-Caveat Lector-

On 28 Mar 2003 at 8:05, someone from another list wrote:

[Iraq has violated sixteen UN Security Council resolutions, most of
which were passed under the rarely used Chapter VII, which makes them
legally biding on all UN members to enforce by military means if
necessary. What is the point of these resolutions if the member nations
of the UN do not show the will to enforce them?]

Saddam Hussein's Ongoing War Against the Iraqis
http://www.defenddemocracy.org/templ/display.cfm?id=336&dis=2
By Safia Taleb Al Souhail

Safia Taleb Al Souhail is Advocacy Director for the Middle East and
Islamic World at the International Alliance for Justice (www.i-a-j.org),
and the publisher of the independent newspaper Al Manar Al Arabi. Al
Souhail participated in a delegation of nine Iraqi women who met with
British Prime Minister Tony Blair on December 2nd 2002, to brief him on
the persecution of their communities in Iraq. This perspective is based
on the delegation's remarks.

As we watch UN inspectors search Iraq for weapons of mass destruction, I
ask, why are there no UN inspectors investigating Saddam Hussein's
crimes against the Iraqi people? Along with hidden caches of biological
and chemical weapons, Iraq also has hidden torture chambers, prisons and
mass graves.

In Saddam's Iraq, women are especially vulnerable pressure points -
victims who can be used to influence other victims. They are harassed,
abused, raped, tortured and gassed both for their resistance to the
regime and as a means to control their families. For reasons like this,
other Iraqi women and I have been organizing to get our voices heard in
the international arena. Last December we met with Prime Minister Tony
Blair of Britain to brief him on the Ba'th regime's systematic abuse of
women in Iraq, and how our families and communities have been persecuted
by Saddam's regime.

Zahraa Mohammed is a Shi'a, Feyli Kurd from Baghdad.  She described to
Mr. Blair how she was imprisoned with her family for three months in
1980, during a mass deportation campaign of Feyli Kurds from Iraq to
Iran. Saddam's regime has conducted three such campaigns, in 1969, 1971
and 1980, in which hundreds of thousands of Feyli Kurds were expelled
and lost all their property.

Saddam's agents took away Mohammed's four brothers and eight cousins,
and dumped the rest of her family on the heavily mined Iranian border.
To this day, she does not know what happened to her brothers and
hundreds of other relatives who have also disappeared.   In total, seven
thousand young men of the Feyli Kurdish community were taken hostage in
April 1980, and twenty-three years later their fate remains unknown.

Berivan Dosky, a Kurd from northern Iraq, described how her mother was
forced to flee her village in Duhok province in the 1961 Iraqi war
against the Kurds, merely two hours after giving birth to Berivan.
Berivan herself was later forced to repeat the scenario with her
three-month-old son.  In 1988, during a chemical attack against the
Kurds, Berivan had to make a Faustian choice:  She had only one gas
mask, and had to decide whether to use it for herself, or give it to her
then two-year-old son. She decided neither would wear it; they would
either live or die together. Berivan is worried that Saddam will once
again use chemical weapons against the Iraqi Kurds who live in the
British and American-protected Kurdish safe haven. She asked Mr. Blair
to make sure that there are enough gas masks for everyone.

Fatima Bahr-al-Ulum is a Shi'a from a respected religious family in
Najaf, in Southern Iraq.  She listed over twenty clergy members in her
immediate family who are in prison; none of them were released in the
recent amnesty. Scores of others have been killed.  The Iraqi Shi'as
have suffered greatly from the discriminatory policies of Saddam's
regime, which has massacred over two hundred thousand Shi'as, murdered
five of their religious leaders (Al Maraji'), and destroyed their Marsh
lands, known as the Venice of the Middle East.   All the great Sh'ia
religious families in Iraq, like Fatima Ulum's, have been targeted by
Saddam's regime for their opposition to its brutal policies.

Layla Kelenchy, a Turkoman from Kirkuk, in Northern Iraq, described how
she was expelled from her home during the 1990's as part of Saddam's
"Arabization" campaign in which Sunni Arab Iraqis are resettled around
the country to disrupt other Iraqi ethnic communities.  There are an
estimated one million non-Arab refugees within Iraq who have been
displaced by Saddam's ethnic cleansing campaign and live in refugee
camps or scattered in various cities in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Melina Bakhos, an Assyrian poet, told the Prime Minister how Saddam's
regime has destroyed more than two hundred villages, and dozens of
ancient churches and monasteries, in her small Christian Assyrian
community. Only this summer, his agents beheaded a 72-year-old nun in a
Mosul Church. Hundreds of Iraqi women have been beheaded in the last two
years under the orders of Saddam's son Uday. Their heads are displayed
on the walls and doors of their houses. Teachers have been beheaded in
front of their pupils. These women, and others who were doctors and
engineers, were accused of being prostitutes. In reality they were
killed because of they were related to opponents of Saddam.

My father, Sheik Taleb Al Souhail, was the chief of the almost one
million strong Bani Tamim tribe from the central part of Iraq. Our
family fled from Iraq after the Ba'ath coup d'etat of 1968, but Saddam's
agents still managed to kill my father in his exile home in Lebanon, in
April 1994.  Although the case is well documented, it was never
prosecuted in the Lebanese courts. All our property in Iraq was
confiscated by the Ba'ath regime, and several members of the tribe were
arrested and executed. My mother and six sisters have remained in exile
in Jordan. We receive constant death threats from the regime. Earlier
this year, a voice on the phone told me: "Do not think that because you
are a woman you will not face the same fate as your father."

These stories are a just a tiny sample of crimes that the Ba'ath regime
has committed against the Iraqi for the past three decades. It is
essential for people of the world to understand that the suffering of
the Iraqis will not end as long as the current regime is in power.   The
British prime minister's agreement to meet us was a heartening and
encouraging gesture.  We asked the British government to enforce those
sections of UN Security Council Resolution 688, passed in 1991, which
call upon the Iraqi government to end its repression of the Iraqi
people. Resolution 1284, passed in December 1999, also calls on Iraq to
cease its discrimination against various Iraqi ethnic groups. And we
asked that a UN commission be created to investigate human rights
violations in Iraq. There is ample evidence with which to indict Saddam
Hussein for genocide and crimes against humanity in the international
criminal court.

For the past three decades, we have been seeking international support
for our efforts to bring about an Iraq within which our children can be
brought up in peace and security.  Iraq has violated sixteen UN Security
Council resolutions, most of which were passed under the rarely used
Chapter VII, which makes them legally biding on all UN members to
enforce by military means if necessary. What is the point of these
resolutions if the member nations of the UN do not show the will to
enforce them?

Saddam Hussein is himself a weapon of mass destruction. Disarmament is
not enough. It may avert a chemical or biological attack, but it would
not protect the people of Iraq from arbitrary imprisonment, executions,
rape, torture and daily intimidation and deprivation.  Saddam's
oppression of Iraqis is the "king of wars."   His ongoing war against
the Iraqi people must be stopped.  The long-suffering Iraqi people
deserve to be freed, and to live in a democratic, pluralistic and
federal Iraq that is at peace with itself, the region and the world.

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