Open Letter from Defense of Canadian Liberty Committee:
To: Prime Minister Chrétien, and every other Member of Parliament. > > 1. Will you support Parliamentary Reform such as to eliminate the unilateral > power of the Prime Minister and Cabinet? > > 2. And if so, what steps have you already taken and are you now taking as > an MP in this direction? > > 3. And what is your Party's official line on this point? > > On March 24 1999 Canada began bombing Yugoslavia contrary to the Charters > of the United Nations and of NATO. In Question Period of March 24,1999, > our Defence Minister advised you in Parliament that already there were > CF-18's of the Canadian Armed Forces participating in air actions over > Yugoslavia.(Commons Debates, March 24,1999, page 13443). Later on the same > day, each party put forward one representative to give its party's > position on the bombing. No party opposed the bombings. The Bloq Quebecois > said they supported the bombing "With Pleasure". I understand that some > aspect of the issue of Yugoslavia had been discussed in Parliament in > October of 1988, but there has been no actual debate and no vote. NO ONE > REPRESENTED THE MAJORITY OF CANADIANS ON THIS ISSUE. Contrary to the > propaganda media reports, two national call -in shows indicate close to > 80% of Canadians OPPOSE this bombing. But even if they supported it, you > are elected to uphold the law and to promote peace, not war. > > On March 24, 1999, only the Conservative Party representative honestly > portrayed what you as Parliamentarians were acceding to. Unfortunately, > that honest recognition still failed to propel the Conservative Party to > the right position, an absolute opposition to the bombing. Mr David Price > P.C. said: "Canada and the NATO alliance have just gone to war with a > sovereign state - Yugoslavia - over a civil war with the ethnic Albanians > of Kosovo. We have done this without a declaration of war and without the > support of the United Nations.... We as a country and an alliance may have > broken the codes of international law.... NATO is now engaged in an > offensive military operation outside of its own territory and we are > quickly subscribing to the view of NATO as a global policeman. Let there > be no mistake, we have just launched an air attack with our allies on a > sovereign state.... The saddest thing for Canadians and the Parliamentary > process is that this country has slipped into war without briefing its > people through Parliament and through meaningful debate." (Commons > Debates, March 24, 1999, page 13447) > > And now our Prime Minister tells us there are Canadian ground troops in > Yugoslavia. > > For something so grave as bombing a sovereign nation contrary to NATO and > United Nations Charters, a direction for Canada that is 180 degrees > contrary to our respected peacekeeping role, there should have been > Parliamentary revolt. > > 4. Why did you personally fail to break from your own caucus on March 24, > 1999 on the issue of bombing Kosovo? > > 5. Why did you personally fail to stand on the Canadian principle of PEACE > and the Respect for INTERNATIONAL LAW? > > Your failure leaves you with an indelible stain on your record. You are > guilty of the deaths of innocent people including children, and > impoverishment of the survivors. You have caused the ruination of the > environment in that region leaving a legacy of cancer for the unborn. Your > failure has driven out Serbs as well as Albanians and others fleeing the > bombs. Your failure is causing the destruction of that land, leaving a > legacy of hopeless ruination for those peoples. Tomorrow you will be > asking me to pay taxes to rebuild the infrastructure you have destroyed > using my taxes, but my future taxes in fact will go to pay the foreign > creditors, not to the benefit of the people. > > 6. Have you read the Rambouillet Dictate? Do you understand it? > > --Chapter 4a Article 1 required Kosovo to submit to economic principles > comparable to the Multilateral Agreement on Investments. > > --Chapter 5, Article V and Chapter 7, Article XV gave dictatorial powers > to the Chief of the Implementation Mission (to be appointed by the > European countries) and to the NATO commander, (almost certainly to be > from the US)- the right to overturn elections, shut down organizations and > media, and overrule any decisions made by the Kosovar, Serbian or federal > governments regarding Kosovo. > > --Chapter 8, Article 1, Section 3 would have terminated Yugoslav > sovereignty over the region once the agreement was signed. > > Appendix B includes provisions that eradicate the sovereign power of the > territory of Yugoslavia, and required Yugoslavia to allow NATO unfettered > access to all of its territory with all costs to be borne by the > territory. It gave the NATO colonizers immunity from being tried by the > courts of Yugoslavia as a whole even if the colonizers committed rape, or > murder . > > --Section 6a: NATO shall be immune from all legal process, whether civil, > administrative, or criminal. > > --Section 6b: NATO personnel, under all circumstances and at all times, > shall be immune from the Parties' jurisdiction in respect of any civil, > administrative, criminal or disciplinary offenses which may be committed > by them in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. > > --Section 7: NATO personnel shall be immune from any form of arrest, > investigation, or detention by the authorities in the Federal Republic of > Yugoslavia. > > --Section 8: NATO personnel shall enjoy, together with their vehicles, > vessels, aircraft, and equipment free and unrestricted passage and > unimpeded access throughout the FRY including associated airspace and > territorial waters. This shall include, but not be limited to the right of > bivouac, manoeuver, billet and utilisation of any areas or facilities as > required for support, training, and operations. > > --Section 11: NATO is granted the use of airports, roads, rails, and ports > without payment of fees, duties, dues, tolls or charges occasioned by mere > use. > > --Section 15: The Yugoslav and Kosovo governments shall upon simple > request grant all telecommunication services, including broadcast > services, needed for the Operation, as determined by NATO. This shall > include the right to utilize such means and services as required to assure > full ability to communicate and the right to use all of the > electromagnetic spectrum for this purpose free of costs. > > --Section 22: NATO may, in the conduct of the Operation, have need to make > improvements or modifications to certain infrastructure in the FRY, such > as roads, bridges, tunnels, buildings, and utility systems. > > !!The Rambouillet Accord would have turned Kosovo into a colony of the > United States as the dominant power of NATO!! > > 7. What reading have you personally done to understand the economic > restructuring occurring in the world? > > 8. Do you personally submit to what is euphemistically called Globalization? > > Michel Chossudovsky, Economist, University of Ottawa, explains the > economic destruction of Yugoslavia as a result of neoclassical economics > (globalization). In The GLobalization of Poverty (available in bookstores) > he says: The ruin of an economic system, including the takeover of > productive assets, the extension of markets and the scramble for territory > in the Balkans constitute the real cause of conflict. (page 259). Macro > economic restructuring applied in Yugoslavia under the neoliberal agenda > had unequivocally contributed to the destruction of an entire country. Yet > since the outset of war in 1991, the central role of macroeconomic reform > had been carefully overlooked and denied by the global media. (Page > 258-259)... The social and political impact of economic restructuring in > Yugoslavia had been carefully erased from our social consciousness and > collective understanding of what actually happened. Cultural, ethnic and > religious divisions were highlighted, presented dogmatically as the sole > cause of the crisis when in reality they were the consequences of a much > deeper process of economic and political fracturing.... The unity, > solidarity, and identity of the Southern Slavs have their foundation in > history, yet this identity had been thwarted, manipulated and > destroyed.... What is at stake in Yugoslavia are the lives of millions of > people. Macroeconomic reform destroys their livelihood and derogates their > right to work, their food and shelter, their culture and national > identity. Borders are redefined, the entire legal system is overhauled, > the financial and banking system is dismantled, social programmes and > institutions are torn down.... Yugoslavia is a mirror of similar economic > restructuring programmes in the US, Canada and Western Europe. (Page 259) > > >From 1960 to 1980 in Yugoslavia the growth of GDP was on average 6.1% per > annum, there was free medical care with one doctor per 550 population, the > literacy rate was of the order of 91% and life expectancy was 72 years. > (Page 259) > > The first phase of macroeconomic reform initiated in Yugoslavia in 1980 > shortly after the death of Marshal Tito wreaked economic and political > havoc. ... Slower growth, the accumulation of foreign debt, especially the > cost of servicing it, and devaluation led to a fall in the standard of > living of the average Yugoslav... The economic crisis threatened political > stability and aggravated ethnic tensions... These reforms and debt > restructuring agreements with the official and commercial creditors > weakened the federal state creating political divisions between Belgrade > and the republics and autonomous provinces. (Page 244) > > Washington played a role in the strategic restructuring. A 1984 US > National Security Decision Directive labelled SECRET SENSITIVE entitled > United States Policy Towards Yugoslavia was declassified in 1990. The > objectives outlined in the letter included expanded efforts to promote a > quiet revolution to overthrow Communist governments and parties while > reintegrating the countries of Eastern Europe into a market-oriented > economy away from market socialism. (Page 240) > > In 1983 the second stabilization package applied with the support of the > IMF resulted in massive inflation. Import liberalization and the freeze on > credit caused an unprecedented collapse of investment. Industrial > production that had averaged 7.1% per annum from 1966- 79 plummeted to > 2.8% after the initial phase of macro- economic reform in the 1980 - 87 > period. It plunged to zero in 1987- 88 and to minus 10.6% in 1990.(Page 245) > > In 1989 just prior to the fall of the Berlin Wall, US President George > Bush promised the Federal premier of Yugoslavia a financial aid package in > exchange for sweeping economic reforms including a new devalued currency, > the freeze of wages, the curtailment of government expenditure and the > abrogation of the socially owned enterprises under self management. (Page > 245). Much of the legislation for this had already been put in place by > the Belgrade nomenclature with the assistance of the Western advisors. > (Page 246) > > This economic package was launched in 1990, under an International > Monetary Fund Stand-by Arrangement and a World Bank Structural Adjustment > Loan. Budget cut requirements were imposed by the terms of this loan > requiring the redirection of federal revenues towards debt servicing. This > meant cuts to the Transfer payments by Belgrade to the governments of the > republics and autonomous provinces , which in turn fueled the process of > political balkanization and secessionism. In 1990 the government of Serbia > rejected this austerity program outright leading to a walk-out protest of > some 650,000 Serbian workers directed against the federal government. The > trade union movement was united in this struggle- workers resistance > crossed ethnic lines as Serbs, Croats, Bosnians and Slovenians mobilised > shoulder to shoulder with their fellow workers. (Page 246) > > In 1990 the foreign creditors were in control of monetary policy in > Yugoslavia. The agreement signed with the IMF prevented the federal > government from having access to credit from its own Central Bank (the > National Bank of Yugoslavia). This paralysed the budgetary process and > crippled the ability of the federal state to finance its economic and > social programmes. Investment by the socially owned enterprises further > collapsed. (Page 246)... The 1990 IMF agreement required expenditure cuts > of 5% of GDP. Inflation had already eroded earnings. Wages were frozen at > their mid November 1989 level. Prices continued to rise unabated. Real > wages collapsed by 41% in the first 6 months of 1990. Inflation in 1990 > was over 70%. In January 1991 the dinar was devalued another 30%. Prices > increased again. Inflation soared from 140% in 1991 to 937 % in 1992 to > 1,134 % in 1993. (Page 246) The freeze of all transfer payments to the > republics created a situation of de facto secession. The IMF-induced > budgetary crisis had engineered the collapse of the federal fiscal > structure prior to the formal declaration of secession by Croatia and > Slovenia in 1991. (Page 247) > > 9. Did you consider any of this economic history before you acceded to > Canada's participation in the violation of the charters of the United > Nations and NATO? > > 10. Did you consider any of the information available about the role of > organized crime in Kosovo, and in particular the laundering of drug money > before you acceded to Canada's participation in the violation of the > charters of the United Nations and NATO? > > In Kosovo "Freedom Fighters" Financed By Organized Crime, an article > released April 7th 1999, Michel Chossudovsky identifies these connections. > At page 1 he said: The KLA is sustained by organized crime with the tacit > approval of the United States and its allies....The multibillion dollar > Balkans narcotics trade has played a crucial role in "financing of the > conflict" in Kosovo in accordance with Western economic, strategic and > military objectives. Amply documented by European police files, > acknowledged by numerous studies, the links of the Kosovo Liberation Army > (KLA) to criminal syndicates in Albania, Turkey, and the European Union > have been known to Western governments and intelligence agencies since the > mid-1990's. At page 3, Chossudovsky said: Industry and agriculture were > spearheaded into bankruptcy following the IMF's lethal economic medicine > imposed on Belgrade in 1990. The embargo was imposed on Yugoslavia. Ethnic > Albanians and Serbs were driven into abysmal poverty. Economic collapse > created an environment which fostered the progress of illicit trade. > Western sources identified a staggering 70% unemployment rate. Poverty and > unemployment exacerbated simmering ethnic tensions....Young impoverished > teens were drafted into the KLA... In Albania the free market reforms > created conditions which favoured the criminalization of State > institutions.... Drug barons in Kosovo, Albania and Macedonia (with links > to the Italian mafia) had become the new economic elites, often associated > with Western business interests....Large amounts of narco -dollars had > been recycled into the privatisation programmes leading to the acquisition > of State assets by the mafias.... Intelligence agents are convinced the > chain of command in the rackets goes all the way to the top and have had > no hesitation in naming ministers in their reports. At page 5 > Chossudovsky summarizes: The fate of Kosovo had already been carefully > laid out prior to the signing of the 1995 Dayton agreement. NATO had > entered an unwholesome "marriage of convenience" with the mafia. "Freedom > fighters" were put in place, the narcotics trade enabled Washington and > Bonn to "finance the Kosovo Conflict" with the ultimate objective of > destabilising the Belgrade government and fully recolonising the Balkans. > The destruction of an entire country is the outcome. Western governments > which participated in the NATO operation bear a heavy burden of > responsibility in the deaths of civilians, the impoverishment of both the > ethnic Albanian and Serbian populations and the plight of those who were > brutally uprooted from towns and villages as a result of the bombings. > Chossudovsky's articles are on many websites including > www.canadianliberty.bc.ca > > 11. What concrete effective role are you playing to get Canada out of this > war and into the forum of the United Nations. > > 12. Please justify your willingness to violate international law. > > > > > > >
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