The Committee for National Solidarity
Tolstojeva 34, Belgrade, YU
U.S. DELEGATION FINDS HIGH-RADIOACTIVITY IN
IRAQI DESERT
RAMSEY CLARK AND SANCTIONS CHALLENGE HEAD BACK TO
EUROPE, U.S. AFTER SOLIDARITY TRIP TO IRAQ/PALESTINIANS CHARGE ISRAELI
MILITARY USES DEPLETED URANIUM
FROM THE SANCTIONS CHALLENGE of the
INTERNATIONAL ACTION CENTER (Reports from Baghdad, Iraq and Amman,
Jordan)
A investigating team from a U.S. solidarity delegation
to Iraq on Jan. 18 found "extremely high levels of radioactivity" in
soil samples in the Iraqi desert south of Basra. In that region during the
1991 war against Iraq U.S. forces fired hundreds of thousands of shells
reinforced with depleted uranium.
Former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark and New Mexican activist and researcher Damacio Lopez had
separated from the main body of Clark's International Action Center's
50-person "Iraq Sanctions Challenge" to collect the soil samples.
On Jan. 19, Clark was scheduled to report his team's findings of
high radiation levels at a news conference at the Italian Parliament in
Rome. He planned to condemn the Pentagon's use of DU weapons in Iraq and
Yugoslavia and demand that scientists from these countries be included
in the investigation of the dangers to humans of DU.
A storm of
protest in Europe has brought to international attention the threat to
soldiers and civilians from pollution by radioactive and toxic DU shells in
Kosovo and Bosnia. There have already been massive protests in
Greece, with hundreds of Greek soldiers demanding they leave
Kosovo. Other protests are planned in Italy and Portugal and meetings
have been held in Belgium, France and Spain.
>From Amman, Jordan,
IAC co-director Sara Flounders said that "while DU poisoning of European
and U.S. soldiers are criminal, the poisoning and pollution of the civilian
areas of Kosovo, Bosnia and to an even greater degree Iraq are
war crimes. We hold the Pentagon responsible for the damage done to the
population and the environment of the Balkans and of the area including
parts of Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
"A report from Geneva," said
Flounders, "indicates that besides depleted uranium, some of the U.S.
shells contained measurable amounts of plutonium and Uranium-236, even
more dangerous pollutants than depleted uranium. This only adds to U.S.
culpability in this matter.
"Today's Jordan Times reports on its front
page," continued Flounders, "that Palestinian organizations have charged
the Israelis with using DU against the Intifada. Through the Pentagon,
which supplies most Israeli weapons, the Israeli military is supplied with
DU. We in the IAC had raised last November the possibility that Israeli
forces were also using this illegal weapon."
In the days before the
Rome news conference, both the Iraqi and Yugoslav governments had condemned
the use of DU on their territories. Belgrade said it would demand that
the International War Crimes Court at The Hague include DU use as a war
crime to be investigated. [for reports from Iraq and Yugoslavia see the DU
page on the IAC web site at www.iacenter.org]
Background to
Sanctions Challenge
The U.S. group had arrived in Baghdad by air the
night of Jan. 13, acting in defiance of the U.S./UN imposed
no-fly zones. At a press conference at the airport Ramsey
Clark declared, "The US must end the genocidal sanctions against Iraq.
The whole world demands that the sanctions be lifted completely and
immediately."
Fifty anti-sanctions activists led by joined a
demonstration in downtown Baghdad at 2 a.m. on Jan. 17 to mark the
10th anniversary of the U.S.-led war of aggression against Iraq.
It
was at 2 a.m. ten years ago that U.S. and British forces unleashed rockets
and bombs on sleeping Baghdad.
The delegation spent the next three
days visiting sites that demonstrate the consequences of the 10 years of
sanctions or those hit by frequent bombing the past ten years.
Sites included a bomb shelter, elementary schools, a university,
water and sewage treatment plants, and hospitals. The delegation also met
with the Iraqi minister of health, visited a pharmaceutical plant, a school
for the blind, the Iraqi Women's Federation and a food
distribution center.
They found that sanctions are still making life
extremely difficult for the Iraqi population and causing
needless deaths. Yet the mood of the Jan. 17 demonstrators
was optimistic and combative. In the months leading up to
the anniversary, more and more countries had begun individually breaking
the ban on flights and other sanctions against Iraq. More than 100 flights
have entered Iraq in the last five months.
The delegation delivered
over $1.5 million in medical and school supplies, and plans to deliver more
supplies to Palestinian hospitals on the West Bank.
In a meeting
with Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz, Ramsey Clark denounced U.S. policy
toward Iraq. "This is genocide," he said. "The progress that Iraq has made
must not be lost at 12 noon on Jan. 20 when George Bush is
inaugurated. Inspection teams and Oil-for-food program were both
frauds from the beginning. There is no justification for the sanctions.
They are a war by other means."
The IAC delegation brings together
people from fifteen US states and seven countries, including Canada,
Japan, Lebanon, Greece, Britain, Iceland and Palestine. It
includes students, teachers, long time activists, social
workers, lawyers, and others committed to peace.
The delegates met
with the Iraqi host organization, The Organization of Friendship and
Solidarity with Iraq. The head of OFSI, Dr. Hashimi said: "You will see a
nation of siege. The siege is from outsiders who say they do it
in accordance with law and legality and UN resolutions"
"It is a
siege to achieve unjustified objectives. We hold on in spite of the
suffering and the pain and we will continue to hold on for as long as
necessary. We know that if we give up we will lose
Iraq."
International Action Center 39 West 14th Street, Room
206 New York, NY 10011 email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] web: http://www.iacenter.org CHECK OUT
SITE http://www.mumia2000.org phone: 212
633-6646 fax: 212 633-2889 *To make a tax-deductible
donation, go to http://www.peoplesrightsfund.org
Mrs Jela Jovanovic, art historian
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