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Where Next After The Iraqi Genocide?

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  • Where Next After The Iraqi Genocide?

    WHERE NEXT AFTER THE IRAQI GENOCIDE?
    Anwar Darkazally, Electronic Iraq

    Electronic Iraq
    Dec 13 2006

    Six men burned alive, an entire government ministry kidnapped, over
    two hundred dead in a series of car bombs. Another week in Iraq.

    Nothing new and headline news.

    We have become anaesthetised to the pain of the conflict in
    Iraq. The sheer scale of bloodshed has numbed our comprehension of
    what the violence means in human terms. What would have been termed
    "spectaculars" in the bad old days of the IRA are just day to day
    events in Iraq. Our perspective is becoming distorted through a
    kaleidoscope of laser-guided bombs and razor-sharp satellite images.

    The cemeteries are filling up and human lives are becoming numbers,
    or less.

    So far in Iraq, America has nearly lost the same number of soldiers
    as civilians murdered in the 9/11 atrocity. Although images of the
    coffins of the American war dead are not allowed to be shown since the
    Bush administration banned them in March 2003, at least the Americans
    are granted the unseen dignity of being counted as individuals by
    the Department of Defence and borne home in flag-draped coffins. But
    Iraqi civilian deaths are not counted by the US government.

    To armchair warriors in Washington ignoring Iraqi casualties is perhaps
    an extension of the de-humanising concept of collateral damage. To
    the Arab and Muslim world glued to their satellite TVs, the little
    limp bodies being rushed to hospitals in the Mickey Mouse T-shirts
    could be their children. That none of these Iraqi deaths will ever
    be officially recorded makes it hard for the viewer not to conclude
    that an American life is not equal to an Arab life.

    John Hopkins School of Public Health has calculated Iraqi civilian
    deaths and their estimates vary between a third of a million to 900,000
    dead. The lower fatality estimate is almost the same as the total
    number of British civilian and military fatalities in the Second World
    War (388,000). The higher Iraqi fatality figure is almost identical
    to the total number of British soldiers killed in the First World War
    (908,000).

    The US and Britain have disputed these figures and this is not
    surprising. If these estimates are correct, or even in the right
    region, these fatality figures will have far-reaching consequences for
    a war started with questionable, at best, legitimacy. Fatality figures
    this high could make the US and British governments culpable for
    over-seeing the second genocide in the Middle East since the Armenian
    holocaust in which over a million were killed between 1915 and 1917.

    The definition of genocide from Article 2 of the Convention on
    Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide is intent to wholly
    or partially destroy any religious, ethnic or national group through
    killing or causing bodily or mental harm. The wholesale sectarian
    slaughter between Iraqi Sunnis and Iraqi Shia undoubtedly qualifies
    as mutual attempts at genocide.

    The first Middle Eastern genocide since 1917 was perpetrated by Saddam
    Hussein and became one of the justifications of the war after the
    Weapons of Mass Destruction were never found. In what Human Rights
    Watch rightly termed a "genocide" in 1993, between 50,000 and 182,000
    Kurds were killed by Saddam. But if the figures are correct, and
    we have no other data to go on, then the current situation in Iraq
    dwarfs even the evil done by the Saddam regime.

    Wilful failure to record the victims of the US-led and British-backed
    2003 war is perhaps an attempt to not create evidence which could be
    used for war crimes and genocide prosecutions against the politicians
    responsible. But there is no statute of limitations on war crimes
    and the new generation of mass graves in the post-Saddam era can be
    excavated for the evidence.

    The United States and Britain should recognise the terrible gravity
    of the situation they created and start recording the Iraqi victims
    of this war. These records may become part of eventual prosecutions
    for genocide, but the evidence is there anyway. What it will do is
    allow some dignity in death to the victims and their families.

    Few predicted that the situation in Iraq would ever amount to murder
    on a genocidal scale. Every murdered soul makes it harder to see a
    way out or where the killing will lead next. An all-out regional war
    with millions of victims would have been unthinkable only three years
    ago. But in a world where Arab casualties are not counted, perhaps
    it is not such a distant possibility. As regional tensions rise,
    regional solutions must be pursued.

    The door to regional peace in the Middle East is in Jerusalem and
    it can and must be pushed open - it is in everyone's best interests,
    including Israel. The US has pressured its allies before. Let us not
    forget that George Bush senior was the President who forced Israeli
    participation in the Madrid Process through threatening to withhold
    loan guarantees. Peace for Palestine may not stop the bloodshed in
    Iraq, but it will go a good way for the US and Britain to start
    winning back the Arab people and perhaps prove to them that Arab
    lives do count.

    Anwar Al Darkazally is a political analyst an was the legal adviser
    to the Negotiations Support Unit (NSU) of the PLO with responsibility
    for the Jerusalem file in final status negotiations.

    http://electroniciraq.net/news/2723 .shtml
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