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Spain: Thousands protest outside Iraq donors conference
By Vicky Short
27 October 2003
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Thousands of people marched in protest at the Iraq donors
conference held in Madrid on October 23 and 24. The 20,000-strong
demonstration renamed the meeting the Occupiers Plundering
Conference and demanded the withdrawal of foreign troops
from Iraq.
The march was organised by a coalition of 50 groups that included
political parties, civic and neighbourhood organisations, and
students unions. At the end of the demonstration, the author
Rosa Regás read a manifesto in which she denounced the
hypocritical designation donors given to the countries
attending the conference. She described the assembly as a
conclave in which the shameful benefits of the business of war
are being calculated.
She also criticised the actions of the United Nations, which
demonstrate the subordination of this international institution
to the imperialist interests of the Bush administration in the
occupation of Iraq.
It is a union of thieves, she added.
Referring to Spanish prime minister Aznar, she said Washingtons
agreement to hold the conference in Madrid was meant as a gesture
of thanks by the master to one of his lackeys for services rendered.
Marchers chanted, They are not donors, they are thieves,
It is not terrorism, it is resistance and The
Yankees assassinate, the UN legitimises.
Present on the march were a number of relatives of Tele 5 photographer
José Couso, who died when US forces opened fire on the
Hotel Palestine in Baghdad, where scores of international journalists
were staying. His relatives carried a large banner that read,
War crimes. We demand justice.
To cries of assassins, Cousos mother Matilde
Pernuy demanded justice for her son and justice for Iraq. She
said it was shameful to see how the very people who lied
to us in order to destroy Iraq, assassinated thousands of civilians
and broke international law, today demand that the international
community pay for their war of occupation.
She continued: They lied when they said that there were
weapons of mass destruction, and they lied when they assassinated
my son and the other witnesses of their crimes.
On October 17, the Spanish High Court finally accepted a lawsuit
by Cousos family against three members of the 3rd Division
of the Army Infantry of the United States, charging them with
responsibility for the photographers death on April 8. The
three US soldiers are Sergeant Gibson, who shot Couso, Captain
Philip Wolford, responsible for his unit, and Lieutenant-Colonel
Philip de Camp, responsible for his regiment. The suit states
that Couso´s death was a war crime and cites
the Geneva Convention, which stipulates that journalists
who carry out dangerous professional missions in the zone of armed
conflict will be considered as civilians.
According to the newspaper El Pais, the lawsuit was
accompanied by testimony from other journalists, including a declaration
by Sergeant Gibson, who states, I did not shoot him immediately.
I called my superiors and told them what I had seen. Ten minutes
later they called me back and told me to shoot him, and so I did.
Journalists Jon Sistiaga, of Tele 5, Olga Rodriguez, of Cadena
Ser, and Carlos Hernandez, of Antena 3 TV, all of whom were staying
at the Hotel Palestine, have stated that US troops had been stationed
for six hours on the bridge over the river Tigris, from where
they could clearly see the technical equipment of the press on
the Hotel Palestine balconies.
Hernandez said, There were no snipers, no Iraqi military
and no hostile forces in the hotel. Rodriguez said that
the death of her colleague had set a precedent: We now know
that if we go to a war in the future, we run the risk that the
same thing will happen again, with impunity for the perpetrators,
unless we are embedded with the US troops.
Another contingent of workers, from the television station
Antena 3, joined the demonstration after holding a lobby at the
Planeta Group to protest a new employment regulation affecting
the communications industry. A representative of the Antena 3
workers spoke at the rally, castigating the government for not
fulfilling its obligations either to Spanish workers or the Iraqi
people.
See Also:
Bush's Madrid shakedown nets $13 billion
in pledges
[27 October 2003]
Spain: Thousands demonstrate against
Iraq occupation
[2 October 2003]
Iraq: Eyewitness says US helicopter
attack killed ITN reporter Terry Lloyd
[11 September 2003]
Death of Spanish journalists
in Iraq sparks protests
[11 April 2003]
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