IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Saddam Interrogation Screened - In Silence |
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by Robert Fisk The Independent Entered into the database on Wednesday, June 15th, 2005 @ 08:20:20 MST |
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There he was, just as his victims looked on his own television screens, his words
censored, his arguments unknown, his case as undemocratic as the "judicial"
courts in which Saddam destroyed his own enemies. The Iraqis - or, let us speak frankly, the Americans who tried to censor the old
reprobate's previous court appearance - decided yesterday that his words would
also be censored. That is Saddamism. This is how Saddam ran Iraq. The words were obliterated. And now the Americans and their obedient, Shia-led
government, are acting out the same Saddamite line. The pictures, the BBC admitted, were "mute". What in God's name did
this mean? Who emasculated the BBC to such a degree that it should say such
a ridiculous thing? Why were they mute? The BBC didn't tell us. If Saddam was really being charged with war crimes over the killings of Shias
- which I hope he was - then why, in heaven's name, didn't we hear what he had
to say? Why use the methods of Saddam himself? The silent film, the assumption
of guilt? Or was Saddam telling the court that the United States was behind
his regime, that Washington had given him the means to destroy the Halabja Kurds
with gas? How can we know? And when so many of our journalistic brethren failed to challenge
the reason why this tape should be "mute", what does this say of us?
We are told, by Saddam's jailers of course, that he is being questioned about
the murder of Shia villagers south of Baghdad in 1982. I hope so. But how do
we know? The reality is that Saddam is from Iraq's past, something from the era before
"our" insecurity and destruction and the rape and insurgency and death
which has now overwhelmed Iraq. Yes, there are those who would like to see Saddam brought to justice. But they
want safety and law and order and freedom - freedom from us, too - before they
care about this crazed old man's trial. But we insist the Iraqis have bread
and circuses before they have freedom. And they must experience our democracy
by understanding that the defendant in a court must be shut up and denied his
own words in order to appear on the BBC. |