*Who brought these evil policies to Uganda?  …decimating industries in
Jinja and other places…  privatizing/giving away our basic utilities –
electricity, telephones… railways…National Housing ….Uganda Commercial
Bank…. etc….*

*It is the late attorney, John Kazoora. It is him that prostituted m7 to
Thatcher. *

*It is the late John Kazoora that sold our country.*

*========================================================*

 *Guess Who Is Not Coming to Margaret Thatcher's Funeral*


*By Lindsey German
*
April 12, 2013 "Information Clearing
House<http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/>"
-"Stop The 
War<http://stopwar.org.uk/index.php/united-kingdom/2379-guess-who-is-not-coming-to-margaret-thatchers-funeral>"
- Tony Blair has denounced as ‘tasteless’ those celebrating the news of
Margaret Thatcher’s death.

"Even if you disagree with someone very strongly," he said, "at the moment
of their passing you should show some respect."

Blair's demand that we all show respect for the dead is somewhat hard to
take from the man incriminated in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
Iraqi and Afghan
civilians<http://stopwar.org.uk/index.php/iraq/2362-no-more-fuzzy-maths-how-many-really-died-in-the-bush-blair-war-on-iraq>.


I don't recall a similar call from Blair over the recent lack of respect
accorded by the British media to the Venezuelan president Hugo
Chavez<http://stopwar.org.uk/index.php/usa-war-on-terror/2303-hugo-chavez-the-anti-american-bogeyman-fox-news-comes-to-the-bbc>,
when he died at a relatively early age after a long period of suffering
cancer.


On the occasion of Margaret Thatcher’s death, calls for respect are
attempts to stifle any criticism about a woman who, it should be
remembered, was only able to hold office due to splits in the Labour
opposition, rather than any enthusiasm for her or her party from a majority
of voters.


And even many of those who voted for her had cause to regret it, as Paul
Routledge points out in the *Mirror*:

She decimated our basic industries of coal and steel. Shipbuilding
virtually disappeared, along with much of heavy engineering.

She tried to destroy our free trade unions through repressive legislation;
She branded miners fighting for their jobs and communities as "the enemy
within"...

She made mass unemployment respectable, and used it as a tool of
government. The dole queues were "a price worth paying" under her regime –
once described as "an elected dictatorship" by one of her own ministers.

She created a new underclass of jobless men... and forced millions of women
back into the workplace so that families could make ends meet.

She sold our basic utilities – gas, water, electricity and telephones – and
prices soared.

She flogged off the buses and railways, and fares went through the roof.

She sold off the council houses and built no new ones, so there are now
more than two million families on housing waiting lists.

She enthroned the profit motive, and unleashed the spivs and speculators in
the City of London.

She surrendered economic policy to the mysterious dark forces of "the
market", which led UK plc into one recession after another that led to the
mess where we are today.

She imposed the hated poll tax on the nation, first in Scotland where she
made the Tories unelectable for more than a generation. She then thrust it
down the throats of the English, prompting the worst riots in London since
the disturbances of the early eighties.

Mass popular resistance to the poll tax finally marked her downfall, and
Thatcher was driven out of office by her own party.


This is all supposed to be forgiven and forgotten as a nation unites in
grief for a woman who, in the sickening words of David Cameron, ‘made
Britain great again.’

She played a crucial part in the escalation of the Cold War and in the
reestablishment of a doctrine of intervention which began in the Falklands
and continued with her successors in the 1990s and 2000s.

Respect for the dead was certainly not in Margaret Thatcher's mind in 1982
when she took Britain into war with
Argentina<http://en.mercopress.com/2013/04/10/argentine-lawmakers-criticize-lady-thatcher-over-the-belgrano-and-for-promoting-economic-neo-liberalism>over
the Falkland Islands, to save an isolated British colony -- and her
own political face -- when her popularity ratings were rock bottom.
"Rejoice!" was Thatcher's response at the end of a squalid and unnecessary
colonial war that cost over 1000 lives, including those killed on the
Argentinian ship the* Belgrano* -- deaths celebrated by Thatcher's
cheerleaders at Rupert Murdoch's* Sun* with the headline, "Gotcha".

The 323 young Argentinian sailors, mostly conscripts, who died when the *
Belgrano* sank will not be guests at Margaret Thatcher's funeral.

While Margaret Thatcher destroyed many industries, she always protected the
arms industry, which she enthusiastically promoted abroad. Most
notoriously, was her central role in negotiating the al-Yamamah (Dove of
peace!) arms 
deal<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/the-mark-thatcher-affair-arms-deal-triumph-for-batting-for-britain-steve-boggan-examines-the-history-of-the-biggest-weapons-agreement-ever-struck-between-two-countries-1441987.html>with
Saudi Arabia in 1983. At the time, this was the biggest arms deal in
British history. It was oiled with bribes and backhanders running into
hundred of millions of pounds, one of the main beneficiaries being Thatcher's
own son Mark, who pocketed £12
million<http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n22/rw-johnson/her-boy>
.

It is another example of how Margaret Thatcher was mentor to Tony Blair.
When in 2007 a Serious Fraud
investigation<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/15/bae.armstrade>into
the corruption involved in the arms trade got too close to defence
company BAE's dealings with Saudi Arabia, Blair ordered it to be shut down.


The establishment of the ‘new imperialism’ which became such a feature of
the world from the 1990s, was paved by Margaret Thatcher, alongside US
president Ronald Reagan. With him she helped escalate the Cold War in the
1980s, introducing Cruise missiles to
Britian<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-22066747>despite
very widespread opposition.

The ‘special relationship’ cemented with Reagan allowed Tony Blair in
particular to follow her in supporting US foreign policy at every turn,
with disastrous consequences in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Like today, the 'new imperialism' was, proclaimed to be in the interests of
spreading democracy. In reality, Thatcher had no problem in supporting
dictatorships around the world, whether it be in Saudi Arabia or in Chile.

Pinochet reigned for two decades through a regime of oppression, torture
and mass execution. The response of one Chilean woman to Margaret
Thatcher's death sums up the reaction of many in her country:

"The Thatcher government directly supported Pinochet’s murderous
regime<http://www.independent.co.uk/news/victims-of-pinochets-police-prepare-to-reveal-details-of-rape-and-torture-1183793.html>,
financially, via military support, even military training. Members of my
family were tortured and murdered under Pinochet, who was one of Thatcher’s
closest allies and friend. Those of us celebrating are the ones who
suffered deeply.”

When Pinochet found himself under house arrest in Britain in 1998, facing
extradition to Spain to face charges of war crimes, Margaret Thatcher
visited him <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/304516.stm> to "thank her old
friend for bringing democracy to Chile".

Chile's President Allende, assassinated in Pinochet's seizure of power,
will not be a guest at Margaret Thatcher's funeral.

Nor will the black South Africans slaughtered by the apartheid regime in
the 1980s, when Margaret Thatcher branded Nelson Mandela a "terrorist" and
did all she could to block the sanctions which most of the world imposed in
response to the barbarity of the regime. "I have found myself to all
intents and purposes alone in resisting sanctions,” she wrote in
1985<http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/04/thatcher-mourned-by-few-in-s-africa/>to
PW Botha, the hardline apartheid president of South Africa.

During Thatcher's governments, the UK repeatedly vetoed UN resolutions on
apartheid South Africa. Unsurprisingly, the last white South African
president, FW de Klerk, is expected to attend her funeral.

And what a gathering it is turning out to be. She said she didn't want a
state funeral, but she's getting one in all but name anyway, with the Queen
and Prince Philip in attendance. It will be virtually indistinguishable
from the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill.

Previous prime ministers received no such accolade, including Harold Wilson
who, like Thatcher, had three terms in office, and also led a reforming
government, though somewhat different, as it included, for example,
liberalisation of laws on censorship, divorce and homosexuality, and the
ending of capital punishment.

This state funeral in all but name is a blatant attempt by David Cameron to
boost his popularity through a bizarre "feel-good" opportunity, just as
millions of people are learning the extent of the suffering his
government's austerity policies are causing the poorest and most vulnerable
in our society.

The importance of Margaret Thatcher's warmongering is reflected in her
funeral arrangements which will have a Falklands War theme -- something
Tony Blair does not seem to regard as "tasteless". As ex-soldier Joe
Glenton says, "Thatcher's march to war in the Falklands won an election -
and her funeral will process to the same jingoistic
tune<http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/thatchers-march-to-war-in-the-falklands-won-an-election--and-her-funeral-will-process-to-the-same-jingoistic-tune-8569007.html>."


A funeral march with 700 women and men from the British armed services
attending will proceed through the City of London -- where there are plenty
of Margaret Thatcher's friends -- to St Paul’s Cathedral. There will be gun
salutes and full military honours, and the whole event will be another
boost for the militarism which so pervades British society -- one more
occasion on top of Remembrance Day or the Queen's Jubilee where the
establishment praises the military and by extension drums up support for
current and future wars.


The funeral will cost an estimated £10 million. On top of this, is hundreds
of thousands more spent on recalling MPs to parliament for a seven hour
tribute to Thatcher. The special convening of parliament was forced through
against the wishes of the Speaker of the House of Commons, and the Labour
MP Glenda Jackson was an almost lone voice in puncturing the endless
praise<http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/margaret-thatcher-dead-watch-glenda-1822905>of
a prime minister who wreaked, in Jackson's words, "the most heinous,
social, economic and spiritual damage upon this country".

Margaret Thatcher was a multi millionaire. She died in the Ritz hotel,
where she had lived for months, and had a house in Belgravia. It says
everything about her values and of those who continue in her tradition
today that this money can be spent at a time when the poorest and most
disadvantaged in society are having their benefits cut, when inequality is
growing and while most working people see their living standards fall.

Today, the friends of Thatcher and her ideoology of privatisation, economic
neoliberalism and warmongering -- from David Cameron to Tony Blair --
justify arms spending, tens of billions wasted on the Trident nuclear
missile system, continuing wars, and interventions in the Middle East,
Africa and South Asia.

No wonder Tony Blair thinks it’s tasteless to criticise: he learnt
everything he knew from her.
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