Declaration of the Jury of Conscience
World Tribunal On Iraq; DECLARATION OF THE JURY OF CONSCIENCE
PRESS RELEASE about JURY
STATEMENT
http://www.worldtribunal.org/main/?b=93
The attack on Iraq is an attack on justice, on liberty, on our safety, on our future, on us all’ – The Jury of Conscience
Istanbul, 27 June, 2005 - With a Jury of Conscience from 10 different countries hearing the testimonies of 54 members of the Panel of Advocates who came from across the world, including Iraq, the United States and the United Kingdom, this global civil initiative came to an end with a press conference at the Hotel Armada where the chair of the Jury of Conscience, Arundathi Roy, announced the Jury’s conclusions.
The Jury defined this war as one of the most unjust in history: ‘The Bush and Blair administrations blatantly ignored the massive opposition to the war expressed by millions of people around the world. They embarked upon one of the most unjust, immoral, and cowardly wars in history. The Anglo-American occupation of Iraq of the last 27 months has led to the destruction and devastation of the Iraqi state and society. Law and order have broken down completely, resulting in a pervasive lack of human security; the physical infrastructure is in shambles; the health care delivery system is a mess; the education system has ceased to function; there is massive environmental and ecological devastation; and, the cultural and archeological heritage of the Iraqi people has been desecrated.’
On the basis of the preceding findings and recalling the Charter of the United Nations and other legal documents, the jury has established the following charges against the Governments of the US and the UK:
- Planning,
preparing, and waging the supreme crime of a war of
aggression in contravention of the United Nations Charter
and the Nuremberg Principles.
- Targeting the civilian
population of Iraq and civilian infrastructure
- Using
disproportionate force and indiscriminate weapon
systems
- Failing to safeguard the lives of civilians
during military activities and during the occupation period
thereafter
- Using deadly violence against peaceful
protestors
- Imposing punishments without charge or
trial, including collective punishment
- Subjecting Iraqi
soldiers and civilians to torture and cruel, inhuman, or
degrading treatment
- Re-writing the laws of a country
that has been illegally invaded and occupied
- Willfully
devastating the environment
- Actively creating
conditions under which the status of Iraqi women has
seriously been degraded
- Failing to protect humanity’s
rich archaeological and cultural heritage in Iraq
-
Obstructing the right to information, including the
censoring of Iraqi media
- Redefining torture in
violation of international law, to allow use of torture and
illegal detentions
The Jury also established charges against the Security Council of United Nations for failing to stop war crimes and crimes against humanity among other failures, against the Governments of the Coalition of the Willing for collaborating in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, against the Governments of Other Countries for allowing the use of military bases and air space and providing other logistical support, against Private Corporations for profiting from the war, against the Major Corporate Media for disseminating deliberate falsehoods and failing to report atrocities.
The Jury also provided a number of recommendations that include recognising the right of the Iraqi people to resist the illegal occupation of their country and to develop independent institutions, and affirming that the right to resist the occupation is the right to wage a struggle for self-determination, freedom, and independence as derived from the Charter of the United Nations, we the Jury of Conscience declare our solidarity with the people of Iraq and the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of the coalition forces from Iraq.
The Istanbul session of the WTI lasted three days and presented testimony on the illegality and criminal violations in the U.S. pretexts for and conduct of this war. The expert opinion, witness testimony, video and image evidence addressed the impact of war on civilians, the torture of prisoners, the unlawful imprisonment of Iraqis without charges or legal defence, the use of depleted uranium weapons, the effects of the war on Iraq’s infrastructure, the destruction of Iraqi cultural institutions and the liability of the invaders in international law for failing to protect these treasures of humanity.
The session in Istanbul was the culminating session of commissions of inquiry and hearings held around the world over the past two years. Sessions on different topics related to the war on Iraq were held in London, Mumbai, Copenhagen, Brussels, New York, Japan, Stockholm, South Korea, Rome, Frankfurt, Geneva, Lisbon and Spain.
They have compiled a definitive historical record of evidence on the illegality of the invasion and occupation that will be recorded in a forthcoming book.
ENDS
PRELIMINARY DECLARATION OF THE JURY OF
CONSCIENCE WORLD TRIBUNAL ON IRAQ – ISTANBUL 23RD -27TH JUNE
2005
http://www.worldtribunal.org/main/?b=91
27th
June 2005, ?stanbul
‘The attack on Iraq is an attack on
justice, on liberty, on our safety, on our future, on us
all’ – The Jury of Conscience
Click here to download rtf
file.
In February 2003, weeks before war was declared on
Iraq, millions of people protested in the streets of the
world. That call went unheeded. No international institution
had the courage or conscience to stand up to the aggression
of the US and UK governments. No one could stop them. It is
two years later now. Iraq has been invaded, occupied, and
devastated. The attack on Iraq is an attack on justice, on
liberty, on our safety, on our future, on us all. We the
people of conscience decided to stand up. We formed the
World Tribunal on Iraq, to demand justice and a peaceful
future.
The legitimacy of the World Tribunal on Iraq is
located in the collective conscience of humanity. This, the
Istanbul session, was the culmination of a series of 20
hearings held in different cities of the world focusing on
the illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq.
We the Jury
of Conscience, from 10 different countries, met in Istanbul.
We heard 54 testimonies from a panel of advocates and
witnesses who came from across the world, including from
Iraq, the United States and the United Kingdom.
The World
Tribunal on Iraq met in Istanbul from 24-26th of June 2005.
The principal objective of the WTI is to tell the truth
about the Iraq war as clearly as possible, and to draw
conclusions that underscore the accountability of those
responsible and underline the significance of justice for
the Iraqi people.
I. Overview
1. The reasons given by
the US and UK governments for the illegal invasion and
occupation of Iraq in March 2003 have proven to be false.
The real motive was to control and dominate the Middle East.
Establishing hegemony over the Middle East serves the goal
of controlling the world’s largest reserves of oil and
strengthening the position of the US’s strategic ally
Israel.
2. Blatant falsehoods about the presence of
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and a link between Al
Qaeda terrorism and the Saddam Hussein régime were
manufactured in order to create public support for a
“preemptive” assault upon a sovereign independent nation.
3. Iraq has been under siege for years. The imposition
of severe inhuman economic sanctions at the end of the first
Gulf war in 1991; the establishment of no-fly zones in the
Northern and Southern parts of Iraq; and the concomitant
bombing of the country were all aimed at degrading and
weakening Iraq’s human and material resources and capacities
in order to facilitate its subsequent invasion and
occupation. In this enterprise the US and British
leaderships had the endorsement of a complicit UN Security
Council.
4. In pursuit of their agenda of empire, the
Bush and Blair blatantly ignored the massive opposition to
the war expressed by millions of people around the world.
They embarked upon one of the most unjust, immoral, and
cowardly wars in history.
5. The Anglo-American
occupation of Iraq of the last 27 months has led to the
destruction and devastation of the Iraqi state and society.
Law and order have broken down completely, resulting in a
pervasive lack of human security; the physical
infrastructure is in shambles; the health care delivery
system is a mess; the education system has ceased to
function; there is massive environmental and ecological
devastation; and, the cultural and archeological heritage of
the Iraqi people has been desecrated.
6. The occupation
has intentionally exacerbated ethnic and confessionnal
divisions in Iraqi society, with the aim of undermining
Iraq’s identity and integrity as a nation. This is in
keeping with the fam liar imperial policy of divide and
rule.
7. The imposition of the UN sanctions in 1991
caused untold suffering and thousands of deaths. The
situation has worsened after the occupation. At least
100,000 civilians have been killed; 60,000 are being held in
US custody in inhuman conditions, without charges; thousands
have disappeared; and torture has become virtually routine.
8. The privatization, deregulation, and liberalization
of the Iraqi economy has transformed the country into a
client economy that serves the Washington Consensus. The
occupying forces have also accomplished their primary goal
of acquired control over the nation’s oil.
9. Any law or
institution created under the aegis of occupation is devoid
of both legal and moral authority. The recently concluded
election, the Constituent Assembly, the current government,
and the drafting committee for the Constitution are
therefore all illegitimate.
10. There is widespread
opposition to the occupation. Political, social, and civil
resistance through peaceful means is subjected to repression
by the occupying forces. It is the brutality of the
occupation that has provoked a strong armed resistance and
certain acts of desperation. By the principles embodied in
the UN Charter and in international law, the popular
national resistance to the occupation is legitimate and
justified. It deserves the support of people everywhere who
care for justice and freedom.
II. Findings and
Charges
On the basis of the preceding findings and
recalling the Charter of the United Nations and other legal
documents quoted in the appendix, the jury has established
the following charges.
A. Against the Governments of the
US and the UK
1. Planning, preparing, and waging the
supreme crime of a war of aggression in contravention of the
United Nations Charter and the Nuremberg
Principles.
Evidence for this can be found in the leaked
Downing Street Memo of 23rd July, 2002 in which it was
revealed that: “military action was now seen as inevitable.
Bush wanted to remove Saddam through military action,
justified by the conjunction of terrorism and WMD. But the
intelligence and facts were fixed around the policy.”
Intelligence was manufactured to willfully deceive the
people of the US, the UK, and their elected representatives.
2. Targeting the civilian population of Iraq and
civilian infrastructure, by intentionally directing attacks
upon civilians and hospitals, medical centers, residential
neighborhoods, electricity stations, and water purification
facilities in violation of the Geneva Conventions of 1949
and the International Covenant for Civil and Political
Rights (“ICCPR”), Articles 7(1)(a), 8(2)(a)(i), and
8(2)(b)(i). The complete destruction of the city of Falluja
in itself constitutes a glaring example of such
crimes.
3. Using disproportionate force and
indiscriminate weapon systems, such as cluster munitions,
incendiary bombs, depleted uranium (DU), and chemical
weapons. Detailed evidence was presented to the Tribunal by
expert witnesses that leukemia had risen sharply in children
under the age of five residing in those areas which had been
targeted by DU weapons.
4. Failing to safeguard the lives
of civilians during military activities and during the
occupation period thereafter, in violation of the Fourth
Geneva Convention, Articles 13 and 27, and the ICC Statute,
Articles 7 (1)(a) and 8(2)(a)(i). This is evidenced, for
example, by “shock and awe” bombing techniques and the
conduct of occupying forces at checkpoints.
5. Using
deadly violence against peaceful protestors, beginning with,
among others, the April 2003 killing of more than a dozen
peaceful protestors in Falluja.
6. Imposing punishments
without charge or trial, including collective punishment, on
the people of Iraq, in violation of the International
Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), Geneva
Conventions, and customary international law requiring due
process. Repeated testimonies pointed to “snatch and grab”
operations, disappearances, and assassinations.
7.
Subjecting Iraqi soldiers and civilians to torture and
cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment in violation of the
Geneva Conventions, the ICCPR, other treaties and covenants,
and customary international law. Degrading treatment
includes subjecting Iraqi soldiers and civilians to acts of
racial, ethnic, religious, and gender discrimination, as
well as denying Iraqi soldiers Prisoner of War status as
required by the Geneva Convention. Abundant testimony was
provided of unlawful arrests and detentions, without due
process of law. Well known and egregious examples occurred
in Abu Ghraib prison as well as in Mosul, Camp Bucca, and
Basra.
The employment of mercenaries and private
contractors to carry out torture has served to undermine
accountability.
8. Re-writing the laws of a country
that has been illegally invaded and occupied, in violation
of international covenants on the responsibilities of
occupying powers, in order to amass illegal profits (through
such measures as Order 39, signed by L. Paul Bremer III for
the Coalition Provisional Authority, which allows foreign
investors to buy and takeover Iraq’s state-owned enterprises
and to repatriate 100 percent of their profits and assets at
any point) and to control Iraq’s oil. Evidence listed a
number of corporations that had profited from such
transactions.
9. Willfully devastating the environment,
contaminating it by depleted uranium (DU) weapons, combined
with the plumes from burning oil wells, as well as huge oil
spills, and destroying agricultural lands. Deliberately
disrupting the water and waste removal systems, in a manner
verging on biological-chemical warfare. Failing to prevent
the looting and dispersal of radioactive material from
nuclear sites. Extensive documentation is available on air,
water pollution, land degradation, and radiological
pollution.
10. Actively creating conditions under which
the status of Iraqi women has seriously been degraded
contrary, to the repeated claims of the leaders of the
coalition forces. Women’s freedom of movement has been
severely limited, restricting their access to education,
livelihood, and social engagement. Testimony was provided
that sexual violence and sex trafficking have increased
since the occupation of Iraq began.
11. Failing to
protect humanity’s rich archaeological and cultural heritage
in Iraq, by allowing the looting of museums and established
historical sites and positioning military bases in
culturally and archeologically sensitive locations. This
took place despite prior warnings from UNESCO and Iraqi
museum officials.
12. Obstructing the right to
information, including the censoring of Iraqi media, such as
newspapers (e.g., al-Hawza, al-Mashriq, and al-Mustaqila)
and radio stations (Baghdad Radio), targeting international
journalists, imprisoning and killing academics,
intellectuals and scientists.
13. Redefining torture in
violation of international law, to allow use of torture and
illegal detentions, including holding more than 500 people
at Guantánamo Bay without charging them or allowing them any
access to legal protection, and using “extraordinary
renditions” to send people to torture in other countries
known to commit human rights abuses and torture
prisoners.
B. Against the Security Council of United
Nations
1. Failing to protect Iraq against a crime of
aggression.
2. Imposing harsh economic sanctions on Iraq,
despite knowledge that sanctions were directly contributing
to the massive loss of civilian lives and harming innocent
civilians.
3. Allowing the United States and United
Kingdom to carry out illegal bombings in the no-fly zones,
using false pretense of enforcing UN resolutions, and at no
point allowing discussion in the Security Council of this
violation, and thereby being complicit and responsible for
loss of civilian life and destruction of Iraqi
infrastructure.
4. Allowing the United States to dominate
the United Nations and hold itself above any accountability
by other member nations.
5. Failure to stop war crimes
and crimes against humanity by the United States and its
coalition partners in Iraq.
6. Failure to hold the United
States and its coalition partners accountable for violations
of international law during the occupation, and giving
official recognition to the occupation, thereby legitimizing
an illegal invasion and becoming a collaborator in an
illegal occupation.
C. Against the Governments of the
Coalition of the Willing
Collaborating in the invasion
and occupation of Iraq.
D. Against the Governments of
Other Countries
Allowing the use of military bases and
air space, and providing other logistical support, for the
invasion and occupation.
E. Against Private Corporations
Profiting from the war with complicity in the crimes
described above, of invasion and occupation.
F. Against
the Major Corporate Media
1. Disseminating the
deliberate falsehoods spread by the governments of the US
and the UK and failing to adequately investigate this
misinformation. This even in the face of abundant evidence
to the contrary. Among the corporate media houses that bear
special responsibility for promoting the lies about Iraq’s
weapons of mass destruction, we name the New York Times, in
particular their reporter Judith Miller, whose main source
was on the payroll of the CIA. We also name Fox News, CNN
and the BBC.
2. Failing to report the atrocities being
committed against Iraqi people by the occupying
forces.
III. Recommendations
Recognising the right of
the Iraqi people to resist the illegal occupation of their
country and to develop independent institutions, and
affirming that the right to resist the occupation is the
right to wage a struggle for self-determination, freedom,
and independence as derived from the Charter of the United
Nations, we the Jury of Conscience declare our solidarity
with the people of Iraq.
We recommend:
1. The
immediate and unconditional withdrawal of the coalition
forces from Iraq;
2. That coalition governments make war
reparations and pay compensation to Iraq for the
humanitarian, economic, ecological, and cultural devastation
they have caused by their illegal invasion and occupation;
3. That all laws, contracts, treaties, and institutions
established under occupation which the Iraqi people deem
inimical to their interests, should be considered null and
void;
4. That the Guantanamo Bay prison and all other
offshore US military prisons be closed immediately; that the
names of the prisoners be disclosed, that they receive POW
status, and receive due process;
5. That there be an
exhaustive investigation of those responsible for crimes of
aggression and crimes against humanity in Iraq, beginning
with George W. Bush, President of the United States of
America; Tony Blair, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom;
and other government officials from the coalition of the
willing;
6. That we initiate a process of accountability
to hold those morally and personally responsible for their
participation in this illegal war, such as journalists who
deliberately lied, corporate media outlets that promoted
racial, ethnic and religious hatred, and CEOs of
multinational corporations that profited from this war;
7. That people throughout the world launch actions
against US and UK corporations that directly profit from
this war. Examples of such corporations include Halliburton,
Bechtel, Carlyle, CACI Inc., Titan Corporation, Kellog,
Brown and Root (subsidiary of Halliburton), DynCorp, Boeing,
ExxonMobil, Texaco, British Petroleum. The following
companies have sued Iraq and received “reparation awards”:
Toys R Us, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Shell, Nestlé, Pepsi,
Phillip Morris, Sheraton, Mobil. Such actions may take the
form of direct actions such as shutting down their offices,
consumer boycotts, and pressure on shareholders to
divest.
8. That soldiers exercise conscience and refuse
to enlist and participate in an illegal war. Also that
countries provide conscientious objectors political asylum.
9. That the international campaign for dismantling all
US military bases abroad be reinforced.
10. That people
around the world resist and reject any effort by any of
their governments to provide material, logistical, or moral
support to the occupation of Iraq.
We, the Jury of Conscience, hope that the specificity of these recommendations will lay the groundwork required for a world where the international institutions will be shaped and reshaped by the will of people and not fear and self-interest, where journalists and intellectuals will not remain mute, where the will of the people of the world will be central, and human security will prevail over state security and corporate profits.
Appendix: List of Legal
Documents
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
(1948)
The Convention on the Political Rights of Women
(1952)
The Declaration of the Rights of the Child
(1959)
The Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination (1963)
The International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights (1966)
The Declaration on
the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
(1979)
The Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (1984)
The
Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989)
The Rome
Statute of the International Criminal Court (1998)
The
European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms
(1950)
The American Convention on Human Rights (1969)
The Code of Conduct for the Armed Forces of the United
States of America
(1963)
+++++++++++++