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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: maceng2 who wrote (101893)6/18/2003 6:36:01 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Stop bleating about WMD and listen to how Nasir's mother was executed in a pit

Ann Clwyd - LONDON TIMES
The author is an MP and special envoy on human rights in Iraq to the Prime Minister.

I never imagined when I wrote on this page in March about the plastic shredder used to kill in one of Saddam?s prisons that I would, some months later, read in a chillingly meticulous record book that one of the methods of execution was ?mincing?.

I had just finished a press conference in the still-shabby British Embassy in Baghdad, when a reporter from Fox TV told me that he had been handed for safekeeping by an Iraqi a 56-page record book from the notorious Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad. Later, at the Sheridan hotel, we scanned the horrific record of Saddam?s sadism and brutality.

The prison itself, really a vast concentration camp, is on the edge of a small town. Market traders sell fresh fruit and vegetables, children play ball in the dusty streets. The normality of life outside this ghastly place, where so many lives came to an end, is itself horrible, since many of the people probably would have worked in the prison. I walked around talking to groups of young boys messing around on their bikes. Two of them, not more than 16 years old, told me they had been guards.

Just a few days before the Americans arrived, they said, the remaining prisoners had been killed; stood in trenches up to their waists and shot through the head.

In the corridors there are murals of Saddam Hussein: Saddam with a hawk on his shoulder; Saddam with a rocket-launcher and a dove in the barrel; Saddam in a silk shirt with a cigar. His victims were taken from dark and overcrowded cells to the execution block with its ceiling hooks and levers that catapulted them to a grisly death in the pits below. Some were still alive. The guards then broke their necks by standing on them.

The UN could have gone on passing resolutions and sending in inspectors and rapporteurs for the next 50 years, but in the end there was no realistic alternative to war. Those who bleat about weapons of mass destruction or question the legality of war should talk to the Iraqi people. They are irritated. They ask, ?Don?t they care about us? About mass graves? About torture?? Stand at the mass grave at al-Hillah where up to 15,000 people are buried, hands tied behind their backs, bullets through their brains. Examine the pitiful possessions found so far: a watch, a faded ID card, a comb, a ring, a clump of black hair. Watch the old woman in her black chador, tattoos on her gnarled hands, looking through the plastic bags on top of unidentified, reburied bodies, for something that will help her to find her son, who disappeared in 1991.

Stand at the mass grave near Kirkuk, where huge mechanised trucks churn the earth in clouds of dust. Look at the skeletons now tenderly reburied in simple wooden coffins. Talk to Nasir al-Hussein, who was only 12 at the time of the 1991 mass arrests. He, his mother, uncle and cousins were piled on buses. They turned off on to a farm road and the executions started. People were thrown into a pit, machinegunned and then buried with a bulldozer. Nasir crawled out of the mass grave, leaving his dead relatives behind.

The killing fields of al-Hillah and Kirkuk look unremarkable. Shepherds graze their sheep, children play on bikes. But also here are some of the hundreds and thousands of the perhaps 800,000 of the dead of this country. Saddam?s victims: Shias, Kurds, Communists, the people of Iraq. Now the secrets of this evil and despotic regime are being revealed. How much more killing could there have been?

A house in Baghdad, formerly the private home of one of Saddam?s secret police, has been taken over by those who seek to put the record straight. Outside on the banks of the Tigris, hundreds of Shia men search through the records found so far. Dusty papers and old files fill every room. In one are three computers into which 150,000 names of the dead and where they died have been logged in just two weeks. In another room is some of the torture equipment: a chiropractor?s couch wired to administer electric shocks, the weights and pulleys used to apply pain. All around are grieving relatives, women in black chadors clutching tearfully at my arm. They have waited 12 long years for news. They still wait. Saddam, like Hitler and Pol Pot, kept meticulous records of his crimes. At the same time, Baath party men are said to be buying up the files that implicate them in the crimes.

The director of this self-help centre, Ibrahim al-Idrissi, was in prison eight times. Once they took off all his toenails. He shows me photographs of executions and the bloodied, battered body of a university lecturer from Basra, still alive, his sawn-off arm lying by his side.

On the streets of Baghdad, WMD is not an issue. ?Thanks to Bush and Blair,? they cry. I ask what would have happened if they had spoken to me like this in the past on the streets of Baghdad. One man slowly drew his hand, palm down, across his throat.

timesonline.co.uk



To: maceng2 who wrote (101893)6/18/2003 7:05:34 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 281500
 
Seattle Comes to Sacramento - The anti-globalization crowd's next festival of folly
Ronald Bailey REASON

Trade and agricultural ministers from at least 75 countries are expected to attend the Ministerial Conference and Expo on Agricultural Science and Technology in Sacramento, CA, from June 23 to 25. According to the Department of Agriculture, the gathering "will focus on the critical role science and technology can play in raising sustainable agricultural productivity in developing countries." Sacramento is part of the run-up to the big World Trade Organization ministerial meeting this September in Cancun, Mexico, where negotiators from 180 countries hope to change the way farm goods are traded, among other things.

Of course, wherever trade ministers gather, so too does the anti-globalization "resistance" movement. Activists plan to make Sacramento a practice run for bigger things in Cancun. The protest umbrella group (or should I say website?) Sacramento Mobilization describes the conference as a "meeting to pave the way for 'free trade,' privatization of water, genetic engineering and factory farming." Organizers are "inviting the participation of social justice/human rights/animal rights/and peace activists, workers, students, trade unionists, environmentalists, indigenous groups, artists, community campaigners, consumer advocates, citizens and anyone else who is concerned about the violence and inequality of the corporate economy."

One of their chief targets is plant biotechnology. A group calling itself Northwest Resistance Against Genetic Engineering (NW RAGE) posts a resolution from the Pesticide Action Network's Asian subsidiary, declaring: "Through this meeting transnational corporations (TNCs) will tighten their collaboration with governments to expand the use of the untested and unlabeled products of agricultural biotechnology, which pose extraordinary risks to public health, farmer independence and the environment." This is, in a word, crap.

All crops used to grow biotech foods are tested extensively. In fact, biotech crops are the most thoroughly examined foodstuffs in the history of the world. What the anti-globalization activists want is for biotech foods to pass through the same laborious testing process as pharmaceutical products. Practically no conventional foods?all of which have been greatly modified from their genetic forbearers?could pass such scrutiny.

As for labeling, it is true that the United States does not require foods made with genetically ehnanced ingredients to be identified as such. That's because our food and drug laws require that a product be labeled only if the information is relevant to human health or safety. Sadly, there is one exception to this reasonable rule?organically produced foods. Organic farmers managed to bamboozle the feds into allowing special labeling requirements for their products. Thus, if some consumers get spooked by unfounded activist claims that biotech foods are harmful, they may be lured into buying labeled organic products.

What about those extraordinary risks to public health? Again, complete twaddle. Since being introduced in the mid-1990s, "there has not been a single adverse reaction to biotech food," said Lester Crawford, Deputy Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, at a recent American Enterprise Institute conference in Washington, D.C. "In the meantime," Crawford added, "we've had tens of thousands of reactions to traditional foods." In other words, to the government's knowledge, no one has gotten so much as a sniffle or a stomach ache because of biotech foods.

What about farming independence? Won't farmers, especially poor ones, become mere serfs for biotech multinationals? This attitude treats farmers with condescension, if not contempt. If growers don't find seeds worthwhile, they won't use them. The problem for the activists is that poor farmers who are given access to biotech seeds embrace them with a vengeance.

Consider, for example, the case of insect-resistant cotton in India. The Indian government prohibited cotton that was genetically enhanced to fight off bollworms, but some farmers managed to smuggle in the forbidden seeds. The subsequent crops of biotech cotton performed spectacularly, boosting yields as much as 80 percent, and increasing farmers' cotton-related income by 500 percent. Now the government has approved the seeds.

In Brazil, similarly, farmers have been smuggling in herbicide-resistant biotech soybeans for years. So why won't the activists let poor farmers choose for themselves? Because every time farmers have been given the option, they've jumped at the opportunity to plant genetically modified seeds. That's real independence.

Finally, what risks do biotech crops pose to the environment? Negligible. Biotech strains are hardly threatening to run roughshod over the ecology. All crop plants are pampered and protected from the ravages of wild nature; that's called farming, and it's why we don't see wheat invading our forests, or corn taking over the grasslands. But won't traits like pest-resistance and herbicide-resistance, transferred by cross-breeding to wild plants, create superweeds? Pollen can flow between biotech crops and wild relatives, but the potential to cause environmental problems is minimal.

Meanwhile, by boosting productivity, biotech crops mean that fewer natural forests and grassland areas will have to be plowed under to produce food for a hungry world. Pest-resistant crops use less chemical pesticide, and the future may produce plants resistant to drought, and perhaps even able to self-fertilize. All of which would be enormously beneficial for the environment.

Sacramento should provide us all with a protest preview for Cancun, at which organizers are hoping 150,000 anti-globalizers will show up. So let the protesters dance in the streets of Sacramento. I will defend the right of any idiot to spout whatever nonsense he or she wishes, but the rest of us, including world leaders and business executives, have no obligation to pay any heed to it.

Ronald Bailey, Reason's science correspondent, is the editor of Global Warming and Other Eco Myths (Prima Publishing) and Earth Report 2000: Revisiting the True State of the Planet(McGraw-Hill).

reason.com