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Politics : DON'T START THE WAR -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: E. T. who wrote (15752)3/5/2003 11:59:00 AM
From: E. T.  Respond to of 25898
 
Saddam Stepping Down A Dangerous Precedent: Analysts

islam-online.net
Only the Iraqi people have the right to change their own leader
By Hamdi Al Husseini, IOL Egypt Correspondent

CAIRO, March 5 (IslamOnline.net) – The UAE's initiative asking Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to step down to evade a U.S. war on his country, received a mixed response among some Arab intellectuals and politicians speaking to IslamOnline.net.

Some of them stressed that Saddam's stepping down will be the first act of its kind and will be followed by other demands for other leaders to step down while others felt that this will open the way towards a new era of democracy in Iraq.

"It is dangerous to discuss or even propose initiatives such as this in conferences or summits despite what people think about it,” Ahmad Bin Hali, the Assistant Secretary General of the Arab League told IslamOnline.net on Tuesday, March 4.

“These are things that only the Iraqi people can decide upon or even discuss. But for a foreign power to come and demand this, is unacceptable and goes against the official Arab policies," he added.

Hali warned that to agree on the initiative will make it possible for this to repeat itself in any other Arab country whose interests and stances are opposing any foreign power.

He said that because of this, the general secretariat of the Arab League Amr Mussa was keen on not to discuss the UAE initiative during the last Sharm El-Sheikh Summit to allow the summit to succeed.

Any Arab who supports the UAE initiative is either "an absolute follower to Washington who is prepared to carry out any order coming from the U.S. even if it wasn’t legitimate or a person who is unaware of the consequences of such a move," said Dr. Ahmad Thabet, Political Science professor at Cairo University.

the Iraqi crisis has nothing to do with Saddam stepping down, he said, adding that Washington burst this balloon to create earthquakes amidst the Arab governments to weaken their self confidence in addition to starting a psychological warfare.

The problem has nothing to do with the Iraqi President as a person, rather it the existence of a strong united Iraq which is not what the American administration or Israel wants, he added.

Meanwhile, Jameela Ali Raja, the media consultant in the Yemeni embassy in Cairo said that this initiative is a dangerous precedent in our Arab World.

“Whatever the opposition may be to the regime of Saddam Hussein, it is not the right of a foreign power to ask for him to step down because this is a blatant breach of the soveriengty of countries and an aggression on the basic principles of the United Nations as well as a call for chaos in the world," she said.

She added that the Iraqi people must continue to be the only side with the power to exercise this right because "if we agree to this American wish, how do we know that the remaining Arab regimes will be spared from the same fate?"

"Who gave the United States this right? Who gave some of the Arab countries the legitimacy to adopt this stance? What about after Saddam leaves? Is it true that after he steps down the U.S. will cancel its plans to swallow the region's wealth and resources and to spread its control over the entire region?" she asked.

A Starting Point

Meanwhile, Dr. Ibrahim Al Anani, the international law professor in the Faculty of Law in Ain Shams University in Egypt said that the current Iraqi regime is the reason behind much of the suffering the Iraqi people are going through during the current times and that his departure would be good.

Al Anani said that the crisis is much bigger than Saddam stepping down, instead it is strongly related to the American own agenda in the Arab region as well as the rest of the world.

Washington choose Iraq to be a starting point of invasion and it will be followed by other steps, especially that the U.S. found in Iraq a chance to try out regime changing and replacing it with a regime allying the U.S. to establish its interests and the interests of Israel, he added.

He added that this is not acceptable by international law which refuses the interference of any country in the change of another country's ruling regime, whether directly by force or indirectly.

Hazem Al Youseffi, the representative of the National Kurdistan Union in Iraq, said that the crisis is in the presence of Saddam Hussein and that once he is removed from power, Iraq will start a new era towards progress under a true democratic rule based on national patriotic elements.

He added that the American excuse to launch a war on Iraq will be removed as soon as Saddam steps down and that the Kurds are against any foreign aggression, whether from the United States or any other force.



To: E. T. who wrote (15752)3/5/2003 1:37:48 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25898
 
Prior to that suicide bombing, this happened:

UN dismayed by indiscriminate shooting of schoolgirl by Israeli forces

United Nations, press release, 3 March 2003

After a 12-year-old girl was shot in the head while sitting at her desk in a
United Nations school in the Palestinian territory, a top UN relief official in
the region has expressed dismay at the Israeli military's indiscriminate
use of force in civilian areas.

Peter Hansen, Commissioner-General of the UN Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), visited the girl
and her family yesterday at the intensive care unit of Shifa Hospital in
Gaza City where she is receiving treatment.

UNRWA said the girl was attending an Agency-run school when she was
wounded by retaliatory fire from Israeli forces after an Israeli tank was
fired upon near the Khan Younis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip.

electronicintifada.net



To: E. T. who wrote (15752)3/5/2003 1:39:38 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25898
 
Prior to that suicide bombing, this happened:

Khan Younis: Israeli forces kill two Palestinians, wound 39, demolish dozens of homes

PCHR, press release, 2 March 2003

Last night, Israeli occupying forces, reinforced with heavy military vehicles and
helicopters and covered by intense shelling, thrust into Khan Younis refugee camp
and al-Nimsawi neighborhood in the western part of the town.

Khan Younis (Photo: Ronald de Hommel, 2002)

The Israeli invasion continued until 07:00 on Sunday, 2 March 2003, and left dead
two Palestinians, including a civilian who was killed at home. 39 were injured,
including 7 inside the Nasser Hospital.

In addition, Israeli forces destroyed an apartment building located in a densely
populated area, which rendered dozens of neighboring houses destroyed. They
also bulldozed 5 other houses. In an aggression against medical and educational
institutions, the Israeli army demolished large parts of the walls surrounding
Nasser Hospital and an UNRWA preparatory school.

According to PCHR's investigation and eyewitness reports, at approximately
midnight, around 30 Israeli heavy military vehicles, accompanied by military
bulldozers, moved approximately 400m into Khan Younis refugee camp. At the
same time a number of other Israeli forces moved into al-Nimsawi neighborhood in
the west of Khan Younis. Israeli heavy military vehicles and helicopters shelled the
two areas intensely.

In Khan Younis refugee camp, Israeli forces surrounded a 7-storey apartment
building, in which 7 families, counting 54 people, live. The house is owned by Fayez
'Ouda Hussein Abu 'Aker. They called through loudspeakers on residents of the
house to get out and used 4 of them as human shields while searching the house.

Israeli forces also ordered the 4 persons to tell residents of neighboring houses to
get out. Then, Israeli soldiers planted explosives in the house and destroyed it,
including some commercial stores that contained foodstuffs for approximately
10,000 US$. As a result of the blast, dozens of neighboring houses were totally or
partially destroyed, and the eastern façade of a mosque was destroyed. Israeli
military bulldozers also demolished two houses.

It is worth noting that early this morning, PCHR submitted an appeal through
Tamim Younis, a lawyer working in Israel, to the Israeli Supreme Court to stop
demolishing Abu 'Aker's house, but the family was not granted enough space of
time and the house was destroyed before the court takes a decision.

In al-Nimsawi neighborhood, Israeli heavy military vehicles moved from "Neve
Dekalim" settlement, west of Khan Younis, towards Nasser Hospital in the north of
the neighborhood.

They surrounded the hospital and military bulldozers demolished large parts of its
fence. Also in the same area, Israeli military bulldozers demolished large parts of
the fence surrounding an UNRWA preparatory school. They then demolished 3
houses, two of which were demolished totally. The bulldozer started demolishing
one of these houses while its residents were still inside.

A number of Palestinian gunmen confronted the Israeli army during the incursion,
which continued until 07:00 on Sunday, 2 March 2003. A gunman, Mohammed
Mar'ei 'Abdul Hadi, 25, was killed by a live bullet in the chest.

As a result of the Israeli indiscriminate shelling, a Palestinian civilian, 'Abed Rabbu
D'ib 'Abed Rabbu, 52, was injured by shrapnel in the chest and back. He bled to
death. According to eyewitnesses, 4 artillery shells hit his bedroom in a house in
al-Nimsawi neighborhood, approximately 100m away from Nasser Hospital.

Palestinian medical personnel were not able to reach the area due to the Israeli
intense shelling and because the Israeli soldiers denied them access to the
affected house. 'Abed Rabbu bled to death. His body was evacuated to hospital
only at approximately 07:00, after the Israeli forces had withdrawn from the area.

Also as a result of the Israeli indiscriminate shelling and gunfire, 39 Palestinians,
mostly civilians, including 10 children, were wounded. Seven of those were
wounded inside Nasser Hospital, including two staff members: Mahmoud
Mohammed al-Bardawil, 35, a nurse; and Ahmed Salman al-Faqa'awi, a worker.

PCHR strongly condemns this serious escalation in the violence perpetrated by the
Israeli occupying forces against Palestinian civilians. PCHR is deeply concerned
about the destruction carried out by Israeli forces in Palestinian areas close to
Israeli settlements, in an attempt to widen the security zones and annex the land to
the settlements.

PCHR believes that the failure of the international community to take steps in order
to stop the numerous grave breaches of international humanitarian law,
perpetrated by the Israeli military, encourages Israel to commit more hideous
attacks. PCHR calls upon the international community to put an end to its silence
and immediately intervene to stop these grave breaches. PCHR reminds the High
Contracting Parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 of their obligations
under the Convention to ensure respect for the Convention, and take effective steps
to stop the persistent, flagrant violations of the Convention by the Israeli occupying
forces.

electronicintifada.net