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World Tribunal On Iraq - Culminating Session - Istanbul 23.-27. Juni 2005
Opening
Speech of Arundhati Roy *)
On Behalf Of The Jury of Conscience Of
The World Tribunal Of Iraq - Istanbul, Turkey.
O6/24/05 "WTI"
- - This is the culminating session of the World Tribunal on Iraq. It
is of particular significance that it is being held here in Turkey
where the United States used Turkish air bases to launch numerous
bombing missions to degrade Iraq’s defenses before the March 2003
invasion and has sought and continues to seek political support from
the Turkish government, which it regards as an ally. All this was done
in the face of enormous popular opposition by the Turkish people. As a
spokesperson for the jury of conscience, it would make me uneasy if I
did not mention that the government of India is also, like the
government of Turkey, positioning itself as a “ally” of the United
States in its economic policies and the so-called War on Terror.
The testimonies at the previous sessions of the World Tribunal on Iraq
in Brussels and New York have demonstrated that even those of us who
have tried to follow the war in Iraq closely are not aware of a
fraction of the horrors that have been unleashed in Iraq.
The Jury of Conscience at this tribunal is not here to deliver a simple
verdict of guilty or not guilty against the United States and its
allies. We are here to examine a vast spectrum of evidence about the
motivations and consequences of the U.S. invasion and occupation,
evidence that has been deliberately marginalized or suppressed. Every
aspect of the war will be examined - its legality, the role of
international institutions and major corporations in the occupation,
the role of the media, the impact of weapons such as depleted uranium
munitions, napalm, and cluster bombs, the use of and legitimation of
torture, the ecological impacts of the war, the responsibility of Arab
governments, the impact of Iraq’s occupation on Palestine, and the
history of U.S. and British military interventions in Iraq. This
tribunal is an attempt to correct the record. To document the history
of the war not from the point of view of the victors but of the
temporarily - and I repeat the word temporarily - vanquished.
Before the testimonies begin, I would like to briefly address as
straightforwardly as I can a few questions that have been raised about
this tribunal.
The first is that this tribunal is a Kangaroo Court. That it represents
only one point of view. That it is a prosecution without a defense.
That the verdict is a foregone conclusion.
Now this view seems to suggest a touching concern that in this harsh
world, the views of the U.S. government and the so-called Coalition of
the Willing headed by President George Bush and Prime Minister Tony
Blair have somehow gone unrepresented. That the World Tribunal on Iraq
isn’t aware of the arguments in support of the war and is unwilling to
consider the point of view of the invaders. If in the era of the
multinational corporate media and embedded journalism anybody can
seriously hold this view, then we truly do live in the Age of Irony, in
an age when satire has become meaningless because real life is more
satirical than satire can ever be.
Let me say categorically that this tribunal is the defense. It is an
act of resistance in itself. It is a defense mounted against one of the
most cowardly wars ever fought in history, a war in which international
institutions were used to force a country to disarm and then stood by
while it was attacked with a greater array of weapons than has ever
been used in the history of war.
Second, this tribunal is not in any way a defense of Saddam Hussein.
His crimes against Iraqis, Kurds, Iranians, Kuwaitis, and others cannot
be written off in the process of bringing to light Iraq’s more recent
and still unfolding tragedy. However, we must not forget that when
Saddam Hussein was committing his worst crimes, the U.S. government was
supporting him politically and materially. When he was gassing Kurdish
people, the U.S. government financed him, armed him, and stood by
silently.
Saddam Hussein is being tried as a war criminal even as we speak. But
what about those who helped to install him in power, who armed him, who
supported him - and who are now setting up a tribunal to try him and
absolve themselves completely? And what about other friends of the
United States in the region that have suppressed Kurdish people’s and
other people’s rights, including the government of Turkey?
There are remarkable people gathered here who in the face of this
relentless and brutal aggression and propaganda have doggedly worked to
compile a comprehensive spectrum of evidence and information that
should serve as a weapon in the hands of those who wish to participate
in the resistance against the occupation of Iraq. It should become a
weapon in the hands of soldiers in the United States, the United
Kingdom, Italy, Australia, and elsewhere who do not wish to fight, who
do not wish to lay down their lives - or to take the lives of others -
for a pack of lies. It should become a weapon in the hands of
journalists, writers, poets, singers, teachers, plumbers, taxi drivers,
car mechanics, painters, lawyers - anybody who wishes to participate in
the resistance.
The evidence collated in this tribunal should, for instance, be used by
the International Criminal Court (whose jurisdiction the United States
does not recognize) to try as war criminals George Bush, Tony Blair,
John Howard, Silvio Berlusconi, and all those government officials,
army generals, and corporate CEOs who participated in this war and now
profit from it.
The assault on Iraq is an assault on all of us: on our dignity, our
intelligence, and our future.
We recognize that the judgment of the World Tribunal on Iraq is not
binding in international law. However, our ambitions far surpass that.
The World Tribunal on Iraq places its faith in the consciences of
millions of people across the world who do not wish to stand by and
watch while the people of Iraq are being slaughtered, subjugated, and
humiliated.
For further information on the World Tribunal On Iraq, visit http://www.worldtribunal.org/main/?b=84
ARUNDHATI ROY (India)
Renowned author and activist Arundhati Roy received the Booker Prize for literature in 1997. Presently, one of the most eloquent voices for the global justice and anti-war movement, she was also awarded, among many others, the Sydney Peace Prize in 2004, and the Lannan Cultural Freedom Prize in 2002.