War Crimes Update
Robin | 01.04.2003 15:27
We'll forget about this as its not a fashionable subject.. brush it under the carpet..only American or British war crimes can be discussed.. no don't say that.. Anti Western material only.. you must conform
Iraq pressed over missing Kuwaitis
Families in Kuwait still seek their lost relatives
The United Nations Security Council has expressed "deep concern" over what it says is Baghdad's failure to address the issue of Kuwaitis and other nationals who have been missing in Iraq since 1991.
Iraq has yet to match its words on the fate of missing persons with tangible deeds and cooperation
Security council statement
Security Council resolutions have called on Iraq to facilitate the return of about 600 foreigners - mostly Kuwaitis - detained during the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, or the subsequent Gulf War.
So far there has been little progress. Iraq says it has lost track of the prisoners.
US ambassador to the UN John Negroponte - who currently chairs the council - also dismissed the latest letter from the Iraqi government proposing new talks on the return of UN weapons inspectors.
Pledges
Ever since the Gulf War, Kuwait has pressed Baghdad to return missing family members, or their remains.
And the Americans have raised the issue of a missing navy pilot, whose plane was shot down over Iraq in 1991.
Negroponte urged Iraq to cooperate
"Despite growing international activity... the government of Iraq has yet to match its words on the fate of missing persons with tangible deeds and cooperation," the security council said on Wednesday.
At the Beirut Arab League summit in March, Iraq promised to respect Kuwait's sovereignty and to resolve the issues of prisoners and property seized during the conflict.
The Security Council endorsed a call by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan for Iraq to "stand by its intention to fully implement the decisions of the Beirut summit on the issue of missing persons".
Iraq, for its part, says it lost track of foreign prisoners during an uprising in the south of the country in 1991.
It also says that more than 1,000 of its own nationals remain unaccounted for.
However, Red Cross officials have inspected Kuwait's prisons and found only 40 Iraqis, all common criminals.
Families in Kuwait still seek their lost relatives
The United Nations Security Council has expressed "deep concern" over what it says is Baghdad's failure to address the issue of Kuwaitis and other nationals who have been missing in Iraq since 1991.
Iraq has yet to match its words on the fate of missing persons with tangible deeds and cooperation
Security council statement
Security Council resolutions have called on Iraq to facilitate the return of about 600 foreigners - mostly Kuwaitis - detained during the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, or the subsequent Gulf War.
So far there has been little progress. Iraq says it has lost track of the prisoners.
US ambassador to the UN John Negroponte - who currently chairs the council - also dismissed the latest letter from the Iraqi government proposing new talks on the return of UN weapons inspectors.
Pledges
Ever since the Gulf War, Kuwait has pressed Baghdad to return missing family members, or their remains.
And the Americans have raised the issue of a missing navy pilot, whose plane was shot down over Iraq in 1991.
Negroponte urged Iraq to cooperate
"Despite growing international activity... the government of Iraq has yet to match its words on the fate of missing persons with tangible deeds and cooperation," the security council said on Wednesday.
At the Beirut Arab League summit in March, Iraq promised to respect Kuwait's sovereignty and to resolve the issues of prisoners and property seized during the conflict.
The Security Council endorsed a call by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan for Iraq to "stand by its intention to fully implement the decisions of the Beirut summit on the issue of missing persons".
Iraq, for its part, says it lost track of foreign prisoners during an uprising in the south of the country in 1991.
It also says that more than 1,000 of its own nationals remain unaccounted for.
However, Red Cross officials have inspected Kuwait's prisons and found only 40 Iraqis, all common criminals.
Robin
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