WAKE UP! WAKE UP! KISSinger MY ARSE. SchNEWS KISSINGER OF DEATH Next
Tuesday is International Human Rights Day - 54 years since the signing of
the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which amongst
other things declared, 'All human beings are born free and equal in dignity
and rights.'
What about Turkey, who've been busy repressing the Kurdish people without
anyone so much as batting an eyelid. Arbitrary arrest, detention, torture,
disappearances, extra-judicial killings, the banning of political
opposition and harassment of human rights groups are just some of the
treats in store for you if you're Kurdish. Add to that the fact that
Kurdish language, names, music, culture, and clothing are outlawed.
Conservative estimates reckon that in the past 15 years, Turkish Security
Forces have destroyed 4000 Kurdish villages - leaving 30,000 dead and 3
million driven from their homes So Kurds fighting Iraq are good, but Kurds
fighting against Turkey are bad because Turkey is a member of NATO and an
important ally of the United States thanks to its strategically placed air
bases. A RIGHT CARRY ON And now the American public can rest easy knowing
that human rights champion Henry Kissinger is to head an 'independent'
commission to investigate the attacks on America on September 11th. Who
better to investigate 9/11 than Kissinger, the man behind untold amounts of
state-sponsored terrorism and wanted across the world as a war criminal! A
proven liar has been assigned the task of finding the truth. Brilliant! As
war criminals go, Kissinger is in the premier league. During the Vietnam
War he was co-architect with Nixon in the secret bombing campaign of
Cambodia, which is estimated to have claimed the lives of hundreds of
thousands of civilians. In 1971, Pakistani General Yahya Khan, armed with
U.S. weaponry, overthrew a democratically elected government in Bangladesh
- an action that led to a massive civilian bloodbath. Kissinger blocked
U.S. condemnation of Khan and instead noted the General's "delicacy and
tact." In the early 1970s, Kissinger masterminded the CIA's $8 million
campaign to overthrow the democratically elected government of Salvador
Allende in Chile. When Allende won power, all US aid was cut and Kissinger
announced, "The issues are much too important for the Chilean voters to be
left to decide for themselves." So in came the murderous military
dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. On June 8, 1976, at the height of
Pinochet's repression, Kissinger had a meeting with the dictator, telling
him, "We are sympathetic to what you are trying to do here." In 1975,
President Gerald Ford and Kissinger offered advance approval of Indonesia's
brutal invasion of East Timor, where tens of thousands of East Timorese
were killed. In 1976, as the Argentinan military junta was beginning its
so-called "dirty war" against supposed subversives - between 9,000 and
30,000 people would be "disappeared" by the military over the next seven
years - Argentina's foreign minister met with Kissinger and received what
he believed was encouragement for his government's violent efforts. A few
years later Kissinger travelled to Buenos Aires as the guest of dictator
General Jorge Rafael Videla and praised the junta for having done, "an
outstanding job in wiping out terrorist forces." As journalist David Corn
points out, "For many in the world, Kissinger is a symbol of U.S. arrogance
and the misuse of American might. In power, he cared more for U.S.
credibility and geostrategic advantage than for human rights and open
government." As the declaration goes 'All human beings are born free and
equal', it just seems that some are a lot more free and a lot more equal
than others. Check out all yer favourite war criminals www.icai-online.org
http://www.ainfos.ca/ainfos14822.html