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  • Deconstructing Genocide

    DECONSTRUCTING GENOCIDE
    Professor Gregory Stanton

    Kurdish Globe
    http://www.kurdishglobe.net/displayArticle.j sp?id=FE4AD2E90CF688C0960CF8CDDD8E5B61
    May 22 2008
    Iraq

    An academic search for information on the Anfalization of Kurds

    The president of Genocide Watch warns Kurds to be watchful; otherwise,
    they may face another genocide.

    American Professor Gregory Stanton stated that genocide, which is
    defined in international law in the Convention on the Prevention and
    Punishment of Genocide, means acts committed with intent to destroy,
    in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group.

    "According to the definition of genocide, 'Anfal' is classified as
    genocide, because the Baath Regime committed the Anfal Campaign with
    the intent to destroy Kurdish ethnicity; it killed and buried alive
    180, 000 Kurdish people in the campaign in 1988," remarked Stanton.

    The professor recently arrived in Kurdistan Region to gather
    information and evidence about the Anfalization of Kurds, which he
    will publish in a book on worldwide genocidal crimes. During his stay
    here, he hopes to discuss plans on holding an international conference
    on the Anfal genocide in Europe. While in Erbil city, he also led an
    academic seminar on genocide at the College of Engineering, attended
    by university teachers and ministers.

    He explained the eight stages of genocide. The first is classification,
    where a regime distinguishes people into "us and them" by ethnicity,
    race, religion, or nationality; the second stage is symbolism, where
    names or other symbols are given to the classifications, combined
    with symbols of hatred; the third is dehumanization, where one group
    denies the humanity of other group; the fourth is organization, as
    genocide is always organized, usually by a state, using a state army
    or militias; fifth is polarization, where extremists drive groups
    apart; the sixth is preparation, where victims are identified and
    separated because of their ethnicity or religion; the seventh stage,
    extermination, begins and quickly becomes the mass killing legally
    called "genocide"; and the final stage is denial.

    He said that denial defines the current stage of Iraqi Kurds, mainly
    due to a number of Arab countries that have denied the Anfal Campaign
    as genocide. It is very important for Kurds, therefore, to hold an
    international conference about Anfal so that international communities
    are informed about what occurred in Iraqi Kurdistan.

    Before the Baath Regime embarked upon the Anfal Campaign against
    Kurds, Kurdish people in Iraq were considered third-class citizens
    after Sunni and Shiite Arabs. Baath Party members called Kurds
    "mountain barbarians."

    "Genocide cannot happen without a massive organization and may include
    international cooperation; in Iraq, for instance, some U.S. and German
    companies cooperated with Saddam by selling weapons, including chemical
    weapons," said Professor Stanton. "These companies should be brought to
    justice and I strongly suggest that Kurds collect documents regarding
    the companies that sold weapons to Saddam," he further added.

    Stanton said he feels shame that the U.S. allied itself with Hussein
    when he committed genocide against Kurds, and the U.S. still has
    alliances with some countries that it shouldn't align itself with,
    he said.

    In a meeting with Stanton, Kurdistan Region President Massoud Barzani
    said it is imperative to identify all those companies that supplied
    the former regime with chemical weapons and those victims of the
    chemical weapons attacks should be compensated by those companies.

    Meanwhile, Dr. Ziryan Osman, Kurdistan Region's Health Minister,
    asked Professor Stanton why Kurds should only try to bring the
    companies to justice and not the governments of the countries
    from which those companies operated, because Kurds are sure these
    companies did not sell weapons to Saddam without the permission of
    the governments. Responding to Dr. Osman's question, Stanton said
    he used to work for the U.S. State Department, and since he believes
    the policy of the U.S. State Department isn't based on a human rights
    policy, he resigned from his post.

    Stanton cautioned Kurds that they might face another genocide if they
    are not vigilant.

    "I am afraid that Turkey could carry out genocide against Kurds since
    in its past it has committed genocidal crimes against Armenians,
    which they are denying. Also, Turkey denies the existence of Kurds in
    Turkey," said Stanton. He believes some Arab countries, such as those
    that deny the Anfal Campaign and the Holocaust, are also capable of
    committing further genocide against the Kurds.

    Stanton mentioned his disappointment in Hussein's expedited execution,
    because it prohibited Hussein from being tried for all of his crimes
    against humanity. He also called on the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)
    to stop using violence in order to gain its objectives. "The PKK
    should use peaceful means; otherwise, I believe resorting violence
    will harm the Kurds," remarked the professor.

    Dr. Osman told Stanton that what Saddam did against the people of
    Kurdistan Region was not just a crime against humanity or genocide. "It
    was a crime against a small part of earth; it was bigger than genocide,
    because when Saddam's regime attacked Kurdistan with chemical weapons,
    it not only killed humans, but also killed and destroyed animals,
    birds, trees, and water springs." Stanton nodded and said, "It is true;
    it was bigger than genocide; we call this crime "ecocide."

    Iraqi Parliament commemorated Anfal on April 14, and officially
    recognized Anfal as genocide.
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