US killed more than Saddam: ‘tribunal’
ISTANBUL, June 24: The World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI), a grouping of NGOs, intellectuals and writers opposed to the war in Iraq, on Friday accused the United States of causing more deaths than ousted president Saddam Hussein.
“With two wars and 13 years of criminal sanctions, the United States has been responsible for more deaths in Iraq than Saddam Hussein,” Larry Everest, a journalist, told hundreds of anti-war activists gathered in Istanbul.
Founded in 2003, the WTI is modelled on the 1960s Russell Tribunal, created by the British philosopher Bertrand Russell to denounce the war in Vietnam. It has held about 20 sessions so far in different locations around the world.
A symbolic verdict was to be handed down on Monday by the 14 ‘jurors of conscience’ — including Indian novelist Arundhati Roy, winner of the 1997 Booker Prize for ‘The God of Small Things’.
The tribunal has for the past two years been gathering evidence to prove that the invasion of Iraq was illegal, and it has also been gathering evidence of exactions allegedly committed by occupation troops.
Its verdict on Monday after its final session is expected to condemn both the United States and Britain.
Ms Roy told the gathering here: “The evidence collated in this tribunal should ... 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 benefit from it.”
She added that the tribunal was ‘an act of resistance’, ‘a defence mounted against one of the most cowardly wars ever fought in history’.
Hans von Sponeck, former director of the UN’s so-called oil-for-food programme for Iraq, told the Istanbul gathering that the humanitarian programme ‘was totally irrelevant’.
Von Sponeck ran the programme until 2000 when he resigned because he said it failed to meet the humanitarian needs of the Iraqi people.—AFP