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  • Recognise Genocide Against Kurds

    RECOGNISE GENOCIDE AGAINST KURDS

    SP.NL
    http://international.sp.nl/bericht/24 111/080317-recognise_genocide_against_kurds.html
    M arch 17 2008
    Netherlands

    March 17th, 2008 ~U On Sunday it will be just twenty years ago that
    Saddam Hussein attacked the Kurdish town of Halabja with chemical
    weapons. This attack formed part of the Anfal Campaign, which was
    aimed at driving out or destroying the population of Iraqi Kurdistan.

    Members of Parliament Harry van Bommel and Fred Teeven recently
    attended the international conference on this subject in Erbil, Iraq.

    They have since together taken up the cause of international
    recognition of the genocide committed against the Kurds and of the
    establishment of a commemorative monument in the Netherlands.

    In the 1980s Europe and the Netherlands did a great deal of business
    with Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Iraq enjoyed the support of the west in
    its war against fundamentalist Iran, and blind eyes were turned. Only
    in the second half of that decade did it become clear that major risks
    were attached to the furnishing of certain materials. Saddam Hussein
    was employing chemical weapons against his enemies both inside and
    outside the country. On 16th March 1988 this reached a tragic climax
    with the poison gas attack on the town of Halabja and other places
    in the vicinity, which left at least 5,000 people dead.

    Others were physically or mentally mutilated, continuing to suffer
    to this day. This gas attack followed an intensive ethnic cleansing
    which had gone on for several years, the Anfal Campaign, which is
    estimated to have killed 182,000 Kurds. Much is known about this
    genocide, but unfortunately international recognition has not yet
    materialised. The conference which we attended had as its goal the
    promotion of such recognition as well as the bringing of those who
    share responsibility for it to justice.

    That recognition of genocide is far from straightforward is
    demonstrated by the problematic discussion of the crimes committed
    against the Armenians under the Ottoman Empire in 1915. The concept
    of genocide is emotionally charged, but since the realisation, in
    1948, of the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
    Crime of Genocide, it has been narrowly defined as the systematic
    extermination of a particular ethnic group according to a specific
    premeditated plan with the involvement or foreknowledge of governmental
    authorities. There is persuasive evidence for the presence of all of
    these aspects in Saddam Hussein's Anfal Campaign.

    The Netherlands should, we are strongly convinced, recognise therefore
    the genocidal character of this mass murder committed against the
    Kurds. We will be putting questions to the government on this as well
    as initiating a debate on the issue in Parliament.

    Recognition by the Netherlands will make it easier for other European
    countries and the EU to take the same course.

    That the Netherlands should extend such recognition is for a variety
    of reasons clear. Firstly, there is in the person of the convicted
    Dutch poison gas dealer Frans van Anraat a direct relation between
    our country and these tragic events. In 2006 the judge considered
    it proven that Van Anraat had supplied the chemicals needed by
    Iraq to produce the poison gasses. In addition, the judge in the
    first instance explicitly declared that the regime's crimes could be
    defined as genocide. Van Anraat's condemnation, in a higher court, to
    seventeen years in prison increased, in the Netherlands, the awareness
    of and attention to the genocide against the Kurds. Until 1985 it was,
    moreover, legally permitted to supply substances which could be used
    to produce chemical weapons. According to the Dutch UN arms inspector,
    not less than 45% of all poison gas chemicals supplied to Iraq during
    these years came from Dutch persons or Dutch companies. As the seat
    of many international judicial institutions it should be possible
    to expect the Netherlands to offer leadership when it comes to the
    detection and prosecution of war crimes and human rights abuses. A
    solitary reference to the role of international tribunals is in this
    respect utterly insufficient.

    In addition to recognition of the genocide we are urging the
    establishment of an international enquiry into the medical, social,
    economic and legal consequences of the Anfal Campaign. This is needed
    if we are to offer justice to the campaign's victims, especially to
    those who continue daily to contend with its results. As a first step
    on the way to recognition of the suffering of the Kurds we propose
    the establishment of a monument in memory of the victims and as a
    warning to ensure that nothing so terrible should ever happen again.

    The placing of a memorial for the suffering of a specific group would
    be unusual in our country. One example, which can be found at the
    Church of Moses and Aaron in Amsterdam, is the monument memorialising
    the fifteen Surinamese people shot dead by the military regime in
    December, 1982, known as the 'Decembermoorden'. In consultation with
    a range of organisations of Kurds, it seems to us that The Hague,
    as a town associated with justice and peace, would be the place to
    put a Kurdish monument. This year will see in a number of places
    commemorations of the Kurdish sorrow. Let us hope that in the future
    there will be one single place where Kurdish people and others can
    pause in an expression of the grief which has touched so many.

    Harry van Bommel and Fred Teeven are Members of the Dutch National
    Parliament, for the SP and VVD respectively. On Sunday they will
    speak at 1 p.m. at memorial ceremonies in Delft and Amsterdam.
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