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Cindy Sheehan condemns Australian prime minister as an illegal
combatant
By Richard Phillips
31 May 2006
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US antiwar activist Cindy Sheehan denounced the Australian
government for its participation in the Iraq war and called for
the release of David Hicks from Guantánamo Bay and the
closure of the notorious US military prison camp at a demonstration
in Melbourne last Friday.
Sheehan rejected US and Australian government claims that Guantánamo
inmates did not deserve civil rights because they
were illegal enemy combatants. The four-and-a-half-year
incarceration of Hicks, in violation of Geneva Conventions and
his basic legal rights, has been fully endorsed by the Howard
government.
George Bush and John Howard
and Tony Blair are illegal combatants, she said, theres
nothing about this war on terror that is legal. These people perpetuate
the torture and the killing and theyre still allowed to
run free and live in society.
The demonstration was one of several antiwar protests and public
meetings featuring Sheehan and Dr Salam Ismael, from the Baghdad-based
organisation Doctors for Iraq, during an east coast tour of Australia
last week.
While the corporate media provided little publicity about Sheehans
visit, the meetings were packed, demonstrating yet again the deep-seated
opposition of broad layers of the population to the Iraq war and
Australian participation in it.
The military exists to make the world
safe for American corporations
The United States had no business invading Iraq, a country
that was no threat to America, Cindy Sheehan told a 600-strong
meeting at the Seymour Centre in Sydney on Tuesday night. George
Bush lied to me, he lied to my son, he lied to the country and
he lied to the world.
Sheehan began campaigning against the war after her 25-year-old
son Casey was killed by an Iraqi resistance fighter in April 2004.
She is a founding member of the Gold Star Families for Peace,
an organisation established by American families who have lost
relatives in the Iraq war and are demanding the withdrawal of
US troops. She is also a national board member of the Progressive
Democrats of America, a left-liberal pressure group that works
within the Democratic Party and was associated with the Howard
Dean nomination campaign in 2004.
Sheehan became a focus for millions of Americans opposing the
war after she established a protest camp outside George W. Bushs
Texas ranch in August 2005 to demand a meeting with the US president
over the death of her son. Australia is the eighth country she
has visited since that vigil.
Sheehan told the meeting that the invasion of Iraq was illegal
and was given loud applause when she called for the impeachment
of Bush and his prosecution, along with his co-conspirators, on
war crime charges.
In our country the military exists to make the world
safe for American corporations and to assist in the spread of
corporate colonialism, she said.
The invasion had nothing to do with fighting terrorism
or WMDs but was about controlling their natural resources and
stealing their oil. It was about devastating their country so
our countrys corporationsHaliburton, Bechtel and Blackwater
Security and Exxon and KBRcould profit. This is a war crime.
Another war crime, along with Guantánamo and Abu
Ghraib, and the other prisons in Iraq, is that my country has
used chemical weapons in Iraq, she said. It has been
proven that they used white phosphorus and napalm in Fallujah.
Even more than that, using conventional weapons on civilians is
a crime against humanity. Going into a country and imposing regime
change, your system of government, is also a war crime.
Your country supports all this action, which makes your
government war criminals, like mine.
Somebody asked me how do the people of Australia redeem
themselves, she continued, but the people of Australia
dont have to redeem themselves. The problem is your government.
A medical disaster
Dr Ismael told the capacity crowd at the Seymour Centre that
the invasion of Iraq was an act of barbarism. Using
photographs and statistical charts he described the destruction
of basic health service infrastructure since the 2003 invasion
and called for the immediate withdrawal of the US-led occupying
forces.
Ismael explained that only 45 percent
of 900 basic drugs required to maintain adequate medical treatment
were available in Iraq and that 40 percent of imported food and
medical supplies were not inspected to determine whether they
conformed to basic health standards or not. In Iraq today, over
400,000 children are malnourished.
He said that water purification and sanitation plants destroyed
in March 2003 had not been repaired and that of the 18 hospitals
operating in Baghdad prior to the invasion, 11 had been looted
and were dysfunctional. Privatisation of medical services was
extensive and basic drug prices had skyrocketed. Antibiotic prices
had doubled and medical oxygen increased more than ten-fold since
the invasion, he declared.
Prior to the invasion, he continued, hundreds of people from
the Middle East came to Iraq for medical treatment in the countrys
health system. Today, nobody came for medical care. Rather, any
Iraqis who could afford it, left the country to have medical procedures
carried out elsewhere.
According to Ismael, who has worked in refugee camps and health
units throughout Iraq, including in Fallujah, drug supplies were
so scarce that in some hospitals surgeons had to carry out amputations
using only local anaesthetics. Scores of people had died or been
forced to undergo limb amputations because they had been held
up on their way to hospital at occupation checkpoints.
Ismael treated casualties of the first siege of Fallujah in
April 2004 and was one of the first medical observers to enter
the city after a second wave of US attacks in November 2004. He
provided a harrowing account of the US militarys destruction
of Fallujah and its murder of thousands of innocent Iraqi men,
women and children.
Fallujahs main hospital was seized by the US troops a
few days after the first siege. The only other city clinic was
hit twice by American missiles, with medical equipment and drugs
destroyed. Ismael said there were no functioning ambulances left
in the city. The two ambulance vehicles sent to help evacuate
the wounded had been destroyed by US missile fire.
He told the audience that Doctors for Iraq had been the first
to present documentary evidence that the US military had used
napalm-white phosphorus bombs against civilians.
The Western media had ignored this war crime, he said, because
the information about it came from Iraqis who were
considered biased. It did not become an issue until
later, when Italian journalists took it up.
Ismael said that large numbers of Iraqi doctors and highly
qualified surgeons had left the country since the invasion, unable
to cope with the impossible state of medical infrastructure and
lack of basic drugs. This included more than 3,000 doctors in
the past year.
Violations of medical neutrality were now commonplace, he explained,
with doctors and surgeons threatened or killed for honouring their
Hippocratic oath and treating all sick and wounded, irrespective
of their political loyalties or religious beliefs. He said that
15 surgeons had been jailed by the US military for treating patients
the US claimed were insurgents.
Ive been accused of this. My house has also been
raided and my father beaten up by US military forces, Ismael
said.
Nothing could be worse
A brief question and answer period followed the speeches by
Sheehan and Ismael.
One audience member suggested that withdrawal of the US-led
military would only make things worse.
Ismael briefly replied that the invasion was an act of
barbarism and that nothing can be worse for Iraqis
than the current situation. The first step in repairing
the destruction, he added, was the withdrawal of the occupying
forces.
Sheehan said: I get this question at almost every single
Q & A but lets be clear: our government doesnt
care about the people of Iraq. The coalition troops are the problem,
not the solution, and there is never going to be peace or rebuilding
the country of Iraq with our troops and the independent contractors
there.
This area was once the cradle of civilisation. They have
doctors, engineers, scientists and other highly trained people.
They dont need Americans to solve their problems and to
say that they do is arrogant and racist.
During her speech Sheehan did not mention Democratic Party
support for the Iraq war or its backing for the Bush administrations
police state measures. The following exchange, however, won sustained
applause from the Sydney audience.
A local member of Democrats Abroad was given the floor to urge
expatriate Americans to register for the forthcoming Senate and
Congressional elections.
Sheehan responded: Have you been watching the news? Its
easy to vote but that doesnt mean that your vote will be
counted.
Democrats Abroad: But if we dont register and get out
there and vote, then we cant make a change.
Sheehan: Im not saying you shouldnt register but
what have the Democrats done for us? In the United States there
is only one party and its called the war party. When it
comes to war, both parties agree, and the same people who line
their pockets and profit from war keep on doing it.
Im not saying dont vote, thats our right
and our responsibility as Americans, but we cant wait until
November. People are dying in the hundreds every day in Iraq....
We cant count on our politicians to do the right thingthese
people have a track record. Real changes only happen when it comes
from the bottom up.
See Also:
At Bush's State of the Union:
Cindy Sheehan arrested for wearing antiwar message
[2 February 2006]
New York City police
attack Cindy Sheehan at antiwar rally
[21 September 2005]
The media and Cindy
Sheehan
[18 August 2005]
Growing support for
Cindy Sheehan protest against Iraq war
[16 August 2005]
Mother of fallen soldier
camps outside Bush ranch: "Why did you kill my son?"
[11 August 2005]
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