IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
BUSH & BLAIR TARGETED BY IRAQ TRIBUNAL |
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by Greg Szymanski American Free Press Entered into the database on Wednesday, June 08th, 2005 @ 17:31:54 MST |
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As President George W. Bush “jet-sets” around the world, promoting
the neo-conservatives’ own brand of democracy, there is one overseas meeting
in June he will likely avoid like the plague. In late May, Bush and England’s Prime Minister Tony Blair received personal
invitations to attend a session of the World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI) in Istanbul
from June 23-27. A White House spokesman told AFP he was unaware of the meeting
or any such group. The WTI, made up of thousands of people worldwide including many preeminent
scholars and dignitaries, seeks to reclaim justice regarding the Iraqi invasion.
The group was formed two years ago with the intent to document the war crimes
orchestrated by Bush and Blair and eventually bring both heads of state to justice
because of what group leaders say is “an arrogant flaunting of world opinion
and established law.” WTI media spokesman Hilal Kuey said many countries around the world are not
as kind toward the two leaders as the West, viewing the Iraqi invasion as an
overt act of aggression. “Since the U.S. administration and the UK government have used their
power to avoid being prosecuted for an illegal and illegitimate war, the citizens
of the world have undertaken an initiative to reclaim justice,” said Kuey
from her office in Turkey. “The world is calling for Bush and Blair to
be held accountable for the crimes committed in Iraq.” DESTRUCTION OF IRAQ The Istanbul conference is a culmination of two years of investigating and
documenting the occupation and destruction of Iraq, as numerous sessions have
been held in many foreign capitals around the world. The Istanbul conference
marks the third anniversary of the Iraq invasion. The formal letter sent to Bush is highly critical of the U.S.-led war in Iraq
and asks Bush to defend his position to the world, something WTI leaders say
he has avoided for three years. “We, on behalf of the peoples of the world who believe in justice, start
from the conviction that you have been acting in violation of common values
of humanity, international treaties and international law,” stated the
letter sent to the White House and numerous American and British Embassies around
the world, asking both Bush and Blair to defend their positions. Since the organization claims Bush has ignored worldwide pleas to respect international
law, the WTI has spread to almost every capital in the world in an attempt to
fight what it calls “a war of aggression launched despite the opposition
of people and governments all over the world.” “There is no court or authority that will judge the acts of the United
States and its allies. If the official authorities fail, then authority derived
from universal moral and human rights principles can speak for the world,”
said Kuey, the WTI spokesman. “Our legitimacy derives from the failure of official international institutions
to hold accountable those who committed grave international crimes and constitute
a continued menace to world peace. We have a duty to take action against wars
of aggression, war crimes, crimes against humanity and other breaches of international
law. “The WTI will not end in Istanbul as it is to be considered a continuing
process. The investigation of what happened in Iraq is of prime importance to
restore truth and preserve collective memory against the constant rewriting
of history. We are challenging the silence of international institutions and
seeking to put them under pressure to fulfill their obligations under international
law.” GROWING CLAMOR Besides the Iraq war, the WTI is also investigating the growing clamor of what
has been called America’s effort to create a “new world order”
to dominate the world. The WTI has been endorsed and signed by such notable worldwide figures as Richard
Falk, professor of international law at the University of California at Santa
Barbara; Ken Coates, chairman of the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation; Baskin
Oran, former European member of parliament and professor of international relations
at the University of Ankara and Denis J. Halliday, former assistant UN secretary
general from 1994 to 1998. |