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Australia: Families of Bali victims denounce Howard and the
Iraq war
By Rick Kelly
1 April 2003
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A significant but little publicised component of the opposition
in Australia to the war on Iraq has been statements from the relatives
of those killed in last years terrorist bombing in Bali.
They have been highly critical of Prime Minister John Howard,
in particular, for attempting to exploit the tragedy, in which
more than 180 people died, as a reason for Australias participation
in the war.
On March 10, during an official visit to New Zealand, Howard
was asked on how he would justify the inevitable fatalities in
any war. He replied: I think the Australian people will
understand that if we are engaged in military conflict that casualties
could occur, but casualties can occur in the most benign of circumstances.
We lost 88 Australians [sicthere were 89] in Bali because
of the wilful act of international terrorism, and we all had to
grapple with that. I will, among other things, be asking the Australian
people to bear those circumstances in mind if we become involved
in military conflict in Iraq.
Families of the Bali victims immediately condemned the self-serving
statement. They noted the lack of any evidence connecting the
bombing in Bali to the Baghdad regime and warning that a war on
Iraq would only heighten the danger of future terrorist attacks.
Brian Deegan, an Adelaide magistrate, who lost his son Josh
in the tragedy, has previously opposed Howards support for
the so-called war on terrorism and demanded to know what intelligence
warnings the government received prior to the bombing. He denounced
Howards comments in New Zealand and said no connection could
be drawn between Bali and war on Iraq. How dare he suddenly
use my son as a means for going into an illegal activity. Hes
a nasty little man whos going to get my kids killed,
he said.
Speaking later on ABC Radio, Deegan said: What Im
concerned about is the prime minister is seemingly using this
tragedy to justify the possibility of further tragedy, that other
tragedy having no connection whatsoever with my sons death.
The Australian government has absolutely no business legally,
morally, or any other reason to be entering Iraq. To use the death
of civilians in Bali to justify what, in my opinion, is an exercise
in cynicism.
Gold Coast doctor Bruce Whelan, whose 32-year-old son-in-law
Shane Walsh-Till died in Bali, told the media that Howards
comments were an attempt to gain political leverage
from the tragedy. He rejected Australian involvement in the war
against Iraq.
Some of the strongest comments came from Hannabeth Luke, a
22-year-old Australian student who survived the Bali attack. She
publicly confronted British Prime Minister Blair over his commitment
to war against Iraq on Britains Tonight television
program. If you had experienced the horrors I have seen,
known the grief I have known, you would be doing everything in
your power to ensure that no other individual would ever have
to go through this terrible experience, she said
She later explained to reporters: I tried to say [to
Blair]: will your conscience allow you to bring death to thousands
of innocent Iraqis? Will your conscience allow you to bring more
death and destruction on innocent people? Condemning Howards
comments, she said: There is no link [between Bali and Iraq].
The government is not realising that as long as they treat the
symptoms and not the causes, terrorism will increase.
Luke also challenged Howard in a full-page comment entitled
Please Mr. Howard Stop the Bloodshed, in Sydneys
Herald Sun. I have seen the horrific results of hatred
and aggression and I have felt its lasting consequences in my
heart, it read.
I witnessed at first-hand scenes of such unimaginable
horror, things I never thought I would see in my life. Yet, here
we are on the brink of a war that is certain to cause more bloodshed,
more pain and more horror for the people of Iraq, while inevitably
increasing the risk of further terrorist attacks against the West.
Luke referred to her boyfriend, Marc Gojard, who was killed
in the Bali blast. If he were alive today to see what our
world leaders are doing Im sure he would have been completely
baffled. He would not see any sense in an aggressive act of war
that is bound to isolate us further from Islamic countries and
push more ordinary Muslims towards the fanaticism of Al Qaeda.
She flatly rejected Howard government claims that invading
Iraq would make the world safer by removing alleged
weapons of mass destruction.
All we hear is talk of weapons of mass destruction and
I, for one, am sick of it. Whatever weapons Saddam Hussein may,
or may not, possess is not the issue. The threat to the west is
terrorism and war will do nothing to stop it. ... What sort of
a twisted logic is it that says we are going to create peace and
security for ourselves by waging war on Iraq?
What happened in Bali devastated me and changed my life
forever in so many different ways. But the fundamental way that
I look at the world has not altered... I am saying that war will
not solve anything. It will not make countries like Australia
any more safe. It will not make terrorism go away. I am saying
that the war will only make things worse. It will cause violence
and hatred in the world to escalate... If there is a chance to
stop even one death we should seize it. Its what [Gojard]
would have wanted.
The reaction of the families of the Bali victims highlights
the depth of antiwar sentiment. While there was a widespread anger
and distress in the aftermath of the Bali tragedy, the government
has been unable to channel this deeply-felt concern into support
for the US-led attack on Iraq. In fact, Howards attempt
to justify participation in the invasion by reference to the Bali
bombing is a measure of the governments isolation and weakness.
See Also:
Bali victims
father indicts Australian government
[3 December 2002]
Australian government
uses Bali atrocity to demand new repressive powers
[19 October 2002]
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