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Britain: Labour Party suspends MP George Galloway for antiwar
stance
By Julie Hyland
21 May 2003
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On May 6 Labour Party General Secretary David Triesman announced
that he had suspended George Galloway from the party due to remarks
the Scottish Member of Parliament (MP) had made opposing the war
against Iraq.
Triesman said an internal investigation would establish whether
the MP had brought the party into disrepute by urging
British troops not to obey illegal orders and accusing
Prime Minister Tony Blair and President George W. Bush of acting
like wolves.
Galloway, one of the most prominent spokesmen for the Stop
the War coalition, had been attacked as a traitor by the right-wing
media and most of the political establishment for his remarks.
In an interview with Abu Dhabi television at the beginning of
April, he suggested that Blairs pursuit of an illegal war
could lead him to be tried for war crimes, and said, The
best thing British troops can do is to refuse to obey illegal
orders.
Following the US-led attack on Iraq, Galloway said, [T]wo
of the worlds richest and powerful leaders had fallen like
wolves upon one of the most wretched countries on earth.
Notwithstanding our fundamental political differences with
Galloway, the World Socialist Web Site unconditionally
defends him against the attack launched by the Labour Party leadership
against him. Galloways political career has been marked
by the opportunism that is typical of the left wing of the Labour
Party, and he has, on occasion, gone beyond defence of the Iraqi
people to imply political support for the despotic regime of Saddam
Hussein. He does not represent a principled, socialist opposition
to British imperialism. These differences can and should be discussed
at greater length in the future, but on the issue at hand, the
basic question is a gross violation of democratic rights aimed
at silencing opposition to Blairs war-mongering policies
and intimidating political dissent in general.
The decision to suspend the MP is an unprecedented attack on
freedom of speech and due process, even by the Blair governments
standards. Labour has essentially decreed that an elected representative
has no right to speak his or her mind if it runs contrary to the
partys official position. The flouting of any notion of
parliamentary democracy and accountability was further underscored
by the fact that the disciplinary action was apparently taken
by Triesman without consultation with Galloways fellow MPs.
The statements for which Galloway has been suspended were entirely
principled and true. Given the illegal and unprovoked character
of the US-British invasion, his advice to British soldiers not
to obey illegal orders was entirely in line with the letter and
spirit of international law. It is not Galloway who is bringing
the Labour Party into disrepute in the eyes of millions of working
and oppressed people around the world, but rather Blair, Triesman
and the political reactionaries and cowards who either lined up
behind the war or sought in the aftermath to make their peace
with the Blair leadership.
Galloway is being attacked for voicing sentiments shared by
broad sections of the British public, including millions who marched
and demonstrated against the war. Blair made plain his contempt
for public opinion, when in the run-up to the war he blithely
dismissed the two million-strong antiwar protest in London on
February 15, and insisted that history would be his
judge, as opposed to the electorate.
Now contempt has been replaced by an active suppression of
dissenting views that will not stop with Galloway. His fate is
meant to intimidate all opponents of the government, both within
the party and in the population at large.
Galloways suspension, which was immediate and indefinite,
bars him from holding party office or publicly representing the
party pending the outcome of the investigation. He is still required
to vote with the party in parliament, however.
It is doubtful that Labour can make the specific charge against
Galloway stick. Not even Labours latest variant of the party
constitution could officially outlaw free speech.
Moreover, branding Galloway a traitor for his remarks would
raise many questions, given the fact that his description of the
war as illegal is the opinion of many experts in international
law. This month Clare Short resigned as international development
secretary, charging that Blair had suppressed a report from the
attorney general that raised concerns over the legality of a war
undertaken without UN backing. Focusing an attack on Galloway
on this issue could well backfire.
Nevertheless, the government has been emboldened to act because
of the ongoing media witch-hunt against the MP, seeking to destroy
his credibility and force him out of the public arena. Ever since
the war against Iraq was ended, there have been a series of allegations
made against Galloway charging him with being in the pay of the
Saddam Hussein regime.
Last month Daily Telegraph journalist in Iraq David
Blair alleged that he stumbled across several documents
during a trawl of the ruins of the Iraqi Information Ministry
in Baghdad that indicate that Galloway had received more than
£375,000 a year from Iraqs Oil for Food
programme.
Blair claims to have found the files intact as he searched
a heap of grubby box files on the floor of the bombed-out
ministry, while looters scurried through the corridors.
Subsequently, the Christian Science Monitor in the United
States claimed to be in possession of documents proving that Galloway
had received £6.3 million from Saddam Hussein. The documents
were said to have been found by an unnamed Iraqi general in a
house used by Saddams son, Qusay.
Galloway has launched libel action against both papers, claiming
the documents were either forgeries or contained false information.
He has also rejected the charge of financial wrongdoing over
the Mariam Appeal he set up to fund the treatment of a little
Iraqi girl who contracted leukaemia. The Times of London
newspaper, amongst others, alleges that, having secured Mariams
treatment, Galloway used funds to conduct a political campaign
against sanctions and in support of the Palestinian intifada.
The Labour Partys attorney general had already announced
that he would conduct a fact-finding probe into the
Times allegations.
Others have also questioned the veracity of the document finds,
especially why such important documents had not been recovered
first by British or US forces, and how they had managed to remain
intact given the extensive damage caused by US bombs and the widespread
looting that followed.
A May 11 report in the Mail on Sunday disclosed that
documents it had been offered for sale in Iraq implicating Galloway
with the regime were clearly forgeries. The documents were being
sold in Baghdad by a former Republican Guard general, Salah Abdel
Rasool, and contained obvious mistakes, the newspaper reported.
These included glaring misspellings of Iraqi officers names,
errors in the official title of Saddams son Qusaysaid
to have authorised the documentand the fact that the signature
that was supposed to be Galloways bore no resemblance to
the MPs.
According to Roy Greenslade, former editor of the Daily
Mirror, it is likely that Galloway is the victim of a state-inspired
frame-up, designed to destroy his credibility and wreck his political
career.
Greenslade would be more familiar than most with such a put-up
job, for, as he admits in his article in the May 8 Guardian,
he was central to such an operation against National Union of
Mineworkers leader Arthur Scargill in 1990. As editor of the Daily
Mirror, Greenslade had accused Scargill of using money raised
during the yearlong miners strikeallegedly donated by Libyas
Colonel Gaddafito pay off his house mortgage. Further allegations
of financial impropriety followed, all involving various pariah
regimes and countries.
It was open season on the president of the National Union
of Mineworkers for weeks afterwards. Papers could, and did, say
whatever they liked. The principle, Greenslade wrote, was
to throw as much mud as possible in the hope that some of it would
stick.
Years later Greenslade realised he had been duped
by a secret service plot to defame the miners leader,
and that none of the allegations were true.
The similarities between the Scargill and Galloway cases
are so pronounced its impossible not to believe that the
next stage in the Galloway saga, even if it takes place long into
the future, will eventually end up echoing the Scargill affair.
Labour has made clear that its investigation into the MP will
take account of the media allegations against him. Given that
these allegations are subject to separate investigationsincluding
a possible court casethis is a telling example of Labours
readiness to ignore the presumption of innocence without proof
of guilt that is one of the most fundamental democratic rights.
In a sign that Labour intends to step up its campaign against
the MP as a means of intimidating any opposition to its policies,
a meeting that Galloway was due to address in Oxford on May 16
was cancelled by the local authorities on a technicality. But
Oxford Labour Councillor Mick McAndrews spelt out the real objective,
claiming that Galloway should not be allowed a public platform
on which to spread his anti-British message.
See Also:
Britain: What Clare Short's resignation
says about New Labour
[15 May 2003]
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