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Nationwide tour opposes Iraq sanctions

Former UN relief coordinator speaks in Detroit

By Shannon Jones
17 March, 1999

The former coordinator of the United Nations "oil for food" program in
Iraq, Denis Halliday, spoke in the Detroit suburb of Southfield, Michigan
on March 14 to an audience of about 500 people. The public meeting was part
of a nationwide speaking tour opposing the economic sanctions that have
inflicted untold death and suffering on the Iraqi people.

Halliday resigned his post as UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq last
fall to protest the ongoing sanctions. He denounced the oil for food
program as hopelessly inadequate and accused the United States and other
industrial powers of carrying out the equivalent of genocide against the
Iraqi people.

The Detroit area is home to the largest Iraqi and Arab immigrant population
in the United States. The meeting attracted a wide audience, including
students, local social activists, as well as Iraqi Chaldeans, Palestinians
and other immigrants from the Middle East.

The tour, which has already visited 15 US cities, has attracted sizable
turnouts, but has been boycotted by the big business media. Following this
pattern, no television station covered the Southfield meeting and neither
the Detroit News nor the Free Press, the two largest local dailies,
reported the event.

The speaking tour is being sponsored by the American Friends Service
Committee, the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee and a number of
other liberal and religious-pacifist organizations. Touring with Halliday
is Phyllis Bennis, of the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington DC,
who has written several books critical of US policy in the Middle East.

Halliday's visit to the Detroit area took place against a background of
almost daily US bombing raids on Iraq. On March 15 US jets again dropped
laser-guided bombs in northern and southern parts of the country. According
to an Iraqi military spokesman the planes dropped bombs on civilian and
military sites near the northern city of Mosul. Iraqi officials said one
civilian was wounded in another US bombing attack in southern Iraq.

Despite claims that it is targeting only Saddam Hussein and his military,
US policy is directed against the country's population as a whole. In late
February US warplanes damaged a control center for the oil pipeline in
northern Iraq that delivers oil under the oil for food program. Disabling
the pipeline temporarily cut off the source of revenue to purchase food and
medicine for the Iraqi people.

Last week 40 US congressmen from oil producing states urged the Clinton
administration to suspend or reduce the amount of oil Iraq is allowed to
sell under the oil for food program. The congressmen claimed Iraqi oil
exports may be a factor behind "the excess supply and very low prices that
currently exist." Without any evidence, the congressmen suggested that
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was not distributing humanitarian supplies
sent to Iraq.

Another indication of the role of commercial interests in shaping the
Clinton administration's policy toward Iraq was revealed in a comment by
Bennis toward the close of the Southfield meeting. Responding to a question
on the role of the US oil industry in the Middle East, she noted that while
in Texas she and Halliday had been approached by an oil company executive
who supported ending the UN humanitarian aid program as part of an effort
to shut off all Iraqi petroleum exports. He expressed the hope that this
would boost the US oil industry by increasing world market prices.

In his opening remarks to the meeting Halliday noted the difficulty in
getting media coverage of his speaking tour. He said it was not lack of
interest but lack of information that prevented the American people from
raising an outcry against the sanctions. He said he firmly believed that if
the American people knew that US-supported sanctions against Iraq were
leading to the deaths of thousands of children, they would put a stop to
them.

While expressing hope that the United States could be pressured into
adopting a more enlightened foreign policy, Halliday denounced the present
policies of Washington and the UN in the strongest of terms. "We of the UN
are taking away the right of healthcare, housing and education," he said.
"The UN is worse than Saddam Hussein in many respects."

"The coalition forces during the gulf war deliberately attacked civilian
targets and set about destroying electricity grids, water purification and
wastewater treatment systems. That was the beginning of the total
destruction of Iraq. By all accounts conditions in Iraq today are worse
than what they were in 1991 and 1992. In Saddam Hussein Hospital in Baghdad
there are wards of children dying of leukemia. It is a terrible thing to
witness. It is a reality in Iraq today."

He continued, "Thousands under the age of five are dying from malnutrition
and diseases curable by antibiotics. Preventative healthcare in Iraq has
largely collapsed. More than 30 percent of children under the age of five
are suffering from malnutrition. The loss of elderly people is common due
to the lack of basic medical equipment and drugs."

Halliday described the bloodlust of the American military, recounting a
recent conversation he had had with an aid to Norman Schwartzkopf, the US
commander who led Operation Desert Storm. In the words of Halliday this US
officer expressed "glee" at the prospect of an Iraqi attack on US bases in
Turkey, hoping this would give the US military the excuse to launch massive
new attacks against the already devastated country.

The sanctions have done almost irreparable damage to every facet of life.
Halliday estimated that some 2 million professionals had emigrated since
the sanctions in search of work. Some 10,000 teachers had quit, unable to
work under conditions of overcrowded classrooms, lack of textbooks,
malnourished students and inadequate heat and ventilation.

Archeological sites are being looted throughout Iraq because the government
can no longer afford to pay guards. Priceless Mesopotamian artifacts, once
unavailable, are now appearing on the markets of Europe.

Halliday explained that the amount of money allotted to Iraq to buy food
and medicine under the oil for food program, $4 billion for 23 million
people, was inadequate to maintain even a minimal level of existence. He
disputed reports that the suffering of the Iraqi people was due to the
diversion of humanitarian aid by the Iraqi regime. He said that in his
tenure as humanitarian aid director, UN monitors had found that the Iraqi
regime had handled distribution with great efficiency and saw no evidence
of misappropriation by government officials.

Even if sanctions were lifted today, Halliday said, it would take Iraq 15
to 20 years to recover from the impact. Some $12 billion would be required,
he said, just to repair Iraq's electrical system.

He accused the Western powers of using a double standard in determining
what it deemed aggression. Israel, he noted, has carried out the illegal
occupation of south Lebanon for 20 years and Turkey invades Iraqi territory
at will. Meanwhile, the United States is selling billions of dollars worth
of arms to countries throughout the Middle East, many with regimes guilty
of serious human rights abuses.

The next speaker, Phyllis Bennis, focused on the difficulty of breaking
through the media silence on the death and suffering in Iraq. "In every
city we visited, we were told that this is the worst media anywhere in the
country, and it was hard to argue. Some reporters told us 'we would like to
report this, but it is not news.'

"If you were to read the US press you would believe that history in Iraq
began August 2, 1990, the day of the invasion of Kuwait. You would forget
that Iraq had been a junior partner of the United States."

She pointed out that the United States had sold Iraq much of that country's
supply of chemical weapons. She noted that in its final weapons inspection
tour United Nations monitors were looking for documents, not arms. The
documents they were looking for were records of Iraq's weapons suppliers.
She suggested one reason the US was so interested in securing the documents
was to prevent the names of US firms supplying weapons to Iraq from falling
into the hands of the public.

During a question and answer period following the meeting Halliday reported
that the pharmaceutical plant in Sudan destroyed by US cruise missiles last
August had a contract with the United Nations to supply veterinary vaccines
to Iraq. "They had a one-quarter million dollar contract for vaccines for
goat and sheep screw worms causing disease in Iraq. When the plant was
destroyed the contract went down the drain with it."

See Also:
Spy revelations vindicate Iraqi charges
[4 March 1999]
Former UN official calls for an end to sanctions of Iraq
[29 January 1999]



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