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: Britain
Christian Science Monitor admits using forged documents
against antiwar British MP Galloway
By Mick Ingram
5 July 2003
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Scottish Labour MP George Galloway has issued High Court libel
proceedings against the Telegraph newspaper over a claim
that he received money from Saddam Husseins regime in Iraq.
The move follows a public apology to Galloway by the Christian
Science Monitor for having made similar allegations based
on forged documents.
In April the Telegraph claimed that Galloway had secretly
received at least £375,000 a year from the Iraqi government.
It alleged that he had made substantial profits by receiving money
from the oil for food programme. The newspaper also
claimed Galloway received a percentage of the profits on a number
of food contracts he had supposedly obtained with the Iraqi ministry
of trade. The Telegraph said it had evidence Galloway had
a meeting with an Iraqi agent, on December 26, 1999, at which
he asked for more money, further alleging that Galloway had used
the Mariam Appeal, which he founded, as a front to conceal his
secret commercial dealings with Iraqs intelligence service.
All of these allegations were based upon documents said to have
been discovered in the bombed-out ruins of the Iraqi Ministry
of Information building in Baghdad by Telegraph reporter
David Blair.
The story was then picked up by the American newspaper Christian
Science Monitor, which claimed to have obtained its own documents
showing that Galloway had received some $10 million from the Iraqi
regime over an 11-year period for the promotion of its interests
in the West.
The Monitor has now been forced to apologise for its
story. Its June 20 edition published a retraction stating that
the documents were forgeries. The retraction, Galloway papers
deemed forgeries: Iraq experts, ink-aging tests discredit documents
behind earlier Monitor story, said that after publishing
the initial article of April 25, 2003, An extensive Monitor
investigation has subsequently determined that the six papers
detailed in the April 25 piece are, in fact, almost certainly
forgeries.
The Arabic text of the papers is inconsistent with known
examples of Baghdad bureaucratic writing, and is replete with
problematic language, says a leading US-based expert on Iraqi
government documents. Signature lines and other format elements
differ from genuine procedure, the article stated.
Two of the documents dated 1992 and 1993 were written
within the past few months, according to a chemical analysis of
their ink. The newest documentdated 2003appears to
have been written at approximately the same time.
Monitor editor Paul Van Slambrouck said, At the
time we published these documents, we felt they were newsworthy
and appeared credible, although we did explicitly state in our
article that we could not guarantee their authenticity.
It is important to set the record straight: We are convinced
the documents are bogus. We apologize to Mr. Galloway and to our
readers, he declared.
An accompanying article by Van Slambrouck declared, On
this story, we erred. Our report said what we knew, honestly and
carefully. With this follow-up story Friday, we are continuing
our effort to tell what we know, as fully and fairly as we can,
to set the record straight.
The Monitors apology is, however, one of the most
backhanded in the history of journalism. It launched its investigation
only the British newspaper, Mail on Sunday, ran an article
May 11 that disputed the authenticity of documents obtained from
the same source as the Monitors documents, an Iraqi
general the Mail named as Salah Abdel Rasool. The Mails
article said its writer had purchased other documents from the
general alleging payments to Galloway. Those documents, unlike
the Monitors, included purported Galloway signatures.
Extensive examination of the documents by experts has
proved they are fakes, bearing crude attempts to forge the MPs
signature, the Mail said.
Galloway rejected the Monitors apology, saying
the story went into print without ever having been put to him.
He told Sky News that the basic checks werent
made and that the paper could not now just shrug it off as a mistake.
I want to know who forged these documents. I am calling
on the prime minister, as head of the co-occupying power in Iraq,
to investigate how this conspiracy came about, Galloway
said in an earlier statement.
As a member of the House of Commons, indeed as a British
subject, I have the right to the protection of the British intelligence
services from a conspiracy hatched by persons unknown but whose
handiwork was conducted in foreign territory co-occupied by Great
Britain.
I dont accept their apology. Firstly, a newspaper
of their international standing should have conducted these basic
checks on the authenticity of these documents before they published
them and not more than two months afterwards.
This internationally renowned newspaper published on
its front page, in virtually every country in the world, that
I took 10 million dollars from Saddam Hussein, based on papers
which have proved to be forgeries.
They did not even speak to me before publishing these
allegations. My legal action against them continues.
Many of the Monitors own readers also felt that
an apology was not an adequate response and criticised the editors
statement as seeking to justify running the story.
Regarding your June 20 article Galloway papers
deemed forgeries: Will an apology repair the
damage to Mr. Galloways reputation? As a supposedly professional
publication, you have a duty to fact check before you publish
articles that are potentially so devastating to individuals,
wrote Carolyn Gray from Jupiter, Florida.
Documents conveniently uncovered
in the days following the war amid heavy looting and destruction
should have been viewed with the highest skepticismespecially
when they reveal facts about one of the most influential
and outspoken critics of the war. Is it too much to believe that
someone might have an agenda to smear such a man? asked
Gil Gillman from Pittsburgh.
John F. Garcia from Iowa City, Iowa wrote: Let me encourage
the Monitor to hang on to this story, now that youve
made this limited concession to the truth. Are we to believe a
has-been Iraqi general spontaneously dabbles in Britains
domestic politics for a mere cut of an $800 translation fee?
Your apology is nice, but your readers would prefer you
to make it up to us by looking underneath the documents.
Far from conducting such an investigation, the Monitor
has accompanied its formal retraction of its story with efforts
to shore up the credibility of the accusations made by the Telegraph.
The June 20 article states that the Monitors
documents were different in many details from those of the Daily
Telegraph, and came from a different source.
The Monitor further reports, After examining copies
of two pages of the Daily Telegraphs documents
linking Galloway with the Hussein regime, Mneimneh [head of Iraq
Research and Document Project in Washington] pronounces them consistent,
unlike their Monitor counterparts, with authentic Iraqi
documents he has seen.
Moreover, a direct comparison of the language in the
Monitor and Daily Telegraph document sets
shows that they are somewhat contradictory.
The papers in the Monitors possession alleged
that Galloway began receiving funds from Iraq in the early 1990s.
One of the Daily Telegraphs, dated January 2000,
alleges that Iraqi officials were just beginning their consideration
of a financial relationship with Galloway.
Of the Monitors papers, he says, My
gut reaction to [these documents] is that they are extremely suspicious.
The implication, though embarrassing for the Monitor,
is that the documents it used are fakes but the Telegraphs
are authentic and can even be used to prove the inaccuracy of
Rasools crude forgeries.
The Telegraph has declared that it stands by its original
story and has used the Monitors comments to back
up the authenticity of the documents supposedly stumbled
upon by reporter David Blair in April.
Following publication of the Monitors retraction,
in a June 20 statement Telegraph editor Charles Moore said,
We have complete confidence in our story, our reporter and
the authenticity of our documents.
The Christian Science Monitors
retraction has no bearing on the Daily Telegraphs
story. Our story was based on a different set of documents found
in a different set of circumstances. They were not supplied or
given to us but unearthed by our reporter, David Blair, in the
foreign ministry in Baghdad.
We note that the experts employed by the CSM pronounced
that the documents on which our story was based appeared to be
genuine, he added.
After Galloway issued the writ, Moore said the action would
be defended.
As the World Socialist Web Site pointed out in its article
of May 3, Media attack on MP George Galloway aimed at smearing
antiwar protests, the circumstances in which the Telegraphs
documents were supposedly uncovered are just as suspicious as
the handing of documents to the Monitor by Rasool.
Blair himself was forced to remark, Why the contents
of the room with the box files survived is a mystery. Its walls
are blackened by fire, yet most of the folders are intact.
The WSWS noted that the claim that hundreds of CIA and MI6
operatives missed what Blair and a handful of other journalists
discovered in a casual search would convince no one. All indications
are that the press smear campaign against Galloway is part of
an orchestrated witch-hunt in which the hidden hand of the security
services is working beneath the surface of events in an attempt
to discredit all those who opposed the US-British war and the
continued occupation of Iraq.
See Also:
Britain: Media attack on MP
George Galloway aimed at smearing antiwar protests
[3 May 2003]
Britain: Labour Party suspends
MP George Galloway for antiwar stance
21 May 2003]
Britain: Labour extends antiwar
witch-hunt to Tam Dalyell
[22 May 2003]
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