----- Original Message ----- 
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2000 7:39 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Russia, China Blast US, UK For Iraq Bombing, Sanctions


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Times of India
June 10, 2000
 
  
Russia criticises patrol of Iraqi zones 
UNITED NATIONS: What should have been a perfunctory
Security Council vote to extend the U.N. humanitarian
program in Iraq erupted into acrimonious debate early
Friday, with Russia criticizing sanctions and US and
British airstrikes against Iraq. 

Russian Ambassador Sergey Lavrov took the floor of the
council chamber three times, delivering a bristling
critique of the sanctions, the air patrols and the
council's overall failure to solve the Iraq crisis
after 10 years. "We're trying to deal with the
symptoms - to ease the symptoms of the disease - but
we're not dealing with the crux of the problem,"
Lavrov said in a rambling, off-the-cuff speech. He was
joined in his criticism by deputy Chinese ambassador
Shen Guofang, who decried the impact of the airstrikes
but expressed some optimism that a study the council
authorized Thursday night would assess the
humanitarian impact that the strikes have caused. 

The United States and Britain have been enforcing
northern and southern no-fly zones in Iraq since the
end of the Persian Gulf War to protect Shiite Muslims
in the south and Kurds in the north from Iraq's army.
The allies say their regular aerial attacks hit only
military targets, but Iraq often claims civilians are
injured or killed. "These bombings have caused
suffering," Shen said. 

The debate came during discussion on a resolution to
keep the U.N. relief program, due to expire at
midnight, running for another six months. Iraq is
still suffering under strict U.N. sanctions imposed
after its 1990 invasion of Kuwait. The relief program,
launched in 1996, allows Iraq to use proceeds from
U.N.-supervised oil sales to buy food, medicine and
other humanitarian goods for its people. The new
resolution also allows Iraq to spend $600 million from
its oil sales on spare parts for its oil industry and
lets it buy water and sanitation equipment without
approval from the council's sanctions committee. 

In Cairo, Iraq's trade minister said the oil-for-food
program was doing little to help the Iraqi people. Out
of $29 billion earned since the program began in 1996,
Iraq has access to only $7 billion, the rest set aside
for paying U.N. expenses in Iraq or compensation to
Gulf War victims, Mohammed Mehdi Saleh said. The
program has "failed to ease the suffering of the Iraqi
people, and Iraq now calls it the oil-for-U.N.
expenses" program, the minister said, quoted by
Egypt's Middle East News Agency. 

The sticking point in negotiations at the United
Nations this week revolved around calls from countries
sympathetic to Iraq's plight for a study of the impact
sanctions have had on the Iraqi people. France had led
the push for such a study. Thursday afternoon, it
agreed to a more general study after Britain and the
United States argued that the effects of two wars and
government policies also had a bearing on the state of
ordinary Iraqis. 

The final text of the resolution calls for a panel of
experts to prepare a "comprehensive report and
analysis of the humanitarian situation in Iraq," by
November 26. US and British officials defended their
policies against the Russian and Chinese assault.
British Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock said the no-fly
zone patrols were authorized under resolutions calling
for the protection of Iraqi minorities. And the deputy
American ambassador, James Cunningham, said it was
"disingenuous" to suggest that the limited airstrikes
impact the overall humanitarian situation in Iraq.
(AP)



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