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January 6, 2006
The death of freedom
Cover story
John Pilger
Monday 9th January 2006
http://www.newstatesman.com/200601090004
The
rights of ordinary people to speak out against an unjust war and
atrocities unleashed in their name are being crushed. Fascism is at the
door. Who else, asks John Pilger, will fight it?
On Christmas
Eve, I dropped in on Brian Haw, whose hunched, pacing figure was just
visible through the freezing fog. For four and a half years, Brian has
camped in Parliament Square with a graphic display of photographs that
show the terror and suffering imposed on Iraqi children by British
policies. The effectiveness of his action was demonstrated last April
when the Blair government banned any expression of opposition within a
kilometre of parliament. The high court subsequently ruled that,
because his presence preceded the ban, Brian was an exception.
Day
after day, night after night, season upon season, he remains a beacon,
illuminating the great crime of Iraq and the cowardice of the House of
Commons. As we talked, two women brought him a Christmas meal and
mulled wine. They thanked him, shook his hand and hurried on. He had
never seen them before. "That's typical of the public," he said. A man
in a pinstriped suit and tie emerged from the fog, carrying a small
wreath. "I intend to place this at the Cenotaph and read out the names
of the dead in Iraq," he said to Brian, who cautioned him: "You'll
spend the night in the cells, mate." We watched him stride off and lay
his wreath. His head bowed, he appeared to be whispering. Thirty years
ago, I watched dissidents do something similar outside the walls of the
Kremlin.
As the night had covered him, he was lucky. On 7
December, Maya Evans, a vegan chef aged 25, was convicted of breaching
the new Serious Organised Crime and Police Act by reading aloud at the
Cenotaph the names of 97 British soldiers killed in Iraq. So serious
was her crime that it required 14 policemen in two vans to arrest her.
She was fined and given a criminal record for the rest of her life.
Freedom is dying.
Eighty-year-old
John Catt served with the RAF in the Second World War. Last September,
he was stopped by police in Brighton for wearing an "offensive" T-shirt
which suggested that Bush and Blair be tried for war crimes. He was
arrested under the Terrorism Act and handcuffed, with his arms held
behind his back. The official record of the arrest says the "purpose"
of searching him was "terrorism" and the "grounds for intervention"
were "carrying plackard and T-shirt with anti-Blair info" (sic).
He is awaiting trial.
Such
cases compare with others that remain secret and beyond any form of
justice: those of the foreign nationals held at Belmarsh Prison who
have never been charged, let alone put on trial. They are held "on
suspicion". Some of the "evidence" against them, whatever it is, the
government has now admitted, could have been extracted under torture at
Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib. They are political prisoners in all but
name. They face the prospect of being spirited out of the country and
into the arms of a regime which may torture them to death. Their
isolated families, including children, are quietly going mad.
And for what?
Between
11 September 2001 and 30 September 2005, 895 people in total were
arrested under the Terrorism Act. Only 23 have been convicted of
offences covered by the act. As for real terrorists, the identities of
two of the 7 July bombers, including the suspected mastermind, were
known to MI5, yet nothing was done. And Blair wants to give the
security services more power. Having helped to devastate Iraq, he is
now killing freedom in his own country.
Consider parallel
events in the United States. Last October, an American doctor, loved by
his patients, was punished with 22 years in prison for founding a
charity, Help the Needy, which helped children in Iraq stricken by an
economic and humanitarian blockade imposed by America and Britain. In
raising money for infants dying from diarrhoea, Dr Rafil Dhafir broke a
siege which, accor-ding to Unicef, had caused the deaths of half a
million under the age of five. John Ashcroft, the then US attorney
general, called Dr Dhafir, a Muslim, a "terrorist", a description
mocked by even the judge in a politically motivated travesty of a trial.
The
Dhafir case is not extraordinary. In the same month, three US circuit
court judges ruled in favour of the Bush regime's "right" to imprison
an American citizen "indefinitely" without charging him with a crime.
This was the case of Jose Padilla, a petty criminal who allegedly
visited Pakistan before he was arrested at Chicago airport three and a
half years ago. He was never charged and no evidence has ever been
presented against him. Now mired in legal complexity, the case puts
George W Bush above the law and outlaws the Bill of Rights. Indeed, on
14 November, the US Senate in effect voted to ban habeas corpus by
passing an amendment that overturned a Supreme Court ruling allowing
Guantanamo prisoners access to a federal court. Thus, the touchstone of
America's most celebrated freedom was scrapped. Without habeas corpus,
a government can simply lock away its opponents and implement a
dictatorship.
A related, insidious tyranny is being imposed
across the world. For all his troubles in Iraq, Bush has carried out
the recommendations of a Messianic conspiracy theory called the
"Project for the New American Century". Written by his ideological
sponsors shortly before he came to power, it foresaw his administration
as a military dictatorship behind a democratic facade: "the cavalry on
the new American frontier", guided by a blend of paranoia and
megalomania. More than 700 American bases are now placed strategically
in compliant countries, notably at gateways to sources of fossil fuels
and encircling the Middle East and central Asia. "Pre-emptive"
aggression is policy, including the use of nuclear weapons. The
chemical warfare industry has been reinvigorated. Missile treaties have
been torn up. Space has been militarised. Global warming has been
embraced. The powers of the president have never been greater. The
judicial system has been subverted, along with civil liberties. The
former senior CIA analyst Ray McGovern, who once prepared the daily
White House briefing, told me that the authors of the PNAC and those
now occupying positions of executive power used to be known in
Washington as "the crazies". He said: "We should now be very worried
about fascism."
In his epic acceptance of the Nobel Prize in
Literature on 7 December, Harold Pinter spoke of "a vast tapestry of
lies, upon which we feed". He asked why "the systematic brutality, the
widespread atrocities, the ruthless suppression of inde- pendent
thought" of Stalinist Russia were well known in the west while US state
crimes were merely "superficially recorded, let alone documented, let
alone acknowledged".
A silence has reigned. Across the world,
the extinction and suffering of countless human beings can be
attributed to rampant American power, "But you wouldn't know it," said
Pinter. "It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was
happening it wasn't happening. It didn't matter. It was of no interest."
To
its credit, the Guardian published every word of Pinter's warning. To
its shame, though unsurprising, the state television broadcaster
ignored it. All that Newsnight flatulence about the arts, all that
recycled preening for the cameras at Booker Prize-giving events, yet
the BBC could not make room for Britain's greatest living dramatist, so
honoured, to tell the truth.
For the BBC, it simply never
happened, just as the killing of half a million children by America's
medieval siege of Iraq during the 1990s never happened, just as the
Dhafir and Padilla trials and the Senate vote banning freedom never
happened. The political prisoners of Belmarsh barely exist; and a big,
brave posse of Metropolitan police never swept away Maya Evans as she
publicly grieved for British soldiers killed in the cause of nothing
except rotten power.
Bereft of irony, but with a snigger, the
newsreader Fiona Bruce introduced, as news, a Christmas propaganda film
about Bush's dogs. That happened. Now imagine Bruce reading the
following: "Here is delayed news, just in. From 1945 to 2005, the
United States attempted to overthrow 50 governments, many of them
democracies, and to crush 30 popular movements fighting tyrannical
regimes. In the process, 25 countries were bombed, causing the loss of
several million lives and the despair of millions more." (Thanks to
William Blum's Rogue State, published by Common Courage Press.)
The
icon of horror of Saddam Hussein's rule is a 1988 film of petrified
bodies of people in the Kurdish town of Halabja, killed in a chemical
weapons attack. The attack has been referred to a great deal by Bush
and Blair and the film shown a great deal by the BBC. At the time, as I
know from personal experience, the Foreign Office tried to cover up the
crime at Halabja. The Americans tried to blame it on Iran. Today, in an
age of images, there are no images of the chemical weapons attack on
Fallujah in November 2004. This allowed the Americans to deny it until
they were caught out recently by investigators using the internet. For
the BBC, American atrocities simply do not happen.
In 1999,
while filming in Washington and Iraq, I learned the true scale of
bombing in what the Americans and British then called Iraq's "no-fly
zones". During the 18 months to 14 January 1999, US aircraft flew
24,000 combat missions over Iraq; almost every mission was bombing or
strafing. "We're down to the last outhouse," a US official protested.
"There are still some things left [to bomb], but not many." That was
seven years ago. In recent months, the air assault on Iraq has
multiplied; the effect on the ground cannot be imagined. For the BBC,
it has not happened.
The black farce extends to those
pseudo-humanitarians in the media and elsewhere, who themselves have
never seen the effects of cluster bombs and air-burst shells, yet
continue to invoke the crimes of Saddam to justify the nightmare in
Iraq and to protect a quisling prime minister who has sold out his
country and made the world more dangerous. Curiously, some of them
insist on describing themselves as "liberals" and "left of centre",
even "anti-fascists". They want some respectability, I suppose. This is
understandable, given that the league table of carnage by Saddam
Hussein was overtaken long ago by that of their hero in Downing Street,
who will now support an attack on Iran.
This cannot change
until we, in the west, look in the mirror and confront the true aims
and narcissism of the power applied in our name, its extremes and
terrorism. The usual double standard no longer works; there are now
millions like Brian Haw, Maya Evans, John Catt and the man in the
pinstriped suit, with his wreath. Looking in the mirror means
understanding that a violent and undemocratic order is being imposed by
those whose actions are little different from the actions of fascists.
The difference used to be distance. Now they are bringing it home.
John Pilger's new book, Freedom Next Time, will be published in June by
Bantam Press
==
Jennifer Loewenstein
amadea311@earthlink.net
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