----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, August 14, 2000 6:15 PM
Subject: [STOPNATO] "We are not a lackey of the U. S. We are free to go anywhere."


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

The Irish Times

 Monday, August 14, 2000
Iraq claims oil-for-food
supplies were hit in raid
By Michael Jansen
IRAQ: Anglo-US air strikes over the weekend aimed at the Iraqi city of
Samawa, 270 km south of Baghdad, hit a regional ration distribution
centre and a railway station, Iraqi officials claimed.
The Trade Minister, Mr Muhammad Mehdi Saleh, said in the first air raid
supplies purchased under the oil-for-food programme were destroyed, two
civilians killed and 19 injured.
In the second attack, dwellings near Samawa's railway station were
damaged and an unknown number of injuries inflicted, a spokesman for the
governor said. Baghdad says US and British strikes have killed more than
300 civilians and wounded 900 since the air campaign began in December
1998.
A spokesman for the US Central Command in Tampa, Florida, stated that US
and British aircraft fired "smart" missiles at two Iraqi air defence
sites after anti-aircraft batteries opened fire on aircraft patrolling
the southern "no-fly zone".
Iraq argues that the air exclusion zones imposed after the 1991 Gulf War
are illegal.
On Saturday, Iraq's highest policy-making body, the Revolutionary
Command Council, castigated Saudi Arabia and Kuwait for allowing the US
and Britain to mount air raids from bases in their territory.
The Iraqi Foreign Minister, Mr Muhammad Saeed al-Sahhaf, sent a letter
to the Security Council accusing the two governments of "providing
logistical support for the American and British forces, making them
accomplices in aggression".
The latest attacks follow the visit to Baghdad last Thursday and Friday
by the Venezuelan President, Mr Hugo Chavez, the first by a foreign head
of state to the Iraqi capital since 1991.
The US was sharply critical of Mr Chavez, who is touring member states
of the Organisation of Petroleum-Exporting Countries in his capacity as
temporary head of the body. On Saturday Mr Chavez was told by Indonesian
President Mr Abdurrahman Wahid that he too will break the taboo on
visiting Baghdad. He called for an end to the punitive sanctions regime
which is said to have killed 1.3 million Iraqis in the past decade.
The Libyan leader, Col Moammar Gadafy, and the Sudanese President, Gen
Omar alBashir, have also pledged to go to Baghdad to end Iraq's
isolation and the ostracism of its President, Mr Saddam Hussein.
The US Secretary of State, Ms Madeleine Albright, said on Saturday that
President Wahid would harm his country's stature if he visited Iraq.
"I think it would be very useful [for him to listen to US advice].
President Wahid has a great deal to do in Indonesia," she said.
The US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, Mr Thomas
Pickering, had already asked Mr Wahid not to visit Iraq or other
countries Washington regards as state sponsors of terrorism, but the
Indonesian leader rejected the request. "We are not a lackey of the US,"
President Wahid said. "We are free to go anywhere." - (Additional
reporting by Reuters)


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