>
>                              THE SANCTIONS
>   "From previous trips, we knew exactly where to find overwhelming
>   evidence of a weapon of mass destruction. Inspectors have only to
>   enter the wards of any hospital in Iraq to see that the sanctions
>   themselves are a lethal weapon, destroying the lives of Iraq's most
>   vulnerable people. In children's wards, tiny victims writhe in
>   pain, on blood-stained mats, bereft of anesthetics and antibiotics.
>   Thousands of children, poisoned by contaminated water, die from
>   dysentery, cholera, and diarrhea. Others succumb to respiratory
>   infections that become fatal full body infections. Five thousand
>   children, under age five, perish each month." - Kathy Kelly, March   9,
>  1998
>   ---------------------------------------
>   In the five years since the Persian Gulf War, "as many as 576,000
>   children have died as a result of sanctions imposed against Iraq by
>   the United Nations Security Council, according to a report by the
>   U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)." (New York Times,
>   12/1/95) If the blockade continues, UNICEF tells us, 1.5 million
>   more children will eventually suffer malnutrition or a variety of
>   unchecked illnesses because the sanctions make antibiotics and other
>   standard medicines impossible to get. Yet the U.N. Security Council
>   and the U.S. government continues to defend a blockade whose highest
>   casualty rate is among those under 5 years old. We can no longer
>   remain party to this slaughter in the desert. Myths and Realities
>   In numerous presentations, Voices in the Wilderness members have
>   heard the following myths. We think the discussion below will help
>   clarify our perspective on several important issues.
>   Myth 1 - The sanctions have produced temporary hardship for the
>            Iraqi people but are an effective, nonviolent way to
>            pressure the Iraqi government.
>   Surveys by UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, have found
>   that almost one-third of Iraqi children are suffering chronic
>   malnutrition. An April, 1997 UNICEF report says that 4,500 children
>   continue to die each month for lack of adequate food or medicine.
>   The UN Department of Humanitarian Affairs reports that "public health
>   services are near total collapse - basic medicines, life-saving drugs
>   and essential medical supplies are lacking throughout the country.
>   50% of rural people have no access to potable water and waste water
>   treatment facilities have stopped functioning in most urban areas."
>   The sanctions are an insidious form of warfare that have claimed
>   hundreds of thousands of innocent civilian lives.
>   Myth 2 - The US government wants to enforce UN Resolutions and
>            uphold the rule of law.
>   The US has consistently employed a double standard when it comes to
>   UN Resolutions and international law. For decades, the US has vetoed
>   UN resolutions condemning Israel's occupation of Arab territories.
>   It is also relevant to the current situation that the US is in
>   technical violation of a global treaty to dismantle chemical
>   weapons (AP, 2/27/98). A Senate bill passed in 1997 allows the
>   president to deny international inspections of US weapons sites "on
>   grounds of national security." UN sanctions against Iraq, which
>   continue to be imposed at the insistence of the US (with the UK
>   following suit) are a gross violation of the Geneva Protocol 1,
>   Article 54; Starvation of Civilians as a Method of Warfare is
>   Prohibited. It's significant that the US, which has yet to ratify
>   the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, considered using nuclear weapons
>   against Iraq in February, 1998.
>   Myth 3 - The US Government is concerned about Iraq's weapons of
>            mass destruction.
>   The US and other western European countries were the major suppliers
>   of chemical and biological weapons to Iraq in the 1980s during the
>   Iran-Iraq war. A report from the US Senate Committee on Banking,
>   Housing and Urban Affairs states that 9 out of 10 biological
>   materials used in Iraq's weapon components were bought from US
>   companies. The Los Angeles Times (2/19/98) reported that the US
>   supplied satellite intelligence to the Iraqis when they used
>   chemical weapons against Iran in 1988. During the Gulf War, the US
>   military used depleted uranium tipped shells, rockets and missiles,
>   spreading tons of highly toxic uranium oxide particles into the air.
>   A dramatic rise in congenital diseases and fetal deformities has
>   been found amongst both the children of Gulf War veterans and Iraqi
>   children under age five.
>   The US imposes genocidal sanctions which are themselves a weapon of
>   mass destruction, yet the US sells billions of dollars of weapons of
>   mass destruction to other Gulf states. Israel possesses over 200
>   thermonuclear weapons and has violated 69 UN mandates, yet the US
>   uses its veto power in the UN Security Council to prevent the UN from
>   seeking Israeli cooperation with UN mandates and ignores Israel's
>   possession of nuclear weapons.
>   Myth 4 - The Iraqi government has made weapons inspections impossible
>            and something must be done about it.
>   In February, 1998, the US prepared for and threatened to bomb Iraq
>   over access to the presidential palaces. At the same time, former
>   weapons inspector Raymond Zalinskas, a University of Maryland
>   professor, stated that the inspections have resulted in the
>   destruction of all major (bombing) targets related to chemical
>   and biological warfare and that "95% of UNSCOM'S work continues
>   unhindered." (NPR 2/13/98). UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's
>   diplomacy took the wind out of the US bombing effort. Following his
>   visit to Baghdad, inspections have continued smoothly and indeed,
>   no weapons have been found in the presidential sites. In a Chicago
>   Tribune article, (2/15/98) Zalinskas wrote, "Although it has been
>   theoretically possible for the Iraqis to regain such weapons since
>   1991, the duplicity would have been risky and expensive and the
>   probability of discovery high."
>   Myth 5 - Economic sanctions or military force are the only means
>            that will force Iraq to comply with UN agreements.
>   Sanctions and military threats have only served to strengthen the
>   Iraqi government's position while punishing innocent civilians and
>   isolating them from the international community. On the other hand,
>   efforts at negotiation and conciliation, such as Kofi Annan's
>   February, 1998 visit, have produced cooperation and an opening for
>   continued dialogue. Establishment of a clear timetable for the
>   wrap-up of UNSCOM's mission and recognition of progress made by the
>   Iraqi government would provide incentive for further compliance.
>   We believe that there is no humanitarian benefit in backing Iraq
>   into a corner and causing greater desperation, as the economic
>   sanctions have done. Much good will stands to be gained from
>   recognizing the fundamental human rights (e.g., the rights to food,
>   clean water, health care), of Iraqi civilians and not using human
>   beings as a bargaining chip in trying to force US will on Iraq's
>  leaders.
>   Myth 6 - UN Resolution 986 (the oil for food deal) has begun to
>            alleviate the suffering of the Iraqi people.
>   Dennis Halliday, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Iraq, stated on
>   January 12, 1998, that Iraq would need in the neighborhood of $30
>   billion / year to meet its current requirements for food, medicine,
>   and infrastructure.
>   Resolution 986 initially allowed Iraq to sell up to 2.14 billion
>   dollars worth of oil every six months. After allocations are taken
>   out to pay for Gulf War reparations and UN administrative expenses,
>   the amount of money which trickles down to the average person in
>   central and southern Iraq is 25 cents per person per day. Currently,
>   the UN is offering to allow Iraq to sell $5.26 billion worth of oil
>   every six months. However, Iraq says it cannot pump more than $4
>   billion worth of oil because of the deterioration of oil field
>   equipment under sanctions. This claim was corroborated by a team
>   of experts working for the United Nations who stated that "the
>   deplorable state of Iraq's petroleum industry will prevent it from
>   exporting the $5.26 billion worth of oil." (AP 4-16-98) In light of
>   damages caused by 7 years of comprehensive sanctions coupled with
>   Gulf War bombardment, even the $5.2 billion offer is grossly
>   inadequate to repair Iraq's shattered infrastructure, a medical
>   system near total collapse, and a destroyed economy.
>   Myth 7 - Doubling the amount of oil Iraq is allowed to sell, under
>            Resolution 986, would enable the Iraqi government to meet
>            the population's need for medicine and medical relief.
>   In an interview with the February, 1998 VitW delegation, Dr. Habib
>   Rejeb, MD, head of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Iraq,
>   said that such revenue would meet Iraqi needs in terms of purchasing
>   medicine "but you would be providing this in a vacuum because you
>   don't have the equipment. If you buy laboratory materials and you
>   don't have the equipment it's useless....you give antibiotics but
>   because of the poor hygiene in hospitals it's unlikely that you can
>   prevent cross-infections. If you don't provide the proper food in
>   hospitals then you can't enhance recovery. You can't really work
>   without electricity, you can't really work without water, and you
>   can't work safely while stepping on sewage which comes out often. To
>   improve the health situation you don't only need drugs because this
>   is the tip of the iceberg....If you want to provide the proper care
>   to the population then you have to rehabilitate the infrastructure."
>   Myth 8 - The Iraqi government does not care about its people and
>            siphons off material aid intended for civilians.
>   The World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Food Program (WFP)
>   have carefully monitored Iraqi distribution of all food and medicine
>   purchased under Resolution 986 auspices. In February, 1998, Voices in
>   the Wilderness members interviewed officials from the WHO and the WFP.
>   Both UN organizations gave an "A" rating to the Iraqi government
>   distribution of food and medicine throughout every governorate. Over
>   the past two years, dozens of doctors in Iraqi hospitals have told
>   our delegations that they believe distribution of available medicines
>   is fair. The problem is that desperately needed medicines are in
>   short supply. They receive only 5 to 10 percent of the medicines they
>   need to treat patients.
>   US officials and media pundits repeatedly refer to the opulence of
>   Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's palaces. They neglect to point out
>   that Iraq has been building palaces for 7,000 years and that
>   building anything puts Iraqis to work when unemployment is rampant.
>   Construction of palaces, mosques and other buildings currently
>   underway uses indigenous materials, doesn't require importation of
>   sophisticated infrastructure materials (such as those needed to
>   build hospitals and schools), and is largely financed with Iraqi
>   dinars which are worthless outside Iraq. Why is there no similar
>   outcry about the Pentagon's wasteful and destructive expenditures
>   that siphon money away from meeting human needs in the United States.
>   The US military pours taxpayer money into highly criticized B-2
>   Stealth Bombers at a cost of billions. What about ongoing US Defense
>   Department development and possible use of new generations of
>   weapons, including nuclear weapons?
>   Myth 9 - The Iraqi regime represents a unique and monumental threat
>            to world security.
>   US military planners have fanned a war hysteria based on fears of
>   Iraq when in fact Iraq is a crippled country, badly damaged by UN/US
>   imposed economic warfare and previous bombardments. The US government
>   needs to distract the US public from the fact that in a post cold-
>   war world, there are no enemy threats to justify current military
>  spending.
>   Myth 10 - An international consensus endorses US policy towards Iraq.
>   France, Russia and China, permanent members of the UN Security
>   Council, have continually challenged the US position on sanctions
>   and have opposed US military strikes. The Pope, 53 bishops and
>   numerous other religious leaders have called for an end to sanctions
>   and vigorously protested military strikes against Iraq. The Arab
>   League has called for an immediate lifting of sanctions and deplored
>   US threats to bomb Iraq. In fact, the US has acted in defiance of
>   international consensus and has incurred mistrust and criticism for
>   its arbitrary and selective enforcement of UN Resolutions.
>   Myth 11 - The US military presence in the Middle East protects US
>             national interests.
>   Whose interests is the US military protecting? Sacramento State
>   University professor Dr. Ayad Al-Qazzaz notes that "before the gulf
>   war, the Saudis exported less than five million barrels of oil a
>   day. Today, as a result of sanctions against Iraq, the Saudis
>   export more than nine million barrels a day. Since the imposition of
>   sanctions against Iraq in 1990, Saudi Arabi has made more than 200
>   billion dollars. Most of this money is spent in the US by buying
>   billions of dollars of military equipment." US arms merchants have
>   sold a whole new generation of high-tech weaponry not only to Saudi
>   Arabia but also to Turkey, Egypt, Kuwait, the UAE, Jordan and Israel.
>   These sales actually prop up the US economy. The US government is
>   protecting the interests of oil barons and war profiteers. The
>   interests of the majority of US people lie in developing just and
>   equitable relations with people in the Middle East. Our interest lies
>   in cutting the $300 billion dollar Pentagon budget and using those
>   funds for better schools, jobs and health care.
>            http://www.iraqi-mission.org/iraq.htm
>   >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
>      >>   Further Informations about Iraq and Palestine:
>      >>   http://www.germany.net/teilnehmer/101,88843/
>   >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
>                                * * * * *** End of text from
>  cdp:mideast.gulf **
>  **********************************************************************
>  This material came from the Institute for Global Communications (IGC), a
>  non-profit, unionized, politically progressive Internet
>  servicesprovider. For more information, send a message to
>  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (you will get back an automatic reply), or visit their
>  web site at http://www.igc.org/. IGC is a project of the Tides Center, a
>  501(c)(3) charitableorganization.
>  **********************************************************************


                            THE SANCTIONS
 "From previous trips, we knew exactly where to find overwhelming
 evidence of a weapon of mass destruction. Inspectors have only to
 enter the wards of any hospital in Iraq to see that the sanctions
 themselves are a lethal weapon, destroying the lives of Iraq's most
 vulnerable people. In children's wards, tiny victims writhe in
 pain, on blood-stained mats, bereft of anesthetics and antibiotics.
 Thousands of children, poisoned by contaminated water, die from
 dysentery, cholera, and diarrhea. Others succumb to respiratory
 infections that become fatal full body infections. Five thousand
 children, under age five, perish each month." - Kathy Kelly, March   9,
1998
 ---------------------------------------
 In the five years since the Persian Gulf War, "as many as 576,000
 children have died as a result of sanctions imposed against Iraq by
 the United Nations Security Council, according to a report by the
 U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)." (New York Times,
 12/1/95) If the blockade continues, UNICEF tells us, 1.5 million
 more children will eventually suffer malnutrition or a variety of
 unchecked illnesses because the sanctions make antibiotics and other
 standard medicines impossible to get. Yet the U.N. Security Council
 and the U.S. government continues to defend a blockade whose highest
 casualty rate is among those under 5 years old. We can no longer
 remain party to this slaughter in the desert. Myths and Realities
 In numerous presentations, Voices in the Wilderness members have
 heard the following myths. We think the discussion below will help
 clarify our perspective on several important issues.
 Myth 1 - The sanctions have produced temporary hardship for the
          Iraqi people but are an effective, nonviolent way to
          pressure the Iraqi government.
 Surveys by UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, have found
 that almost one-third of Iraqi children are suffering chronic
 malnutrition. An April, 1997 UNICEF report says that 4,500 children
 continue to die each month for lack of adequate food or medicine.
 The UN Department of Humanitarian Affairs reports that "public health
 services are near total collapse - basic medicines, life-saving drugs
 and essential medical supplies are lacking throughout the country.
 50% of rural people have no access to potable water and waste water
 treatment facilities have stopped functioning in most urban areas."
 The sanctions are an insidious form of warfare that have claimed
 hundreds of thousands of innocent civilian lives.
 Myth 2 - The US government wants to enforce UN Resolutions and
          uphold the rule of law.
 The US has consistently employed a double standard when it comes to
 UN Resolutions and international law. For decades, the US has vetoed
 UN resolutions condemning Israel's occupation of Arab territories.
 It is also relevant to the current situation that the US is in
 technical violation of a global treaty to dismantle chemical
 weapons (AP, 2/27/98). A Senate bill passed in 1997 allows the
 president to deny international inspections of US weapons sites "on
 grounds of national security." UN sanctions against Iraq, which
 continue to be imposed at the insistence of the US (with the UK
 following suit) are a gross violation of the Geneva Protocol 1,
 Article 54; Starvation of Civilians as a Method of Warfare is
 Prohibited. It's significant that the US, which has yet to ratify
 the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, considered using nuclear weapons
 against Iraq in February, 1998.
 Myth 3 - The US Government is concerned about Iraq's weapons of
          mass destruction.
 The US and other western European countries were the major suppliers
 of chemical and biological weapons to Iraq in the 1980s during the
 Iran-Iraq war. A report from the US Senate Committee on Banking,
 Housing and Urban Affairs states that 9 out of 10 biological
 materials used in Iraq's weapon components were bought from US
 companies. The Los Angeles Times (2/19/98) reported that the US
 supplied satellite intelligence to the Iraqis when they used
 chemical weapons against Iran in 1988. During the Gulf War, the US
 military used depleted uranium tipped shells, rockets and missiles,
 spreading tons of highly toxic uranium oxide particles into the air.
 A dramatic rise in congenital diseases and fetal deformities has
 been found amongst both the children of Gulf War veterans and Iraqi
 children under age five.
 The US imposes genocidal sanctions which are themselves a weapon of
 mass destruction, yet the US sells billions of dollars of weapons of
 mass destruction to other Gulf states. Israel possesses over 200
 thermonuclear weapons and has violated 69 UN mandates, yet the US
 uses its veto power in the UN Security Council to prevent the UN from
 seeking Israeli cooperation with UN mandates and ignores Israel's
 possession of nuclear weapons.
 Myth 4 - The Iraqi government has made weapons inspections impossible
          and something must be done about it.
 In February, 1998, the US prepared for and threatened to bomb Iraq
 over access to the presidential palaces. At the same time, former
 weapons inspector Raymond Zalinskas, a University of Maryland
 professor, stated that the inspections have resulted in the
 destruction of all major (bombing) targets related to chemical
 and biological warfare and that "95% of UNSCOM'S work continues
 unhindered." (NPR 2/13/98). UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's
 diplomacy took the wind out of the US bombing effort. Following his
 visit to Baghdad, inspections have continued smoothly and indeed,
 no weapons have been found in the presidential sites. In a Chicago
 Tribune article, (2/15/98) Zalinskas wrote, "Although it has been
 theoretically possible for the Iraqis to regain such weapons since
 1991, the duplicity would have been risky and expensive and the
 probability of discovery high."
 Myth 5 - Economic sanctions or military force are the only means
          that will force Iraq to comply with UN agreements.
 Sanctions and military threats have only served to strengthen the
 Iraqi government's position while punishing innocent civilians and
 isolating them from the international community. On the other hand,
 efforts at negotiation and conciliation, such as Kofi Annan's
 February, 1998 visit, have produced cooperation and an opening for
 continued dialogue. Establishment of a clear timetable for the
 wrap-up of UNSCOM's mission and recognition of progress made by the
 Iraqi government would provide incentive for further compliance.
 We believe that there is no humanitarian benefit in backing Iraq
 into a corner and causing greater desperation, as the economic
 sanctions have done. Much good will stands to be gained from
 recognizing the fundamental human rights (e.g., the rights to food,
 clean water, health care), of Iraqi civilians and not using human
 beings as a bargaining chip in trying to force US will on Iraq's
leaders.
 Myth 6 - UN Resolution 986 (the oil for food deal) has begun to
          alleviate the suffering of the Iraqi people.
 Dennis Halliday, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Iraq, stated on
 January 12, 1998, that Iraq would need in the neighborhood of $30
 billion / year to meet its current requirements for food, medicine,
 and infrastructure.
 Resolution 986 initially allowed Iraq to sell up to 2.14 billion
 dollars worth of oil every six months. After allocations are taken
 out to pay for Gulf War reparations and UN administrative expenses,
 the amount of money which trickles down to the average person in
 central and southern Iraq is 25 cents per person per day. Currently,
 the UN is offering to allow Iraq to sell $5.26 billion worth of oil
 every six months. However, Iraq says it cannot pump more than $4
 billion worth of oil because of the deterioration of oil field
 equipment under sanctions. This claim was corroborated by a team
 of experts working for the United Nations who stated that "the
 deplorable state of Iraq's petroleum industry will prevent it from
 exporting the $5.26 billion worth of oil." (AP 4-16-98) In light of
 damages caused by 7 years of comprehensive sanctions coupled with
 Gulf War bombardment, even the $5.2 billion offer is grossly
 inadequate to repair Iraq's shattered infrastructure, a medical
 system near total collapse, and a destroyed economy.
 Myth 7 - Doubling the amount of oil Iraq is allowed to sell, under
          Resolution 986, would enable the Iraqi government to meet
          the population's need for medicine and medical relief.
 In an interview with the February, 1998 VitW delegation, Dr. Habib
 Rejeb, MD, head of the World Health Organization (WHO) in Iraq,
 said that such revenue would meet Iraqi needs in terms of purchasing
 medicine "but you would be providing this in a vacuum because you
 don't have the equipment. If you buy laboratory materials and you
 don't have the equipment it's useless....you give antibiotics but
 because of the poor hygiene in hospitals it's unlikely that you can
 prevent cross-infections. If you don't provide the proper food in
 hospitals then you can't enhance recovery. You can't really work
 without electricity, you can't really work without water, and you
 can't work safely while stepping on sewage which comes out often. To
 improve the health situation you don't only need drugs because this
 is the tip of the iceberg....If you want to provide the proper care
 to the population then you have to rehabilitate the infrastructure."
 Myth 8 - The Iraqi government does not care about its people and
          siphons off material aid intended for civilians.
 The World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Food Program (WFP)
 have carefully monitored Iraqi distribution of all food and medicine
 purchased under Resolution 986 auspices. In February, 1998, Voices in
 the Wilderness members interviewed officials from the WHO and the WFP.
 Both UN organizations gave an "A" rating to the Iraqi government
 distribution of food and medicine throughout every governorate. Over
 the past two years, dozens of doctors in Iraqi hospitals have told
 our delegations that they believe distribution of available medicines
 is fair. The problem is that desperately needed medicines are in
 short supply. They receive only 5 to 10 percent of the medicines they
 need to treat patients.
 US officials and media pundits repeatedly refer to the opulence of
 Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's palaces. They neglect to point out
 that Iraq has been building palaces for 7,000 years and that
 building anything puts Iraqis to work when unemployment is rampant.
 Construction of palaces, mosques and other buildings currently
 underway uses indigenous materials, doesn't require importation of
 sophisticated infrastructure materials (such as those needed to
 build hospitals and schools), and is largely financed with Iraqi
 dinars which are worthless outside Iraq. Why is there no similar
 outcry about the Pentagon's wasteful and destructive expenditures
 that siphon money away from meeting human needs in the United States.
 The US military pours taxpayer money into highly criticized B-2
 Stealth Bombers at a cost of billions. What about ongoing US Defense
 Department development and possible use of new generations of
 weapons, including nuclear weapons?
 Myth 9 - The Iraqi regime represents a unique and monumental threat
          to world security.
 US military planners have fanned a war hysteria based on fears of
 Iraq when in fact Iraq is a crippled country, badly damaged by UN/US
 imposed economic warfare and previous bombardments. The US government
 needs to distract the US public from the fact that in a post cold-
 war world, there are no enemy threats to justify current military
spending.
 Myth 10 - An international consensus endorses US policy towards Iraq.
 France, Russia and China, permanent members of the UN Security
 Council, have continually challenged the US position on sanctions
 and have opposed US military strikes. The Pope, 53 bishops and
 numerous other religious leaders have called for an end to sanctions
 and vigorously protested military strikes against Iraq. The Arab
 League has called for an immediate lifting of sanctions and deplored
 US threats to bomb Iraq. In fact, the US has acted in defiance of
 international consensus and has incurred mistrust and criticism for
 its arbitrary and selective enforcement of UN Resolutions.
 Myth 11 - The US military presence in the Middle East protects US
           national interests.
 Whose interests is the US military protecting? Sacramento State
 University professor Dr. Ayad Al-Qazzaz notes that "before the gulf
 war, the Saudis exported less than five million barrels of oil a
 day. Today, as a result of sanctions against Iraq, the Saudis
 export more than nine million barrels a day. Since the imposition of
 sanctions against Iraq in 1990, Saudi Arabi has made more than 200
 billion dollars. Most of this money is spent in the US by buying
 billions of dollars of military equipment." US arms merchants have
 sold a whole new generation of high-tech weaponry not only to Saudi
 Arabia but also to Turkey, Egypt, Kuwait, the UAE, Jordan and Israel.
 These sales actually prop up the US economy. The US government is
 protecting the interests of oil barons and war profiteers. The
 interests of the majority of US people lie in developing just and
 equitable relations with people in the Middle East. Our interest lies
 in cutting the $300 billion dollar Pentagon budget and using those
 funds for better schools, jobs and health care.
          http://www.iraqi-mission.org/iraq.htm
 >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
    >>   Further Informations about Iraq and Palestine:
    >>   http://www.germany.net/teilnehmer/101,88843/
 >>>---------------------------------------------------<<<
                              * * * * *** End of text from
cdp:mideast.gulf **
**********************************************************************
This material came from the Institute for Global Communications (IGC), a
non-profit, unionized, politically progressive Internet
servicesprovider. For more information, send a message to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (you will get back an automatic reply), or visit their
web site at http://www.igc.org/. IGC is a project of the Tides Center, a
501(c)(3) charitableorganization.
**********************************************************************


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