IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Iraqi-American Doctor Convicted of Violating Iraq Sanctions |
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by Amy Goodman Democracy Now Transcripts Entered into the database on Friday, February 11th, 2005 @ 22:48:09 MST |
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AMY GOODMAN: We are joined by Joel Cohen, Dr. Dhafir's attorney. Juan? JUAN GONZALEZ: Welcome to Democracy Now!, Mr. Cohen. JOEL COHEN: Thank you, Juan. JUAN GONZALEZ: Tell us a little bit about the case and the unusual situation
because obviously there have been many folks such as Voices in the Wilderness
who have been involved in breaking the sanctions with Iraq before the U.S. invasion
and no one yet has been prosecuted there. JOEL COHEN: Well, that's accurate. Dr. Dhafir was clearly targeted, clearly
investigated, clearly indicted, tried, and clearly convicted because he is a
Muslim, because he is a person of Iraqi ancestry and, as you pointed out, he's
the only person who has been criminally charged with violating these sanctions.
JUAN GONZALEZ: What's specifically was he involved in doing with the charity?
JOEL COHEN: Well, he and some other folks in the early 1990's when the impact
of the sanctions really began to devastate the Iraqi infrastructure, when it
destroyed the health system, when it increased the infant mortality rate tenfold
and the rate of cancer tenfold because not only did the folks in Iraq have to
deal with the impact of sanctions, but also of the devastation brought by the
Gulf war that depleted uranium that remained behind and so seriously hurt the
health system in Iraq. He and some other folks got together and began to raise
money and to get funds, humanitarian aid, food, blankets, medicine into Iraq.
People at Help the Needy were aware that dealing with anti-government institutions
involved in distribution of aid in Iraq, which means any Iraqi government institution
meant whatever aid actually reached the country went into the pockets of the
regime. So they sought to establish a network of people in the Middle East that
could raise funds, purchase things in Jordan and other countries and try to
get them into Iraq in such way that they would reach the people who needed them
and not the folks of the regime. AMY GOODMAN: Mohamed Khater is also on the line with us, a friend of Dr. Dhafir
for two decades. The reaction in the Muslim community and also of Dr. Dhafir's
family? MOHAMED KHATER: Well, the reaction in the Muslim community has been shock and
disbelief that something like this can happen. We never expected that the doctor
would be convicted on 59 counts. It just goes to say that we, as Muslims, we
have to -- we are being held to higher standards than any other citizen in this
country. We have to prove our innocence beyond any reasonable doubt, not the
other way around and for the doctor to be convicted this way, it just goes to
say that any -- any Muslim is difficult to get a fair trial in this environment.
AMY GOODMAN: Ramsey Clark, your response? You were familiar with this case
in Syracuse, New York. RAMSEY CLARK: Yes, I went up to Syracuse and spoke on the university campus.
The defense in this case and -- the place was jammed with people from the community,
1,500 people there perhaps, they all wanted to know why are they prosecuting
this good doctor? What did he do? He cared about the suffering in Iraq. 1,500,000
people died form those sanctions, more than half were children under the age
of 5. What did they need? They needed medicine. What is he -- he is a doctor.
When the cancer rates started jumping, he's an on oncologist, because of the
depleted uranium which is spread through the country from the U.S. assault on
Iraq, it was tearing him up and he was trying help in a humanitarian cause.
When a tsunami occurs, when natural disasters occur, you try to help. And the
sanctions were more deadly than those by far. So what he was doing was what
every human being who cares about life ought to do. And the prosecution of him
has threatened not only Arab American and the Muslim American communities which
are vast, but it is -- it threatens anyone who stands up for doing the right
thing in a crisis. JUAN GONZALEZ: The double standards here, not just the situation of prosecuting
him for giving humanitarian aid, but then also the fact that Voices in the Wilderness,
other groups in the United States have also done the same thing and you also
have a situation in the United Nations under the Oil for Food program where
nations were violating the sanctions and the United States was winking, looking
the other way while these violations of sanctions were going on. JOEL COHEN: There's one thing that you have to understand here. And that is
that this case began as a terrorist investigation. The government saw at some
point that funds were being sent to Jordan, sent to a bank in Jordan and every
document in the case, every government memorandum, they brought the defense
department into this investigative theme, they had every single federal law
enforcement agency here but the fish and wildlife commission forming a task
force to investigate the doctor and all of it was a search for a connection
to terrorism. They just couldn't believe that these folks were simply trying
to feed people who were starving and heal people who were sick. AMY GOODMAN: On that note I want to thank you very much for joining us, Joel
Cohen, Mohamed Khater, and former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark. To purchase an audio or video copy of this entire program, click here for our
new online ordering or call 1 (800) 881-2359. for more information on Dr. Rafil Dhafir click here: |