British police have recently begun investigations of
allegations that the Iraqi President, Saddam Hussein, committed war
crimes during the conflict in the Gulf in 1990 and 1991. The
criminal case concerns the plight of 4,500 British citizens and
thousands of people from other countries who were held hostage in
Iraq and Kuwait a decade ago. The British hostages were held, often
in appalling conditions, for up to five months. The London-based
group Indict has spent five years compiling evidence of war crimes
and brutality by the Iraqi leadership, including witness statements,
and millions of captured documents. The case, which was passed on to
UK Attorney General, has been referred to the police, and may now be
further investigated by Scotland Yard. This could eventually lead to
a war crimes indictment against the Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein,
and his deputy prime minister, Tariq Aziz.
Conspicuously missing from the current war crimes
probe is Saddam’s more serious record of acts of genocide,
atrocities and human rights abuses, much of which occurred with the
military and financial support of the United Kingdom, the United
Kingdom, and European powers. One of the most horrific examples of
this is the March 1998 massacre of an estimated 5,000 Iraqi
civilians in Halabja by Saddam’s forces, in a brutal chemical
weapons attack utilising mustard gas and nerve toxins. "Entire
families were wiped out and the streets were littered with the
corpses of men, women and children", reported the Washington
Post (24/3/88). "Other forms of life in and around the city
- horses, house cats, cattle - perished as well."
Such atrocities committed by Saddam occurred not to
any meaningful Western indignation, but to Western consent,
complicity, and active military support. The materials, technology
and know-how to manufacture and use weapons of mass destruction were
siphoned to the regime throughout its crimes against its own
population, as well as during its war with Iran. The Guardian
reports that Saddam’s aggression was "fuelled by the arms
industries of Britain and the rest of Europe, the Soviet Union and
the United States" (4/3/00) – so much so that after the
genocide at Halabja, rather than halting arms supplies to Saddam’s
regime, the Western powers escalated their military support of the
regime. For instance, U.S. Department of Commerce figures show that
after the Halabja massacre, the U.S. was granting new licenses for
arms technology exports at a rate more than 50 per cent greater
than before Saddam’s gassing of the Kurds. Such grotesque war
crimes, for which the West bears equal responsibility, have been
ignored by the present inquiry.
Saddam was not the only party responsible for war
crimes during the 1991 Gulf War. The Allied forces committed grave
violations of international law and war crimes in their bombardment
of Iraq from 1991 to 92, by deliberately targeting civilians and
civilian infrastructure in the country. Middle East Watch,
affiliated to the U.S. based Human Rights Watch, confirms that the
Allies bombed and destroyed centres for civilian life, commercial
and business districts, schools, hospitals, mosques, churches,
shelters, residential areas, historical sites, private vehicles and
civilian government offices. In aerial attacks, including strafing,
over cities, towns, the countryside and highways, Allied aircraft
bombed and strafed indiscriminately. The bombing "effectively
terminated everything vital to human survival in Iraq - electricity,
water, sewage systems, agriculture, industry, health care",
reported Eric Hoskins, a Canadian doctor and coordinator of a
Harvard study team on Iraq. "Food, warehouses, hospitals and
markets were bombed. Power stations were repeatedly attacked until
electricity supplies were at only 4 per cent of prewar levels."
The same team reported: "The children strive to understand what
they saw: planes bombing, houses collapsing, soldiers fighting,
blood, mutilated and crushed bodies. The children fight to forget
what they heard: people screaming, desperate voices, planes,
explosions, crying people. They are haunted by the smell of gunfire,
fires and burned flesh." As a direct result of this bombing
campaign, at least 25,000 men, women and children were killed. The
Red Crescent Society of Jordan estimated 113,000 civilian dead, 60%
of them children, the week before the end of the war. According to
the Nuremberg Charter, this "wanton destruction of cities,
towns, or villages" is a Nuremberg War Crime. These crimes are
also in violation of Articles 48, 51, 52, 54 and 55 of Protocol I
Additional to the Geneva Convention 1977. Yet clearly the current
investigators do not consider this war crime perpetrated by the West
against Iraqi civilians of any significance.
The international community’s collective
complicity in the UN sanctions regime that has been imposed on the
Iraqi people, is yet another example of a war crime ignored by the
current inquiry. The International Commission of Enquiry on Economic
Sanctions, whose Co-President is former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey
Clark, charges American, British and UN officials with "causing
the deaths of more than 1,500,000 people including 750,000 children
under five, and injury to the entire population of Iraq by genocidal
sanctions." "The criminal acts charged include the
deliberate and intentional imposition, maintenance and enforcement
of an economic blockade and sanctions against the people of Iraq
from August 6, 1990 to this date with full knowledge constantly
communicated that the blockade and sanctions were depriving the
people of Iraq of essentials to support and protect human
life." The essentials denied to the Iraqi people under the
sanctions regime include medicines and medical supplies, safe
drinking water, adequate food, insecticides, fertilisers, equipment
and parts required for agriculture, food processing, storage and
distribution, hospital and medical clinic procedures among numerous
other essential human services. The Commission thus concludes that
U.S., UK, UN and other officials "have committed genocide as
defined in the Convention against Genocide against the population of
Iraq including genocide by starvation and sickness through use of
sanctions as a weapon of mass destruction and violation of Article
54, Protection of Objects Indispensable to the Civilian Population,
of Protocol I Additional to the Geneva Convention 1977."
The selective nature of the current probe into
Saddam and its intent to indict the Iraqi dictator, illustrates
clearly that the most powerful members of the international
community are effectively immune to the stipulations of
international law, being capable of violating them at will without
fear of legal accountability. While the Islamic Human Rights
Commission (IHRC) welcomes this important step to prosecute the
Iraqi President for one of his war crimes, if this procedure is to
rooted in genuine humanitarian concern, then it should be applied
consistently not only to the taking of British hostages, but to the
other horrific war crimes perpetrated by Saddam’s regime - along
with the war crimes perpetrated against the Iraqi people by the
forces of the United Kingdom, the United States and European powers
during the 1991 Gulf War and continuing to this day in the form of
an illegal sanctions regime.
Similarly, the humanitarian principles which make
necessary the indictment of Saddam Hussein due to his massive war
crimes, also make necessary the indictment of other war criminals of
equal standing. For instance, international law demands that the war
criminal Ariel Sharon, now the Prime Minister of Israel, should be
prosecuted and indicted for his long record of atrocities against
the Palestinian and Lebanese people. As Israeli defence minister in
1982, Sharon directly ordered the deliberate bombardment of
residential areas in Beirut, Sidon and other Lebanese cities the
Israeli invasion, killing thousands of Lebanese and Palestinian
civilians. He also oversaw the siege of west Beirut, deliberately
depriving civilian residents of food, water, safe passage and access
to medical care. Along with other Israeli officials, Sharon was
responsible for arming, training and protecting the perpetrators of
the genocidal massacres of Palestinian and Lebanese refugees in
Sabra and Shatila camps in September 1982. These acts constitute
grave breaches of the Fourth Geneva Convention, war crimes, and
crimes against humanity.
Indeed, even though he has only been Israeli Prime
Minister for less than a month, Sharon has already ordered measures
which further violate the Fourth Geneva Convention including
blockades which have reduced the Palestinian civilian population in
the occupied territories to extreme poverty and in some areas near
starvation, and resulted in deaths due to deliberate deprivation of
access to medical care.
Failing to apply standards of justice to other
perpetrators of war crimes such as the Western powers or Israel, is
evidence of a gross double standard among those who claim to
advocate human rights, and signifies that the United Kingdom as well
as the international community at large, is willing to tolerate
atrocities against innocent civilians as long as they are committed
by the leaders of friendly regimes. It also demonstrates clearly the
bankruptcy and hypocrisy of the contemporary human rights discourse,
and how it has effectively been abused by powerful members of the
international community to suit their own interests.
Mr. Nafeez Ahmed is a
political analyst and human rights activist based in London. He is
Director of the Institute for Policy Research & Development and a
Researcher at the Islamic Human Rights
Commission.