearly
cannot occur as long as the embargo remains in force.’ (FAO, Evaluation of
food and nutrition in Iraq, 1995)

Call upon Tony Blair to accept that merely ‘suspending’ sanctions cannot
solve the humanitarian crisis.

Congressional action

Ask Tony Blair to note that 70 US Congress people - Republicans and
Democrats - have signed a letter calling on President Clinton to lift the
economic sanctions against Iraq.

David Bonior, House Minority Whip, a Democrat from Michigan and a
spokesperson for the group, described the economic sanctions as ‘infanticide
masquerading as policy’: ‘Millions of children are suffering and we refuse
to close our eyes to the slaughter of innocents.’ (‘US congressmen criticise
Iraqi sanctions,’ BBC News Online, 17 February)



-- 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a discussion list run by the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq
For removal from list, email soc-casi-discuss-request@lists.cam.ac.uk
Full details of CASI's various lists can be found on the CASI website:
http://welcome.to/casi


[Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq Homepage]