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To: pallmer who wrote (4351)12/27/2002 11:18:12 AM
From: pallmer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 29597
 
-- UN Refugee Chief Says Iraq War Would Be Disaster --

By Huda Majeed Saleh

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - War with Iraq, with biological or
chemical agents possibly unleashed, will be a human calamity,
the U.N. refugee chief warned -- exactly a month before a final
arms inspectors' report might trigger a conflict.

"Believe me, it will be a disaster from a humanitarian
perspective," Ruud Lubbers, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said in a BBC interview.

He raised the spectre that bacteriological or chemical
weapons -- for evidence of which U.N. inspectors are currently
scouring Iraq -- could be used in a conflict.

He urged the international community to prevent war, and
not to fight unless Iraqi President Saddam Hussein could not be
disarmed if he still has such weapons, which Saddam denies.

"Only, only, when Saddam Hussein does not comply with both
the inspections and the consequences of the inspections...then
there can be reason for a military intervention," said Lubbers.

Inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency and
a U.N. mission toured the Modern Company for Brewery and other
sites on Friday as the mission to scour Iraq for traces of
atomic, biological or chemical weapons entered its second
month.

Iraq said on Thursday the experts had found no evidence of
banned weapons. The inspectors are now starting to interview
scientists who worked on now abandoned weapons programs.

The 100-plus inspectors -- whose predecessors left the
country in 1998 after Baghdad halted cooperation -- are due to
issue their next report on January 9 and a final one on January
27, with speculation growing this could spark war.

A U.N. Security Council resolution last month gave Iraq a
last chance to come clean on its weapons programs -- as
required by resolutions stemming back to the 1991 Gulf War --
or face consequences, which is diplomatic speak for possible
war.

World oil prices raced higher again on Friday as a
Venezuelan strike lingered, with fears of a U.S. attack on Iraq
in the New Year also helping sustain crude prices, now $10 a
barrel higher than at the start of 2002.

America, still embroiled in Afghanistan and building up
forces in the Gulf, faced a grave war of words on a new front
as North Korea accused it of rushing into an "extremely
dangerous confrontation" over the communist state's nuclear
plans.

Keen to win over allies lukewarm about a possible war with
Iraq, Washington sent two senior officials for talks in Turkey
but the key NATO member said it wanted to see the results of
the weapons inspectors' mission before promising any support.

"Turkey will not finalize its position until the U.N.
Security Council's decision," said government leader Tayyip
Erdogan.

"The report by the U.N. inspectors about weapons of mass
destruction has not been submitted yet."

Iraq says the United States is planning to attack it
regardless of the findings of the weapons inspectors.



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companies around the world.

27-Dec-2002 16:15:30 GMT
Source RTRS - Reuters News