Nagy Visit on Iraq Sanctions Takes Denmark by
Storm
by Norbert Payne and Coilín
ÓhAiseadha
Monday,
July 15, 2002 CommonDreams.org
While US
plans for the production of Gulf War II rumble on relentlessly, the
Danish campaign to abolish the sanctions against Iraq was given a huge
boost by the visit of Professor Tom Nagy at the start of June. Here,
Nagy presented unshakeable documentation for how the sanctions have
been applied to ban the import of water purification equipment and
chemicals, thus provoking epidemics of diseases such as cholera,
hepatitis and typhoid fever.
Nagy¹s current position is Associate Professor in the school of
business and public management at George Washington University, and
has previously held full-time research posts in the area of public
health.
While searching on the Pentagon¹s Gulflink site for data that might
shed some light on Gulf syndrome, Professor Nagy almost accidentally
entered the search term ³water², and was horrified by one of the
reports he turned up. Headed ³Iraq water treatment vulnerabilities²
and dated January 1991, the Defense Intelligence Agency report details
the difficulties the civilian population of Iraq were predicted to
experience in finding potable water in the presence of restrictions on
the import of water purification equipment and chemicals.
Like a warder doing his rounds to ensure that all doors are securely
locked, the report addresses, point by point, the various sources of
water that might be considered, explaining why each one is precluded:
€ Most of Iraq¹s water supply ³is heavily mineralized and frequently
brackish to saline.²
€ ³Precipitation occurs in Iraq during the winter and spring, but it
falls primarily in the northern mountains.²
€ Iraq's rivers "contain biological materials, pollutants, and are
laden with bacteria.²
The document states: ³Unless water treatment supplies are exempted
from the UN sanctions for humanitarian reasons, no adequate solution
exists for Iraq's water purification dilemma ...² And it explicitly
presents the expected consequences for the civilian population:
³Unless the water is purified with chlorine, epidemics of such
diseases as cholera, hepatitis, and typhoid could occur.²
A series of six related reports document the degradation of the Iraqi
water supply that took place in the first half of 1991. Predictions
were made of outbreaks or epidemics of hepatitis and cholera, and the
fulfillment of these predictions was subsequently documented in
detail.
In an article published in The Progressive magazine, Nagy quoted
Representative Tony Hall, Democrat of Ohio, who wrote to
then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, expressing his concern
about blocks and holds placed on contracts for import of water
purification equipment and chemicals in the UN Security Council. Holds
on seventeen out of eighteen contracts were placed by the United
States, and the last was placed by the United Kingdom.
Professor Nagy¹s article, ³The Secret Behind the Sanctions², has been
nominated by Project Censored as one of the top ten censored stories
of the year 2001. In contrast, Nagy was overwhelmed by the level of
attention he received in the Danish media. Two national newspapers and
one of the foremost current affairs programs on national radio lined
up for in-depth interviews.
And the reception from the Danish public was equally powerful. The
audience at a meeting entitled ³Stop the Cholera War², held at
Copenhagen University on June 4, was by turns curious, appalled,
moved, and many of those present were ultimately inspired to
participate in an ongoing campaign to abolish the sanctions.
Nagy¹s presentation was remarkably up-beat, culminating in a patriotic
proposal that the US make atonement for its inhumane policies of the
past by investing in a global clean water project: "According to the
World Health Organization, 2.3 million children under the age of five
are dying every year as a result of water-borne diseases. This could
be globally prevented for the sum of nine billion dollars annually.
The United States should pay this sum as a memorial to the children
who have died in Iraq, and as a sign of remorse." This measure, he
argued, would likely be more valuable in countering terrorism than any
increase in military expenditure.
The next day was Constitution Day, on which Danes traditionally take a
half day off to listen to elected representatives making cheerful
speeches about the thriving state of Danish democracy. First stop for
Nagy was the Christiansborg Peace Watch, which has been standing in
protest outside the Danish house of parliament every day since Denmark
entered the War on Terrorism on October 19 last year. An interview for
the radio was followed by a photo session for one of the newspapers
and a train ride to the provincial capital of Odense, for a
Constitution Day meeting with a distinctly different flavor.
Coverage in the newspapers and on radio over the next weekend and into
the following week was very gratifying for the visiting professor. A
double-page spread appeared in the Sunday edition of the daily
Politiken, under the heading: ³When Water is a Weapon². The Monday
interview in the independent intellectual broadsheet, Information,
bore the heading: ³US Deliberately Lets Children Die².
A follow-up article in Information, under the title ³Denmark Shuts Its
Eyes², presented the responses of the foreign policy spokespersons of
a range of Danish political parties. Perhaps most significantly, the
press secretary of the Conservative Minister of Foreign Affairs stated
that the minister was unable to make a statement, as the ministry was
unaware of documentation for the assertion that the United States has
banned the import of water purification equipment.
Clearly, the Danish Committee for Peace and Development in Iraq has a
significant level of ignorance to address. But with the success of Tom
Nagy¹s visit behind it, the committee is confident that an October
visit from former UN humanitarian coordinator in Iraq, Hans-Christof
von Sponeck, will do much to create enlightenment.
Meanwhile, Professor Nagy has returned to Washington more than content
with a level of media coverage that currently seems almost
unimaginable within the United States. But perhaps it is still
possible that he will be recognized as a prophet in his own land.
Norbert Payne is a technical writer who regularly does logistical
support in the field, including water supply and purification in
refugee camps, for a medical NGO.
Coilín ÓhAiseadha is a medical doctor with clinical experience in
Northern Ireland. Currently self-employed as a full-time freelance
translator. Contact: Coilín ÓhAiseadha
aat2002@mail.dk
Both authors are Irish, but living in Copenhagen, Denmark, and active
members of the Peace Watch, which
has stood in protest outside the Danish house of parliament since
Denmark entered the War on Terrorism, on October 19, 2001.