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Germany welcomes conference of war criminals, witch-hunts
their opponents
By Justus Leicht
9 February 2005
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In the coming weeks, two conferences are planned in Germany
on the war and occupation in Iraq.
At the Munich Security Conference, high-ranking
international political and military figures are expected to justify
the US war of aggression and the destruction of entire Iraqi cities.
It is also anticipated that the conference will play down the
use of torture and abuse by the occupying forces and call upon
the German government to support this criminal venture.
With great regret, organisers of the Munich conference have
acknowledged that one of the principal architects of this criminal
war, US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, has called off his
participation. He will, however, send Undersecretary Douglas Feith
in his place. Feith is a leading spokesman of the so-called neo-conservatives
and a proponent of a new war against Iran.
The second conference is due to take place in Berlin in more
modest surroundings. It is called the International Iraq
conference on occupation, resistance and international solidarity.
It has been organised by an alliance of left, pacifist and Arab-nationalist
groups and individuals, extending from the freethinkers
federation to the newspaper Junge Welt. The aim of this
meeting is to discuss the resistance against the occupation regime
that has emerged from the war of aggression.
Joachim Guillard, one of the organisers, explained in an interview:
Can the entire resistance be made responsible for terrorist
attacks? Which goals are pursued by the different forces of the
resistance? We want to discuss these and other questions. At the
centre will be the question of how we can best practice solidarity
with the Iraqi population. Among the organisers, there is
evidently agreement that the occupation of Iraq by American and
British troops is illegitimate, and that Iraqi resistance against
it is entirely legitimate.
A comparison of state and media reactions to the two conferences
is instructive. While in the case of the Munich conference everything
imaginable has been done to guarantee its functioning and protect
participants against protests by opponents of the war, the conference
in Berlin is being spied on, slandered, and criminalised, and
may, in the end, be banned. This despite the fact that even the
police have made clear that they do not anticipate any criminal
offences or terrorist attacks in connection with the Berlin conference.
On January 13, the Berlin Senator of the Interior, Erhardt
Körting (German Social Democratic Party-SPD), told members
of the citys intelligence services committee that the conference
had been planned by supporters of the former regime of Saddam
Hussein and left-wing groups. Although he failed to provide
the slightest evidence for the first of his accusations, it was
repeated uncritically in virtually all German media reports.
The headlines were virtually all variations on the same theme:
Saddam supporters plan congress in Berlin. These media
outlets were utterly disinterested in the fact that organisers
of the conference clearly dissociated themselves from the former
Iraqi dictator and the Baathist regimeGuillard stated that
one did not shed a tear for Hussein, and not
one of his supporters was expected to attend the congress.
The boulevard newssheet B.Z. frankly admitted that the
intelligence services were the source for its report.
Körting admitted there was no reason for forbidding the
conference, but announced nevertheless, We will be observing
what goes on.
Spiegel on-line tried to bolster the media campaign
against the conference with a few facts, but failed miserably.
Only one supporter of the congress was revealed to be an alleged
Saddam supporterAziz Alkazaz, a co-worker of
the renowned and thoroughly respectable scientific think tank,
the German Orient Institute. But even in the case of Alkazaz,
the author of the Spiegel on-line article acknowledged,
it is utterly unclear whether he intends to participate
at all. In other words, the article that appeared
the previous day on the very same web site, under the heading
Saddam supporters plan conference, was entirely bogus.
However, neither Körting nor the media outlets were prepared
to correct or apologise for their erroneous presentation of the
facts. Their priority is to defame, intimidate and, if possible,
criminalise any sort of solidarity for the Iraqi resistance and
opposition to the occupation of Iraq.
Klaus Hartmann, chairman of the freethinkers federation
and one of the conference organisers, commented quite correctly
in an open letter to Körting:
Whoever in accordance with the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal
fights a major crime, this war of aggression, and defends international
law, does not thereby become the supporter of any
particular head of state. To the strict defence of international
law belongs the realisation that the war by the US and its coalition
of obedient murderers against Iraq contravenes international law,
the occupation is a form of terror while resistance against it
is legitimate. Even the demand for liberty for Saddam Hussein
is not a question of sympathy or rejection, and does not mean
that he should not be put on trial for proven crimes committed
in complicity with the UShowever, in a free and sovereign
Iraq, not under the occupation and its puppets.
Körtings statement that at this time
there are no grounds for banning the congress should not be regarded
as an all-clear signal. Last September, an Arab-Islamic
congress in support of the Palestinian and Iraqi resistance was
also scheduled to take place in Berlin. Then, Körting also
declared there were no indications that this congress would
be a gathering of terrorists.
However, following a hysterical witch-hunt by the media over
alleged militant Islamists, and in particular a call
by German Interior Minister Otto Schily to ban the conference,
Körting carried out a rapid about-face and justified a prohibition
on the grounds of alleged agitation. However, no action
has been taken by the state to back up the accusations of mass
incitement, support for terror organisations or public approval
of criminal offences made against the organisers of the conference.
The Federal Prosecutors Office has since dropped its investigation.
In other words, the arguments used to justify the ban have proven
false.
For those responsible, however, this does not represent any
hindrance to their next attack on the right to free speech and
assembly.
See Also:
US group files war crimes
complaint in Germany against Rumsfeld: US defence secretary may
skip Munich conference
[29 January 2005]
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