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Testimonials of Resistance

By Jodie Evans, AlterNet. Posted June 26, 2005.


Testimonials at the World Tribunal on Iraq prove over and over again that the US and the UK are guilty of waging an illegal, immoral and unjust war.

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The hall is abuzz with the thrill of full-page spreads on the front page of every newspaper in Istanbul, and the woman next to me says with a smile that we are also on the BBC. The bank of cameras and the swarm of photographers have filled the room again this morning. Still absent at the World Tribunal on Iraq is any sign of the US media, except the cameras of Deep Dish TV.  The website got 15,000 hits from more than 100 countries.  

As the spokesperson for the Jury of Conscience, Arundhati Roy said earlier in the week, "This is what resistance looks like; if we don't show those who resort to violence alternative methods, it will be one of our failings."

For they have been forced to resist an illegal invasion of their country, what would we do if they didn't resist? Our joining together to witness the facts and the experience of those living in Iraq, and to see  this jury's evaluation within a void, where there is no rule of law -- this is our act of resistance. But it is yet another non-event in the USA.  

The mood quickly changed from the thrills of approval as Dahr Jamail began his stories of torture in Iraq by the US military. The hall was in deep grief within moments. He showed photo after photo of the tragedies in Iraq. Photographs of torture and of families that have been left without aid, and of the appalling conditions in the hospitals and the streets if Iraq.  

A group from Japan indicated their opposition against the use of overpowering weapons by listing the number of illegal weapons dropped on Iraq by the US/UK, and their anger with the Japanese government for agreeing to join Bush in invading Iraq. The act violated Article 9 of the Japanese constitution -- to never invade another country.  

Dr. Thomas Fasy of Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York led us through a report with charts and graphs describing the rise in cancer in Iraq since the use of depleted uranium during the first Gulf War, the new nuclear weapon of choice that has horrific consequences. Leukemia had risen 450 percent in children under the age of 5 since 1990.

Fasy's testimony reminded me of 5-year-old Atarid, whom we met in Iraq before the invasion. He had already lost all of his hair and had a very sweet smile, but couldn't get the care available to children in the US because cancer therapies were not allowed under sanctions in Iraq. He was sent home to die and to make room for those wounded from the shock and awe that was about to descend on Iraq.  

Denis Halliday, who had resigned his position as UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq in protest of the Iraq sanctions, completed the morning's session. He enumerated all the ways in which the UN had failed at its job, both at the level of the UN Security Counsel, the Secretary General and the members. He had watched the US destroy Iraq's potential, simply because it was no longer a useful friend, and set a pattern of militaristic aggression toward the people of Iraq that continues today.


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Jodie Evans is a co-founder of Codepink: Women For Peace.

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Excellent article...
Posted by: farhada on Jun 26, 2005 12:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article is an excellent example of important issues that needs to be on the first page of the main-stream Media. But unfortunately that is not the case as it was pointed out in the book
No Questions Asked by Lisa Finnegan.

http://www.noquestionsasked.org

In the book she discussed the issues of self-censorship (in chapter 3 ), "The case for War" (in chapter 5) and the role of the embedded reporters " (in chapter 6) before and during the war.

The book is a good source of information for anyone who wants to look back on how the case for war was created. And how the media missed the major stories (such as the one mentioned here) for non-stories such as the “Run Away Bride”.

We invite you to visit our site and give us your feedback.

You can send your feedback via our message board.

Thank you very much for an interesting article.

NQA web master

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Just multiply the Panama invasion a hundredfold
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 26, 2005 8:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only one documentary I am aware of, which played a few art theaters in major cities, told the story of the invasion of Panama to get Noriega. It was as horrible for the people, though on a much smaller scale, as is Iraq. So the horror of what has happened in Iraq should come as no surprise.

Denial, denial, denial is what we get from our officials. Vice President Cheney does not even make an effort to cover himself when asked to explain. He simply lies. He's able to do that because none of the opposition party or the mainline media have the guts to challenge him. He did it during the campaign debates. It worked then, so he keeps doing it.

P.T. Barnum with his, "A sucker is born every minute," must be the model for the Repugs. Circuses and bread seem to be the universal currency of politics.

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georgesdelatour
Posted by: georgesdelatour on Aug 18, 2005 3:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The commission unreservedly condemns the US and UK for enforcing no-fly zones over the Kurdish and Shia areas of Iraq after the Kuwait war. Well...

I remember seeing TV pictures of Kurds risking life and limb, taking to the hills, desperately trying to escape Saddam's air force at the end of the war. It was moral pressure to halt the massacres, from concerned people around the world (like me), which forced a very reluctant Bush senior to introduce the no-fly zones.

The commission condemns Bush's surrender to this "wimp" lobby (of people like me). For them, the halting of the massacres was wrong. They believe Saddam had an unlimited right to use his airforce to massacre any humans he wanted to, within his own national borders.

I'm not morally perfect - far from it. But on this issue - which should not simply be rolled together with all other issues concerning Iraq - they are morally deficient.

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The Real Culprit
Posted by: sd333trop on Aug 22, 2005 9:40 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Iraqi people, as well as those of conscience in the United States, are simply further victims in the game of global control being played out by the financial elite. One need no look farther than those who profit from the legalized crime of armed conflict: the arms manufacturers and their financial beneficiaries, including the whores in government and the media. As world accesss to fuel resources tightens, we can only expect more such conflicts around the globe as the elite, who predominate over every nation through their command of finance, struggle to maintain their stranglehold on the people and resources of the world. The only possible solution to break their power is to break the power of money, which is, to our eternal damnation, and through the machinations of the elite, the most entrenched belief system in the world.

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» RE: The Real Culprit Posted by: ijbevwofok@mailinator.com
» RE: Not so Posted by: The Butcher
Pissed off again!
Posted by: The Butcher on Aug 29, 2005 1:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm pissed off again.
Here in Australia, the papers , always mouthing your ape, ape the Victory in the endorsement of the Iraki constitution. When is this nightmare going to end? How much hollower can we get?
I hear about grassroot democracy in America. I learned about it in my american civilization classes at Uni. Was it just propaganda?
When I get too angry, I go to this site to read and comfort myself that there are lots of pissed off smart people in the US.
Kind Regards
Francois-Freedom fries eater
I think it is time for you contributorfriends to come out of the closet and get all shop assistants, techies, teachers,public servants, nurses, doctors, lawyers, carpenters, building site workers.... and where are the students? Too busy playing Video Games?......anyone who has an opinion about this catastrophe to actually say it publicly.
This can be easily done by simply calling on a 30 minutes work stoppage... to talk about the war. its victims both at home and in Iraq.
Can you imagine the media impact this would have? Can you imagine how many people would actually start thinking about the horror that the US has bestowed onto a nation?
Go to simplistics! Anice word I just coined. Get people emotionally involved.
I'll settle for 15 minutes of no work right across the Nation.
Fire me for wanting peace!
Then again I'm a dreamer. But look at what Cindy has achieved. A 1000 Brushfires turning into 100 000. Nerobush will be kept occupied.
Right now, the world needs your leadership. As it did to stop the Vietnam Madness. The spin off was a greatly improved world in the 70's with no loss of prestige but admiration for courage... Yeh we got Rambo but deal with it.

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» RE: Pissed off again! Posted by: woodford54