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        MILLIONS ALREADY HAVE DIED IN THIS "NEW WAR" - 

    MILLIONS OF MORE AFGHANS NOW AT RISK THIS WINTER


      "Most of them applauded often during Mr. Farrakhan's
      100-minute speech and gave him a standing ovation
      afterward. The theme of the conference was an examination
      of the roots of global violence and how to deal with it."

       "Aid officials estimate that up to 7.5 million Afghans might 
       be threatened with starvation."


MID-EAST REALITIES � - MER - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 10/21:
     Six thousand Americans died tragically and horrendously on 11 September.  But 
that's not when this war, now more fully erupted, really started.  
     An estimated 1.5-million Iraqis are dead since the Gulf War just 10 years ago 
now.  Hundreds of thousands of Iranians and many more Iraqis died during the Iran-Iraq 
war in the 1980s -- a war at that time instigated and financed primarily by the U.S. 
and Saudi Arabia with Iraq the recipient of billions, including Anthrax from Bethesda, 
Maryland paid for by a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.  Tens of 
thousands of Lebanese were killed during the 1982 war, far more throughout the civil 
war.  More than a hundred thousand Algerians have been massacred since the military 
coup nullified the elections.  Adjusted to be comparable to the size of the American  
population nearly a hundred thousand Palestinians have been killed just in the past 
few years alone without even going back to 1948 or 1967.  Thousands of Egyptians have 
been brutally tortured in what amounts to a kind of Egyptian gulag, many more linger 
in the dungeons of Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other smaller U.S. allies in the region.  
     Add it all up and this war that primarily pits the U.S., Israel, and Arab "client 
regimes" on one rather convoluted side, against indigenous groups largely associated 
with Islamic and nationalist movements on the other, and some 3 million+ people have 
already been killed, millions more injured and lives ruined, in a war that goes back 
at least a few decades now.
      As for Afghanistan, the American CIA worked behind the scenes to bring on the 
Soviet invasion of 1979, then engaged the Soviet Empire in a way that brought about 
the near-total devastation of Afghanistan and a huge uncounted death toll.  Then it 
was the U.S. and its key allies Saudi Arabia and Pakistan that brought on the Taliban 
hoping to end the anarchy left by the earlier war and to set-up another regional 
"client regime"...this one to be a kind of derivative "client regime" of our bigger 
and more important "client regimes" in Riyadh and Islamabad.  And now, if U.S. and 
British policies prevail, millions of Afghanis will be dead by this time next year, 
mostly of starvation and disease, reminiscent of the unconscionable policies the U.S. 
pursued in Southeast Asia where many millions of Cambodians, Laostians and Vietnamese 
(plus 50,000+ Americans) paid the horrible price for what wiz-kid and Pentagon chief 
of that day Robert McNamara recently admitted was "a terrible mistake."





         U.N. SET TO APPEAL FOR HALT IN THE BOMBING
                      By Jason Burke, Peshawar

[The Observer - Sunday October 21, 2001]:
The United Nations is set to issue an unprecedented appeal to the
United States and its coalition allies to halt the war on Afghanistan
and allow time for a huge relief operation. 

UN sources in Pakistan said growing concern over the deteriorating
humanitarian situation in the country - in part, they say, caused by
the relentless bombing campaign - has forced them to take the radical
step. Aid officials estimate that up to 7.5 million Afghans might be
threatened with starvation. 

'The situation is completely untenable inside Afghanistan. We really
need to get our point across here and have to be very bold in doing it.
Unless the [US air] strikes stop, there will be a huge number of
deaths,' one UN source said. 

The move will embarrass Clare Short, the International Development
Secretary, who said last week that there was no 'cause and effect'
between the bombing and the ability of aid agencies to deliver
much-needed food and shelter. 

Aid workers yesterday strongly rejected Short's statements. 'Basically
the bombing makes it difficult to get enough supplies in. It is as
simple as that,' an Islamabad-based aid official told The Observer . 

Dominic Nutt, a spokesman for the British charity Christian Aid,
called Short's remarks sickening. 'Needy people are being put at risk
by government spin-doctors who are showing a callous disregard for
life,' he said. 'To say that there is no link is not just misleading but
profoundly dangerous.' Christian Aid report 600 people have already
died in the Dar-e-Suf region of northern Afghanistan due to
starvation, malnutrition and related diseases. 

Other agencies confirmed that the sick, the young and the old are
already dying in refugee camps around the northern city of
Mazar-e-Sharif. 

The World Food Programme has calculated that 52,000 tonnes of
wheat must be distributed in Afghanistan each month to stave off
mass starvation. Since the aid programme was restarted - on 25
September - only 20,000 tonnes have been supplied and 15,000
distributed. The concern is that the coming winter will make relief
efforts more difficult. The first snows have already fallen on the
Hindu Kush mountains and the isolated highlands of Hazarajat. 

But though the WFP is accelerating the supply of food, it says it is
unlikely to be able to bring in more than two-thirds of what is
required. And it is clear that little aid is reaching the most remote
areas where the need is greatest. 

A new assessment by aid workers on the ground in Afghanistan will
be presented to UN co-ordinators in Islamabad this week. It shows
that the effects of the three-year drought that has hit Afghanistan are
far worse than previously thought. Areas in the north-east are of
particular concern. 

In the western city of Herat food deliveries are barely keeping up with
demand from the 1,000 people a day who are arriving at refugee
camps. 

'We are getting a significant amount of food into the country and we
are desperately trying to get it to more remote areas. The usual
distribution networks are hugely disrupted. At the moment a trickle is
getting through,' said Michael Huggins, a spokesman for the WFP. 

He said the WFP operation was hampered by a lack of truck drivers
willing to carry food through Afghanistan because of the bombing
raids, high fuel prices and communication difficulties. 

The Taliban have also caused problems for aid agencies. A series of
offices have been looted in major cities, prompting French agency
M�decins Sans Fronti�res to shut down its entire Afghan operation.
There have been a number of attempts to steal vehicles from aid
agencies. The Taliban have also delayed relief convoys by
demanding high taxes on their passage. 

Although the expected influx of refugees to Pakistan has yet to occur,
there are signs of larger shifts of population than before. The last
three days have seen more than 10,000 people cross the border from
Afghanistan around the Taliban stronghold of Kandahar. 

Refugees report a breakdown in law and order in Kandahar. 'It is
impossible to live there now,' one said.



AFGHANISTAN ON EDGE OF HUMANITARIAN CATASTROPHE

[The Observer - Sunday October 21, 2001]:
The Afghan refugee situation on the borders of  Pakistan is becoming 
increasingly serious, with thousands more still trapped in the war-torn 
country, it was reported today.

A day after at least 5,000 Afghanistan refugees crossed into Pakistan 
- the largest single one-day exodus since the US-led military 
campaign began - aid agencies today described the severity of the 
problems they face in getting food safely to starving people in 
Afghanistan.

They said the situation had got worse even in the four days since the 
prime minister, Tony Blair, rejected charities' pleas for a halt in 
the bombing.

A "climate of fear" prevents truckers and labourers loading or 
unloading food, driving deep into Afghanistan, or staying overnight 
in Afghan towns, they said.

Oxfam International spokesman Sam Barratt insisted that the US ground 
assaults in Afghanistan, which began yesterday, must also be 
suspended for supplies to get through safely.

Speaking from the Pakistan capital, Islamabad, he said: "From the 
information we have received from our staff, we are getting no food 
through to keep what is a very vulnerable population alive this 
winter."

UNHCR, the United Nations refugee agency, said no food aid was 
getting through to Afghan refugees on the border with Pakistan at 
Chaman.

The situation was becoming increasingly desperate as numbers there 
have swelled to 15,000. None of the refugees are allowed to cross the 
border.

"At this point agencies are not being allowed across into Afghanistan 
at Chaman," said UNHCR spokeswoman Jennifer Clark. "We have sent 
supplies up to the border today but because the border is closed it 
is not getting through."

Oxfam said some food had started to move in, but the charity 
dismissed international development secretary Clare Short's assertion 
that enough was getting through.

The worst affected area, Hazarajat, in the central highlands of 
Afghanistan, had received none at all and people would start dying 
soon, Mr Barratt said.

"The ministry for international development cannot simply draw the 
curtains on Afghanistan and pretend that everything is going to be OK.

"Unless we start receiving food in these areas of Hazarajat, 
thousands or possibly more people will die this winter."

Most aid agencies had had vehicles or supplies stolen in Afghanistan, 
while the bombing made it hazardous for their drivers to reach the 
needy.

Mr Barratt added: "There is a climate of fear wrapped around 
Afghanistan, making it well nigh impossible to do enough to keep 
people alive.

Oxfam International, Islamic Relief, Christian Aid, Cafod, Tear Fund 
and ActionAid joined together last week to call for a temporary pause 
in bombing for supplies to be allowed in.

Christian Aid spokesman Dominic Nutt said the west had just days left 
to save lives.

There are currently 9,000 tonnes of UN food stocks in warehouses in 
Afghanistan - just two weeks' supply - and an estimated 5.5m people 
are short of food.

Around 400,000 are thought to have run out of food altogether, while 
2m do not have enough food to last the winter.

The most pressing emergency is the 0.5m Afghans who face being cut 
off by snow in mid-November. To avoid massive loss of life, the UN 
estimates over 50,000 tonnes of food must be moved into Afghanistan 
in the next month.




                         FARRAKHAN CONDEMNS U.S. WAR
                                            By Betsy Pisik
                      
                       [THE WASHINGTON TIMES,  NEW YORK, 21 Oct: � 
                      Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan
                      yesterday condemned the U.S.-led bombing of Afghanistan,
                      saying Washington had not proven its case against terrorist
                      mastermind Osama bin Laden. 
                           Speaking to a gathering of
                      religious leaders, Mr. Farrakhan
                      said the U.S. government hadn't
                      revealed the evidence to the
                      Taliban, sharing it only with allies.
                           "You show your friend [British
                      Prime Minister Tony Blair] the
                      evidence, but not the people
                      you're about to bomb?" he said.
                           U.S. and British officials have
                      said that revealing the details of the
                      evidence would compromise allied
                      war aims.
                           Mr. Farrakhan keynoted a
                      conference organized by the
                      Interreligious and International
                      Federation for World Peace, a
                      group organized by Rev. Sun
                      Myung Moon, founder of the
                      Unification Church. The
                      conference included a hundred
                      ministers from several religious
                      denominations, and political
                      figures, including former Vice
                      President Dan Quayle, former
                      Indonesian President
                      Abudurrahman Wahid and the former presidents and prime
                      ministers of Guyana, Guatemala, Barbados, Seychelles,
                      Nepal and St. Kitts and Nevis.
                           Most of them applauded often during Mr. Farrakhan's
                      100-minute speech and gave him a standing ovation
                      afterward. The theme of the conference was an examination
                      of the roots of global violence and how to deal with it.
                           Mr. Quayle, who had left the gathering by the time Mr.
                      Farrakhan spoke, had earlier angrily rejected suggestions that
                      U.S. foreign policy in Iraq and the Middle East had provoked
                      terrorist attacks. 
                           "This is the time to be morally clear," Mr. Quayle said.
                      "Nothing justifies terrorism."
                           Mr. Farrakhan, the leader of the nation's largest Muslim
                      group, said the pursuit of bin Laden and his terrorist group
                      was a campaign against Islam. He said he also condemns the
                      Sept. 11 terrorist attacks against the United States, which
                      killed 5,000 Americans.
                           "It was so horrific to me that for the first 48 hours I 
could
                      not speak," he said.
                           Mr. Farrakhan said, without citing his evidence, that 1.5
                      million Iraqis had died under sanctions imposed by the United
                      Nations after the 1991 Persian Gulf war "while we are crying
                      over 5,000."
                           In his remarks, Rev. Moon, who spoke before Mr.
                      Farrakhan's denunciation of U.S. war aims, called on world
                      leaders to repudiate national self-interests and hatreds, and
                      urged religious leaders to cooperate and seek reconciliation.
                      "If religions demonstrate love for each other, cooperate with
                      each other, and serve each other, putting the higher ideal of
                      peace ahead of particular doctrines, rituals and cultural
                      backgrounds, the world will change dramatically." 
                           Mr. Quayle, who served as vice president under President
                      George H.W. Bush, said that fear, unlike anthrax, is
                      contagious. He urged the religious figures to preach messages
                      of tolerance. Mr. Quayle also blamed Hollywood for giving
                      foreigners a distorted picture of the United States. 
                           "Have you ever seen a movie that made the military look
                      good? That looked favorably upon religion? That showed the
                      cohesiveness of the family? No � and why not?" he asked.
                      "If you were a person who had never been to America, you'd
                      see a different country than it actually is."
                           Mr. Wahid, a Muslim cleric who served as president of
                      Indonesia from Oct. 1999 until July 2001, said he supported
                      the American military attacks, which are unpopular with
                      Indonesians, but warned against "hegemony". 
                           "What the United States is doing is honorable, but it is
                      important to remember the multilateral framework," Mr.
                      Wahid said. In an interview, he said that Washington "needs
                      to listen to other people, and they need to listen to the United
                      States."
                           The former presidents and prime ministers of several Latin
                      and Caribbean nations said that it was important to look at
                      what they call the root causes of terrorism � poverty, poor
                      education and an absence of hope. 
                           "We all hoped that the end of the Cold War, peace would
                      have had a chance to break out," said Lloyd E. Sandiford,
                      former prime minister of Barbados. "But efforts to increase
                      development, and relieve poverty and other social blights are
                      again delayed."






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