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IRAQ WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL HELD IN JAPAN

Brian Covert / Independent Journalist | 29.04.2004 11:20

A citizens tribunal seeking to indict US President George Bush for war crimes in Iraq held its third public hearing in Kobe, Japan, on Sunday, April 25, presenting public evidence and bearing witness to the suffering of the Iraqi people.


Akira Maeda, professor of international criminal law, opens the ICTI hearing.
Akira Maeda, professor of international criminal law, opens the ICTI hearing.

The Defendants: Japan's Prime Minister Koizumi and US President Bush
The Defendants: Japan's Prime Minister Koizumi and US President Bush

An activist group readies to take a bow after a performance.
An activist group readies to take a bow after a performance.

A performance of the music and dance of Okinawa, another occupied nation.
A performance of the music and dance of Okinawa, another occupied nation.

Iraqi labor union leader Aso Jabbar (right) and interpreter Reiko Watanabe.
Iraqi labor union leader Aso Jabbar (right) and interpreter Reiko Watanabe.

Independent journalist Akihiro Nonaka, head of Asia Press International.
Independent journalist Akihiro Nonaka, head of Asia Press International.

The ICTI winds to a close as activists hoist the word TETTAI (Withdraw).
The ICTI winds to a close as activists hoist the word TETTAI (Withdraw).




IRAQ WAR CRIMES TRIBUNAL HELD IN JAPAN



By Brian Covert
Independent Journalist



KOBE, JAPAN ム A citizens tribunal seeking to indict US President George Bush for war crimes in Iraq held its third public hearing here Sunday, April 25, presenting evidence and bearing witness to the suffering of the Iraqi people.

An estimated 350 people throughout the day attended the 3rd International Criminal Tribunal for Iraq (ICTI) Hyogo Public Hearing, which featured direct testimony from a visiting Iraqi labor union leader, firsthand news footage of unfolding events in Iraq by an independent Japanese journalist, and a host of performances by university students and other activists in Japan.

メThe Japanese government has offered up Okinawa as a training ground for the US military forces to go and commit massacres in Fallujah [Iraq],モ one Japanese activist, a Mr. Nakakuwa, told the audience. メTherefore, the Japanese government, along with the US and Britain, is a war criminal.モ

That sentiment was echoed thoughout the day by the tribunalユs organizers, guest speakers and performers. Ever present on the stage here Sunday were also models of the two メdefendantsモ in absentia: Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi.

The series of tribunals is being organized and supported by a variety of academics, grassroots activists, journalists and citizens groups throughout Japan.

メWe need to create a war crimes tribunal of our own making,モ organizers of the ICTI said in a preliminary appeal in August 2003.

メ[W]e need to collect pieces of evidence of war crimes committed by Bush, pile them up, and analyze them. We need to elucidate in light of international law that the war by Bush was nothing but an invasion. This tribunal is a stage for [that] sake.モ

One of those here on that stage to testify was Aso Jabbar, representative of a labor union called the Union of Unemployed in Iraq (UUI), who is currently visiting Japan and raising funds for his organizationユs activities in Iraq.

Jabbar stressed that the majority of ordinary Iraqi people are now facing two main enemies: the US-led occupation forces and violent Muslim fundamentalists.

メItユs true they [Muslim fundamentalists] are fighting the US occupying forces,モ Jabbar said. メBut they are attacking at the same time the civilian people. They are attacking the progressive organizations. And they have the strategy to establish an Islamic government in Iraq.モ

Jabbar said the UUI calls for the メend of the occupation and withdrawl of the U.S. and coalition occupying forces because we regard them as the major source of the insecure situation in Iraq.モ

Contrary to American military and media propaganda, most Iraqi people do not want the US-led military forces in their country, he said.

メThe majority of the Iraqi people do not agree with the occupation and they are against it,モ said Jabbar, who also represents the Federation of Workers Councils and Unions in Iraq (FWCUI).

メThey are against the American policies and they have the experience. And they have not the feeling that their lives have been changed,モ he continued. メSaddam [Hussein] has been removed and the situation is deteriorating: the security situation, the living conditions, the situation of women, situation of the unemployed and the labor movement ム everything is deteriorating. So the people have protests and demands, and they want to change their lives.モ

Also standing in their way of that change, he says, are the dangerous forces of what he called extreme right-wing メpolitical Islam.モ

メThese militant groups, they are so aggressive that the ordinary people, they fear them,モ Jabbar told the audience. メYou see in the interviews that the [Iraqi] people are protesting against the occupation, but they are saying nothing about the military resistance or the Islamic resistance or the rest of the Baath Partyモ of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.

メThe majority of them, they are secret organizations,モ he said of the fundamentalist groups. メThey are working underground and they practice only armed violence. So the normal people, they have angst and fear to speak or to criticize in public their actions.モ

The ICTI was created last year to give ordinary citizens in Japan a voice in the events then unfolding in Iraq, amid the Japanese governmentユs plans to send its Self-Defense Forces to Iraq in violation of Japanユs Constitution. About 550 Japanese SDF troops are now based in Iraq, including in Samawah, an area reported to be highly contaminated with depleted uranium from US military weapons.

One of those who has recently returned from Iraq was independent journalist Akihiro Nonaka, founder and head of a Tokyo-based company, Asia Press International.

メWe independently report what the mass media doesnユt report,モ said Nonaka. メAnd the mass media is not reporting the suffering of civilian victims in Iraq.モ

Nonaka said he recently returned from a trip to Palestine and Iraq, where he and his crew managed to film the ongoing wars there.

He aired some of his Iraq video footage at the tribunal, including dramatic scenes of enraged crowds of Iraqi people shouting メDown, down Bush!モ and メAmerica, no!モ as they surrounded US military vehicles with seemingly bewildered US soldiers inside.

メAmericaユs history as a nation was created through the killing of its own indigenous peoples,モ Nonaka said. メThe US thinks that ヤWe are good, and those who are against us are evil.ユ Bush himself uses the word ヤevilユ.

メWhat America is doing in Afghanistan and Iraq is like the old Westerns, based on the overly simple idea of good versus evil,モ Nonaka added メBut the U.S. is ignorant when it comes to Islam. So the anti-US reactions in Iraq are related to this.モ

He cited the the United Statesユ defeat in Vietnam decades ago to a lack of true understanding of the Vietnamese people, a pattern the US is repeating now in the Middle East.

メAmerica doesnユt try to understand Iraqi society, Iraqi history, the history of Islam as a religion,モ Nonaka said メBecause the US thinks its own democracy is so great, it doesnユt hear the voices of the Iraqi people. And the US thinks of Islam as something underdeveloped.モ

Nonaka also had harsh words for prime minister Koizumi of Japan, who has taken up the cause of holding the Japanese citizenry accountable to メjiko-sekininモ (individual responsibility), following the return of five Japanese citizens recently held hostage in Iraq.

メThe Japanese government keeps saying how it undertook so many actions for the release of the hostages,モ Nonaka said. メBut that is the job of the government; thatユs what we pay taxes for. [I want to say to the Koizumi government] Donユt keep talking about it ム just do it!モ

Nonaka said the recent US blockade and killing of civilians in Fallujah are a kind of measuring stick for those who call themselves journalists and those who really are ones.

メOne of the [five Japanese] hostages, Junpei Yasuda, like some real journalists, tried to go to Fallujah to document what is happening there,モ Nonaka said. メI think you canユt call yourself a journalist if you donユt want to go cover Fallujah.モ

The current series of Iraqi tribunals follows in the footsteps of a similar tribunal in Japan last year ム the International Criminal Tribunal for Afghanistan (ICTA) ム which, after a series of public hearings, found Bush guilty of war crimes in Afghanistan.

Noting that Bush and other world leaders are unlikely to be tried in any national or international court, ICTI organizers last December adopted a statute that outlines the tribunalユs jurisdiction concerning Iraq. It includes trying persons for crimes of aggression and genocide, as well as crimes against humanity and crimes of war.

The ICTI will hold several more public hearings throughout Japan this year prior to its scheduled final judgment in December in Tokyo. A related body, the World Tribunal on Iraq, is scheduled to render its own final judgment in March 2005 in Istanbul, Turkey.



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Brian Covert / Independent Journalist
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