Tribunal Finds U.S. Guilty of War Crimes in Korea
by [EMAIL PROTECTED]


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: torstai 28. kes�kuu 2001 11:50
Subject: [WW]  Tribunal Finds U.S. Guilty of War Crimes in Korea

-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the July 5, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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AFTER 50 YEARS OF SUFFERING: TRIBUNAL FINDS U.S.
GUILTY OF WAR CRIMES IN KOREA
Koreans From North and South Present Evidence

By John Catalinotto
New York

Fifty years of enforced silence were broken on June 23 when
Korean victims of U.S. war crimes finally had the chance to
tell an International War Crimes Tribunal about what had
happened to them.

Some 600 people attended the historic gathering at the
Interchurch Center of Riverside Church. Large delegations of
Koreans came from South Korea, Japan, Canada and Germany, as
well as from all over the U.S. Most evidence was presented
in Korean and English to the multinational audience.

The U.S. State Department had refused visas to a delegation
of 11 lawyers bringing evidence from the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea. The South Korean government had barred
some witnesses from boarding planes to the U.S., sparking
protests in Seoul.

Tribunal organizers saw this as proof that both Washington
and Seoul fear the impact of the truth about the U.S.'s
colonial relationship with Korea.

The testimony of victims from North Korea was presented via
videotape.

Listening intently to the evidence were over two dozen
jurists from 17 countries. Twelve of these countries
participated in the 1950-1953 war against Korea. After four
sessions of deliberating over the testimony, this jury
unanimously found the U.S. government and military guilty of
19 counts of war crimes committed against Korea from 1945
until 2001.

KOREA TRUTH COMMISSION FORMED AFTER NO GUN RI
EXPOSE

The tribunal was the culmination of over a year's work by
the Korea Truth Commission, which had been formed after the
exposure of U.S. atrocities against Korean civilians at No
Gun Ri during the Korean War.

The KTC enlisted the aid in the U.S. of the International
Action Center and Veterans for Peace, and the cooperation of
many other organizations internationally. Yoomi Jeong of the
KTC and Sara Flounders of the IAC co-chaired the tribunal.

Former South Korean Supreme Court Justice Byun Jung Soo and
former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark--who drafted the
original indictment against the U.S. at the KTC request--
were the chief prosecutors.

Opening the prosecution, Byun noted that "U.S. crimes have
been suppressed and covered up" and should be revealed in
detail. People from North and South Korea have come together
in the tribunal movement, he said. They hope the tribunal
work will serve as an example for those who want the
reunification of the two Koreas.

Clark pointed out that the U.S. military went into Korea in
September 1945 to "stop Soviet troops and they divided the
Korean people in half, putting into power a military
government in the south that used brutal means to eliminate
every form of sympathy with Koreans in the north."

When war broke out in 1950, the U.S. declared North Korea
"Indian Territory," Clark said. This was a racist term
meaning a free-fire zone. The invading troops killed 3.5
million civilians in three years. Washington has kept up the
"torture of economic sanctions" since.

Clark explained the KTC's decision to focus not only on the
U.S. slaughter of civilians during the 1950-1953 Korean War,
but also on the periods that preceded and followed it:
first, the repression and murder of leftists from 1945 to
1950, and later the U.S. occupation of the south and
economic sanctions against the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea in the north following the 1953 truce.

1945-1950: CRIMES AGAINST PEACE

Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, legal representative of the
Partnership for Civil Justice in Washington, presented the
prosecution's brief for the 1945 to 1950 period. She
instructed the jury that during this period the U.S.
committed "crimes against peace," which were defined at
Nuremberg as the most serious of all war crimes.

As an example of the political persecution and outright
slaughter by the U.S.-backed military regime in the south
during this period, the tribunal heard the testimony of
witness Lee Do Young regarding the massacre of a quarter of
the population of Cheju Island after an uprising in the
spring of 1948. The island lies off the southern coast of
the Korean peninsula.

Lee said he was still frightened that the regime might
punish him for presenting his testimony. Indeed, Seoul
stopped some of the Cheju witnesses from coming to the
tribunal.

Lee's own father, who had worked for the rural government,
was killed later, in August 1950, for alleged participation
in the uprising on the island. His story brought up an
additional aspect--the U.S.-backed slaughter of hundreds of
thousands of leftists and activists in South Korea in the
summer of 1950.

Lee said he found one person who confessed to executing his
father, but that person's superior officer denied it.

WAR CRIMES IN SOUTH KOREA

Prosecutor Shim Jae Hwan spoke on behalf of those Koreans
killed by the U.S. military in South Korea. "The U.S.
brought in massive military force and killed innocent
people, brutalized women, young and old," Shim said. "The
U.S. must admit its crimes, apologize for them and
compensate the Korean people."

A half-dozen witnesses from South Korea then came forward to
describe U.S. atrocities. Their stories, which they had been
unable to tell for 50 years, caused many in the audience to
weep. Any criticism of the U.S. was interpreted as sympathy
with the DPRK and was punishable under the National Security
Law, so they had had to swallow their suffering in silence.

One witness told of a pond near his home village. When
drained, it yielded five truckloads of bodies. Outside the
auditorium were exhibits showing the location and details of
this and other atrocities. He said that some 3,500 people
were killed in his area.

Kang Soo Jo, who had been a young girl when she lost her
mother to the war, told of being shot in the leg. She showed
her mangled leg and foot to the audience. In fury she
demanded the U.S. either "return things to the way they were
before or give compensation for my suffering."

A man from a northern province of South Korea told of being
bombed non-stop by U.S. B-29s. "We raised South Korean flags
to say hello, but were surprised by bombs. I lost my mother
and father. Fifty-nine people were killed in that attack,"
he said, out of 450 people killed altogether in the village
and environs.

U.S. officials claimed what happened was an error, he said,
but then bombed again for 40 minutes a few days later.

An "error," was made, another survivor said, when U.S.
planes bombed and machine-gunned a boat carrying refugees
and flying the South Korean flag. Some "150 people were
killed in the bombing. Others were shot on the stairwell
trying to leave the boat."

That U.S. commanders considered these to be "errors" only
means that the attacks were meant for civilians who might be
sympathetic to the north. Either way, attacks on civilians
are war crimes.

WAR CRIMES IN NORTH KOREA

Attorney Lennox Hinds, the permanent representative to the
United Nations of the International Association of
Democratic Lawyers, led the prosecution's presentation on
civilian massacres in the north. He also raised the U.S. use
of biological and chemical warfare.

Hinds introduced into evidence a study made in 1952 by an
eight-member delegation from his organization at the
invitation of the DPRK. This IADL study showed evidence of
mass murders, massacres and other atrocities that violated
Article 16 and Article 6A of the Nuremburg Laws, said Hinds.

It also showed that the U.S. used weapons banned by the
articles of war, including bacteriological and chemical
weapons. U.S. planes had dropped canisters containing flies
and other insects infected with plague, cholera and other
epidemic diseases. A letter was then read to the tribunal
from Stephen Endicott, whose research into declassified
documents appears in the book "The United States and
Biological Warfare: Secrets from the Early Cold War and
Korea."

Expert witness Anne Katrin-Becker of Germany told of U.S.-
led massacres that killed one-fourth of the population of
Sinchon province--35,383 people--mostly elderly people, non-
combatant women and children. In October 1950, U.S. troops
forced 900 people into a building and burned it to death,
and in another area 1,000 women were drowned.

In a video the KTC made earlier this spring in North Korea,
survivors testified of U.S. atrocities carried out against
their villages and loved ones. The crimes were similar to
those in the south, but with no pretense of "error."

Former U.S. bomber pilot Charles Overby confessed to his own
role in dropping 40 bombs each run, each with 500 pounds of
TNT, on the population of North Korea.

1953-2001: CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY

The fourth prosecutor, Kim Seung Kyo, addressed crimes
against humanity committed from 1953 to 2001, including
political repression, military dictatorship, U.S. troop
occupation, the infamous National Security Law that led to
charges against a million South Koreans, the torture of
political prisoners, the massacre after the 1980 Kwangju
uprising, and U.S. Air Force bombing practice at Maehyang-
ri.

Ismael Guadalupe of the Committee for the Rescue and
Development of Vieques testified on the U.S. Navy's use of
his island as a bombing practice range and expressed his
solidarity with the Koreans at Maehyang-ri. The work of the
tribunal has furthered Korean-Puerto Rican solidarity.

Other presentations included IAC West Coast coordinator
Gloria La Riva on the struggle of the Daewoo workers, Sandra
Smith from Canada on the deprivations caused by sanctions,
and former German Admiral Elmar Schmaehling on U.S. plans
for a National Missile Defense.

The tribunal showed cooperation between North and South
Korean organizations, as well as solidarity of the U.S. anti-
war movement with the Korean Truth Commission, which is
rooted in mass organizations in South Korea.

KTC Secretary General Rev. Kiyul Chung, Brian Willson of
Veterans for Peace and Brian Becker of the IAC ended the
presentations with political analyses of the tribunal and a
call for continued activity by all the participants to help
get U.S. troops out of Korea and allow the Koreans to
reunify their country.

*********

AFTER HEARING THE EVIDENCE, INTERNATIONAL PANEL OF
JURISTS SAYS "GUILTY"

FINAL JUDGMENT

The Members of the Korea International War Crimes Tribunal,
meeting in New York, having considered the Indictment for
Offenses Committed by the Government of the United States of
America Against the People of Korea, 1945-2001, which
charges all U.S. Presidents, all Secretaries of State, all
Secretaries of Defense, all Secretaries of the armed
services, all Chiefs of Staff, all heads of the Central
Intelligence Agency and other U.S. foreign intelligence
agencies, all Directors of the National Security Agency, all
National Security Advisors, all U.S. military commanders in
Korea and commanders of units which participated in war
crimes, over the period from 1945 to the present, with
nineteen separate War Crimes, Crimes Against Peace and
Crimes Against Humanity in violation of the Charter of the
United Nations, the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal, the
Hague Regulations of 1907, the Geneva Protocol of 1925, the
1929 and 1949 Geneva Conventions, the Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 1948,
other international agreements and customary international
law, the laws of the United States, the laws of Korea and
the laws of other nations that have been forced to provide
bases, support and military personnel for United States
actions against Korea;

having the right and obligation as citizens of the world to
sit in judgment regarding violations of international
humanitarian law;

having heard the testimony from various hearings of the
Korea Truth Commission held over the past year and having
received evidence from various other Commission hearings
which recite the evidence there gathered;

having been provided with documentary evidence, eyewitness
testimonies, photos, videotapes, special reports, expert
analyses and summaries of evidence available to the Korea
Truth Commission;

having access to all evidence, knowledge and expert opinion
in the Commission files or available to the Commission
staff;

having considered the Report from the Korean Truth
Commission (South) on U.S. War Crimes During the Korean War,
providing eyewitness accounts by survi vors of massacres of
civilians in farming villages in southern Korea by U.S.
military forces during the 1950-53 war;

having considered the Report from the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea (DPRK) on U.S. War Crimes During the
Korean War, prepared by the Investigation Committee of the
National Front for Democratic Reunification, providing
details on war crimes and crimes against humanity committed
in the north by the U.S. from June to December 1950;

having been provided by the Commission, or otherwise
obtained, various books, articles and other written
materials on various aspects of events and conditions in
Korea, and in the military and arms establishments;

having heard the presentations of the Korea Truth Commission
in public hearing on June 23, 2001, and the testimony,
evidence and summaries there presented;

having considered the testimonies of those Koreans denied
visas to personally attend the hearings by the governments
of the U.S. and the Republic of Korea (ROK), but presented
in the form of videotaped interviews and documents;

having been informed that the Korea Truth Commission gave
ample opportunity to U.S. government defendants to attend
and present evidence in their defense, which up to the
moment of this verdict they have been unable or unwilling to
do;

and having met, considered and deliberated with each other
and with Commission staff and having considered all the
evidence that is relevant to the nineteen charges of
criminal conduct alleged in the Initial Complaint, make the
following findings:

FINDINGS:

The Members of the International War Crimes Tribunal find
the accused Guilty on the basis of the evidence against
them: each of the nineteen separate crimes alleged in the
Initial Complaint has been established to have been
committed beyond a reasonable doubt. The Members find these
crimes to have occurred during three main periods in the
U.S. intervention in and occupation of Korea.

The best-known period is from June 25, 1950, until July 27,
1953, the "Korean War," when over 4.6 million Koreans
perished, according to conservative Western estimates,
including 3 million civilians in the north and 500,000
civilians in the south. The evidence of U.S. war crimes
presented to this Tribunal included eyewitness testimony and
documentary accounts of massacres of thousands of civilians
in southern Korea by U.S. military forces during the war.
Abundant evidence was also presented concerning criminal and
even genocidal U.S. conduct in northern Korea, including the
systematic leveling of most buildings and dwellings by U.S.
artillery and aerial bombardment; widespread atrocities
committed by U.S. and R.O.K. forces against civilians and
prisoners of war; the deliberate destruction of facilities
essential to civilian life and economic production; and the
use of illegal weapons and biological and chemical warfare
by the U.S. against the people and the environment of
northern Korea. Documentary and eyewitness evidence was also
presented showing gross and systematic violence committed
against women in northern and southern Korea, characterized
by mass rapes, sexual assaults and murders.

Less known but of crucial importance in understanding the
war period is the preceding five years, from the landing of
U.S. troops in Korea on September 8, 1945, to the outbreak
of the war. The Members of the Tribunal examined extensive
evidence of U.S. crimes against peace and crimes against
humanity in this period. The Members conclude that the U.S.
government acted to divide Korea against the will of the
vast majority of the people, limit its sovereignty, create a
police state in southern Korea using many former
collaborators with Japanese rule, and provoke tension and
threats between southern and northern Korea, opposing and
disrupting any plans for peaceful reunification. In this
period the U.S. trained, directed and supported the ROK in
systematic murder, imprisonment, torture, surveillance,
harassment and violations of human rights of hundreds of
thousands of people, especially of those individuals or
groups considered nationalists, leftists, peasants seeking
land reform, union organizers and/or those sympathetic to
the north.

The Members find that in the period from July 1953 to the
present, the U.S. has continued to maintain a powerful
military force in southern Korea, backed by nuclear weapons,
in violation of international law and intended to obstruct
the will of the Korean people for reunification. Military
occupation has been accompanied by the organized sexual
exploitation of Korean women, frequently leading to violence
and even murder of women by U.S. soldiers who have felt
above the law. U.S.-imposed economic sanctions have
impoverished and debilitated the people of northern Korea,
leading to a reduction of life expectancy, widespread
malnutrition and even starvation in a country that once
exported food. The refusal of the U.S. government to grant
visas to a delegation from the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea who planned to attend this Tribunal only confirms
the criminal intent of the defendants to isolate those whom
they have abused to prevent them from telling their story to
the world.

In all these 55 years, the U.S. government has
systematically manipulated, controlled, directed,
misinformed and restricted press and media coverage to
obtain consistent support for its military intervention,
occupation and crimes against the people of Korea. It has
also inculcated racist attitudes within the U.S. troops and
general population that prepared them to commit and/or
accept atrocities and genocidal policies against the Korean
people.

It has violated the Constitution of the United States, the
delegation of powers over war and the military, the Bill of
Rights, the UN Charter, international law and the laws of
the ROK, DPRK, People's Republic of China, Japan and many
others, in its lawless determination to exercise its will
over the Korean peninsula.

The Members of the Korea International War Crimes Tribunal
hold the United States government and its leaders
accountable for these criminal acts and condemn those found
guilty in the strongest possible terms.

RECOMMENDATIONS:

The Members call for the immediate end of U.S. occupation of
all Korean territory, the removal of all U.S. bases, forces
and materiel, including land mines, from the region, the
rectification of environmental damage, and the cessation of
overt and covert operations against northern Korea.

The Members urge the immediate revocation of all embargoes,
sanctions and penalties against northern Korea because they
constitute a continuing crime against humanity.

The Members call for emergency funds to be provided to the
people of northern Korea through the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea to feed the hungry and care for the sick,
whose suffering is a direct result of U.S. policies.

The Members call for reparations to be paid by the U.S.
government to all of Korea to compensate for the damage
inflicted by 55 years of violence and economic warfare.

The Members further call for an immediate end to all
interference by the U.S. aimed at preventing the people of
Korea from reunifying as they choose.

The Members call for the U.S. government to make full
disclosure of all information about U.S. crimes and wrongful
acts committed in Korea since September 7, 1945.

The Members urge the Commission to provide for the permanent
preservation of the reports, evidence and materials gathered
to make them available to others, and to seek ways to
provide the widest possible distribution of the truth about
U.S. crimes in Korea.

We urge all people of the world to act on recommendations
developed by the Commission to hold power accountable and to
secure social justice on which lasting peace must be based.

Done in New York this 23rd day of June, 2001

*******

THE PROSECUTORS

Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney General; Joint Chief
Prosecutor for Tribunal

Byun Jung Soo, former Korea Supreme Court Justice; Joint
Chief Prosecutor for Tribunal

Lennox Hinds, U.S., UN Permanent Representative,
International Association of Democratic Lawyers

Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, U.S., Legal Representative,
Partnership for Civil Justice

Shim Jae Hwan, South Korean Legal Team for the Korea Truth
Commission

Kim Seung Kyo, South Korean Legal Team for the Korea Truth
Commission

THE CHIEF JURISTS

Jitendra Sharma, India, former Supreme Court Justice

Brian Willson, U.S., lawyer and Vietnam Veteran

THE JURISTS

Malcolm Cannon, Australia, lifelong peace and anti-war
activist

Miche Doumen, Belgium, spokesperson for Solidarity
International

Sandra Smith, Canada, People's Front

Judi Cheng, Chinese American activist; graduate student
at Hunter College School for Health Science

Gustavo Torrez, Colombia, human rights activist and
Executive Director, Casa de Maryland

Guy Dupre, France, President, International Liaison
Committee for Peace and Reunification of Korea

Hugo Bernard, France, former Senator, French National
Assembly

Wolfgang Richter, Germany, President of the Society for
the Protection of Civil Rights and Human Dignity, e.v. GBM

Benjamin Dupuy, Haiti, former Haitian Ambassador to U.S. &
UN

Hari P. Sharma, India, Professor Emeritus of Sociology
at Simon Fraser University

Oh Jong Ryul, Korea, National President, National Alliance
for Democracy and Reunification of Korea (prevented from
leaving South Korea by Seoul government)

Yun Young Moo, Korea, former Korean Independence fighter;
lifelong reunification activist

Catherine Dujon, Luxemburg, International Section,
Anti-Imperialist League

Ben Fama, Netherlands, son of Dutch
Korean War veteran who opposed the war

Margaret Sanner, Norway, Women's Front of Norway

Edre Olalia, Philippines, Legal Consultant to the National
Democratic Front of the Philippines Negotiating Panel

Arnedo Valera, Philippines, Legal Consultant to the National
Democratic Front of the Philippines Negotiating Panel

Berta Joubert-Ceci, Puerto Rico, Vieques activist;
National People's Campaign

Jorge Farinacci, Puerto Rico, Senior Legal Council to the
Puerto Rican labor movement

Gail Coulson, South Africa, Executive Secretary, Asia
Pacific Desk, General Board of Global Ministries, UMC

Dundak Gurses, Turkey, lawyer, International Association
of People's Lawyers

Charles Overby, U.S., professor, University of Ohio; author;
retired U.S. Air Force pilot

Deirdre Griswold, U.S., Editor, Workers World newspaper;
Secretariat member of 1967 Bertrand Russell
International War Crimes Tribunal

Felton May, U.S., Resident Bishop at Baltimore-Washington
Conference of United Methodist Church

Karen Talbot, U.S., Journalist; President, International
Center
for Peace and Justice

Wilson Powell, U.S. Korean War veteran

Milos Raickovich, Yugoslavia, internationally renowned
composer




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