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US antiwar protesters face $10,000 fines for travel to Iraq
By Jeremy Johnson
18 August 2003
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The Bush administration has moved to prosecute US citizens
who traveled to Iraq in February and March as part of a campaign
to deter the bombing of hospitals, schools and critical civilian
infrastructure there. Loosely organized by the London-based group
Human Shields and by the Chicago-based Voices in the Wilderness,
about 300 people from some 30 countries participated, including
as many as 20 from the United States.
Earlier this month, the US Treasury Departments Office
of Foreign Assets Control demanded that several of the Americans
pay fines of up to $10,000 each for violating government sanctions
against travel to Iraq. The travel ban was imposed before the
first Gulf War as part of a brutal sanctions regime initiated
by the US and endorsed by the United Nations. The sanctions led
to the deaths of over 500,000 Iraqi children and hundreds of thousands
of others in the 12 years between the two American-led onslaughts.
The penalty for violating the sanctions can be an administrative
fine of up to $275,000 per violationagainst which there
is no right to appeal or to a hearingor, if criminal proceedings
are undertaken, a fine of up to $1 million and a jail term of
up to 12 years. Two of those being fined, Faith Fippinger, a 62-year-old
Florida woman, and Ryan Clancy, a 26-year-old record store owner
from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, have publicly refused to pay.
Fippinger told CNN on August 11, I will not contribute
any money to the continual buildup of Americas weapons of
mass destruction, which, as far as I know, far exceed the weapons
of all other nations combined, and, in fact, have escalated the
buildup of weapons everywhere.
The retired teacher of visually impaired children had arrived
in Iraq on February 20. She spent most her time there living with
an Iraqi family in workers housing on the site of the Daura
refinery some 30 kilometers south of Baghdad. The refinery supplied
fuel for the nearby Dora Electrical Power Plant, which in turn
provided power to a third of Baghdad. Both sites had been destroyed
by US bombing during the first Gulf War.
Once US troops overran Baghdad and the bombing slowed, rather
than leave the country along with most of the remaining human
shields, Fippinger volunteered at a Baghdad hospital overwhelmed
with civilian casualties. Lacking any medical training, she was
sometimes assigned to hold down patients as they were having limbs
amputatedwithout anesthetic due to supply shortagesand
then to dispose of the amputated limbs. She told of one Iraqi
man watching his wife die in hospital after just losing their
six children in a bomb attack.
For this work, Fippinger now stands accused of giving
her services to the Iraqi government. However, as she told
the Washington Post in an interview last May, We
never went in support of Saddam Hussein. Never, ever. The goal
and the purpose was the protection of the innocent Iraqi people
who have had many wars and years of sanctions and are tired and
devastated.
Both during the US/British bombardment and soon after her return
home on May 4, the retired schoolteacher publicly proclaimed her
antiwar views in appearances on ABCs Good Morning
America and on National Public Radio, as well as in newspaper
interviews with the Daily Telegraph of Sydney, Australia;
the San Francisco Chronicle; the Irish Times; the
Times of London; and the Washington Post.
Ryan Clancy spent three weeks at a food silo in a rural area
northwest of Baghdad. He worked with children while he was there,
bringing crayons and construction paperitems that were banned
under the sanctionsto encourage younger children to draw
stories of their lives. He played soccer in the streets with the
teenagers. During his stay he was interviewed by Dan Rather for
CBS News and by the Wall Street Journal.
Just before the bombing started, he went to Jordan to get enough
cash to make sure he could get out again quickly, but Iraqi officials
refused him permission to reenter. When he returned to the US
a week later, customs agents subjected him to a lengthy grilling,
photocopying every piece of paper in his possession. For several
months afterwards he found himself on a list of people banned
from commercial air travel in the US.
In addition to the individual fines, the US Justice Department
filed suit on June 20 in federal District Court to force the collection
of a $20,000 fine imposed on Voices in the Wilderness. The fines
were imposed last year for two 1998 violations of sanctions against
the importation of medicine to Iraq without permission. The organization
also refuses to pay the fine.
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to Ryan Clancy about
the Treasury Departments actions against him. I got
a phone call a week ago Monday [August 4]. That was the first
I heard about the fine, he said. They warned me that
if I didnt pay, I could be subject to criminal charges with
penalties of up to $1 million and 10 years in jailbut they
never promised that if I went ahead and paid the fine, that they
would not hit me with criminal charges anyway.
He said that while he asked the agency to send him charges,
penalties and other information in writing, he received only a
one-page fax with a case number and a telephone number. They
dont want to put anything in writing because they know I
will just turn it over to the press, he said.
The Milwaukee native said the government agents had threatened
to seize the assets of his store, leaving him bankrupt.
While I cant say I want to face criminal charges,
I would at least welcome the opportunity to have my day in court,
Clancy told the WSWS. I am worried about what is going to
happen to me, but I am even more terrified and appalled that this
kind of thing can happen in this country. They are also going
after a 62-year-old retired schoolteacher!
The charge against me is giving aid and comfort to the
enemy, but I was giving aid and comfort to elementary school and
high school students, he said. There is no way that
these children were the enemy. He said that he also chose
to stay at a food silo to ward off an attack that could leave
even more Iraqis facing starvation.
Clancy charged that the government is singling out those who
were most outspoken against the war for punitive fines. Other
people traveled to Iraq, who ended up supporting the war; they
have not been fined, he pointed out. Even some Senators
and Congressmen made a trip there. When they get fined or jailed,
Ill take my place right there with them!
An August 7 report in the Los Angeles Times revealed
yet another irony about the Bush administrations policy.
While issuing large fines and threatening criminal action against
ordinary citizens for seeking to protect Iraqi civilians, Bush
recently signed an executive order banning any legal action, either
civil or criminal, against individuals and corporations involved
in exploiting Iraqs oil wealth, now under American control.
Executive Order 13303 states in part, any attachment,
judgment, decree, lien, execution, garnishment or other judicial
process is prohibited, and shall be deemed null and void, with
respect to ... all Iraqi petroleum and petroleum products, and
interests therein, and proceeds, obligations, or any financial
instruments of any nature whatsoever arising from or related to
the sale or marketing thereof...
Legal experts consulted by the Los Angeles Times insisted
that the broad language of the order granted immunity for actions
ranging from criminally negligent oil spills to gross human rights
abuses.
While Saddam Husseins regime fell months ago, many of
the sanctionsincluding the travel ban for US citizens without
prior State Department authorizationremain in force. In
fact, on July 31 George Bush issued a one-year extension of the
national emergency with respect to Iraq first declared
by his father on August 9, 1990 under the initial executive order
imposing sanctions.
The World Socialist Web Site also spoke with Judith
Karpova, a 58-year old writer who stationed herself at the Daura
Refinery along with Faith Fippinger before the bombing began.
She is also the subject of a Treasury Department inquiry, but
as yet has not been fined.
Commenting on the ongoing sanctions, Karpova said, They
represent a further criminal action by the US. They are still
trying to break the spirit of the Iraqi people. They used sanctions,
they used depleted uranium, they used shock and awe
to get the Iraqi people to submit to a murderous assault on their
country. Even now the occupation forces are putting the screws
to neighborhoods where they think there are snipers, cutting off
water and other services. That means more children dying. But
the spirit of a people cannot be broken in this way.
Ms. Karpova is urging supporters of Faith Fippinger and Ryan
Clancy to demand that the Treasury Department drop their cases.
Letters of protest may be sent to:
US Department of the Treasury
Office of Foreign Assets Control
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW (Annex)
Washington, DC 20220
Attn: Mr. David H. Harmon, chief, Enforcement Division
See Also:
A shameful day in American
history: US blitzkrieg turns Baghdad into an inferno
[22 March 2003]
Rumsfeld pushes big lie on
human shields in Iraq
[24 February 2003]
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