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GENOCIDE IN IRAQ: The Case Against the UN Security Council and Member States by Abdul-Haq al Ani and Tarik al Ani

02/02/2013


Mareeg.com-brilliant, detailed and comprehensive analysis of the illegality of the sanctions regime imposed on Iraq by the UN Security Council, leading, by the UN's own 1996 accounting, to the deaths of over 500,000 children under five -- and it wasn't over yet.Imposing sanctions on Iraq was one of the most heinous of crimes committed in the 20th century. Yet it has received little attention in the Anglo-American world. Despite the calamitous destruction resulting from the sanctions, no serious attempts by legal professionals, academics or philosophers have been undertaken to address the full scope of the immorality and illegality of such a criminal and unprecedented mass punishment.

 

Genocide in Iraq offers a comprehensive coverage of Iraq’s politics, its building, its
destruction through aggression and sanctions, and an analysis of the legality of
these sanctions from the point of view of international and human rights laws.
It presents a detailed policy analysis indicating how, under Ba’ath rule, Iraq had
risen to become—before 12 years of total sanctions were globally enforced—the
most progressive and developed Arab nation in the Middle East. It then contrasts
that rising nation to the devastated remains left in the aftermath of sanctions, which
was yet to endure, in 2003, the full force of the American “shock and awe” invasion.

The book explains why, in modern times, imperialist powers felt it was necessary to
occupy Baghdad. It puts forward the uniqueness of Iraq as at the heart of both
Sunni and Shi’a theology, arguing it was this very centrality of Iraq, which far
outweighs the significance of Arabia in socio-economic, religious and geostrategic
dimensions, that at the same time makes Iraq a target.

It details the building of Iraq by the Ba’ath regime, part of which was done with
remarkable speed, putting to rest the argument that other countries in the area were
developed at a similar pace. It also details the devastation of Iraq by 2003 after 12
years of sanctions—a devastation so dreadful and overwhelming that two of the UN’s own key administrators of the sanctions program, Denis J. Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, resigned in protest.

No other book published in English has made such an in-depth research and
comparison of the two eras. Although previous books may have touched on the
breach of international law through sanctions, this book, while making similar
arguments on the breach of international humanitarian law and human rights law,
goes further and argues that the Security Council itself, member states and the
individual relevant members of the governments of that period are guilty of these
crimes. In its section dealing with the Sanction Committee, it demonstrates how one man at any time could hold the whole of Iraq to ransom by denying the export of items so vital to the basic survival needs of millions

More significantly, the authors argue that imposing total sanctions is the equivalent of committing genocide.They challenge the argument of some Anglo-Americans that there is a need to establish "specific intent" to establish the crime of genocide.

As the crime of genocide is one for which there is no statute of limitations, it is hoped that this book will serve not only as an indictment of and barrier to future global imposition of sanctions, but also as a tool in bringing the actual perpetrators of this crime to a Nuremberg-style day of judgment.
.
Abdul-Haq al-Ani is an Iraqi-born, British-trained barrister who served as a legal
adviser on Saddam Hussein’s defense to his daughter, Raghad Saddam Hussein.
Called to the Bar in 1996, he holds a PhD in Electronics Engineering and a PhD in
International law. Founding editor of The Arab Review, he has written widely on
culture, politics and religion. He joined the Ba’ath party while in his his teens, but
left it in disappointment a few years later,prior to the Ba’ath Party assuming power
in 1968. He is author of The Trial of Saddam Hussein.

Tarik Al-Ani is an architect by profession, a translator, and a researcher of
Arab/Islamic issues, who has been a strong opponent of the genocidal sanctions
and the wars against Iraq.He has publicly written and talked about these issues in
Finland where he works and lives.

Joshua Castellano is Professor of Law and Head of the Law Department,
Middlesex University, UK.

 

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