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From:
Momodou Camara <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 9 Apr 2003 18:18:25 -0500
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Blair Wants Free Speech in Iraq, But Not in Britain
George Galloway, The Guardian



      Last week the government enlisted the Murdoch press to launch an
assault on me with the journalistic equivalent of a cluster bomb. The
central thrust of their attacks, that I am a traitor not fit to sit in
Parliament, was scattered over the Sun, News of the World, Times and Sunday
Times. Some bomblets were designed to wound now (like the incitement to
pound me with hate mail and threatening phone calls), others to explode
later, and with terminal effect (like the order to strip me of
parliamentary rank through withdrawal of the Labour whip, followed by
expulsion).

In a world where thousands of civilians are being minced by the real
thing, this would not ordinarily detain us over-long, but both the medium
and the message are significant. That Tony Blair has taken New Labour
into the outer limits of social democratic politics, a kind of twilight
zone where, in the dimness, an axis of Bush, Blair, Berlusconi, Aznar and
Sharon can just be glimpsed, is pretty much a given. But his alliance
with the cheap jingo press, which is spreading racist hatred in this
conflict, is a key development in the war for Labour's future.

This latest attack on me, for example, was fed to a willing press by
Labour sources. I know this because the national newspaper editor who was
first offered the "story" (a transcript of a translated interview I gave
to Abu Dhabi TV) turned it down and alerted me. It was then given to the
Sun. The transcribed words were mine; the spin was all New Labour's.

The Sun (whose columnist, Richard Littlejohn, called me a "cocksucker"
last week and assaults Muslims every time he takes out his armor-plated
lap-top - "You're Shiite and you know you are") and the News of the World
(which told us on Sunday that model Nell McAndrew was sending her
knickers to Our Boys at the front) are Blair's new friends, and the
principal cheerleaders for his war of agression.

Blair, it seems, wants free speech in Baghdad, but not in the British
Parliament. He wants to use his systems of regime control - the whips,
the emasculated national executive committee and the party conference
now dragooned more carefully than a Ceausescu mass wedding) - to ensure
that only "licensed" and low-key opposition is heard.

It's true that some of my words have been harsh, but that's because I'm
expressing the views of the millions who remain fiercely angry at the
government's taking us into a war in defiance of the UN, in the teeth of
overwhelming international opposition, on bogus and fabricated grounds,
and to such disastrous effect. Not least, I'm speaking for the many in
the British Muslim community - Shiites or otherwise - who feel powerless
and virtually voiceless amid the slaughter of Muslims in Palestine,
Afghanistan and now Iraq.

Whole regiments of journalists and commentators have thrown objectivity
to the desert wind and signed up for the war effort, endlessly parroting
propaganda, wheeling this way and that, virtually on command.
Parliamentary sketch-writers openly deride hostile questioning in the
Commons as "suicide missions" on the part of MPs whose right, indeed
duty, it is to stop our own Parliament becoming a rubber-stamp assembly
like those in Baghdad and elsewhere. The threat to discipline me is also
crucially aimed at muzzling the others in what is at risk of becoming a
frenzy of intolerance, shredding the very values for which the
"coalition" claims to be fighting.

Any sense of how this illegal war is playing around the globe is now
virtually absent from public discourse; Bush and Blair have gone from
being "the West" to the "international community" to being, quite simply,
the known world. The safety of our citizens at home and abroad, the
trading and other interests of the state and the security of the world we
will be leaving to our children are all gravely imperilled by this
colonial crime and blunder. But to say so in Blair's Airstrip One is to
become, as the Sun called me, "A traitor ... an enemy of the state".

The real traitors are those who recklessly abandoned our European
heartland and Labour's natural friends like Gerhard Schrüder, Nelson
Mandela and Jimmy Carter and subordinated our interests to an extreme
right-wing faction of a foreign power; George Bush's USA. History will
judge New Labour more harshly than their fans at Wapping have done so
far.

I don't want to be pushed out of Labour politics. After 35 years, and
having served at every level, I suspect I love the Labour party rather
more than Blair does. I hope he will eschew a witchhunt. But, just in
case, my friends and I are busy building the new Glasgow central
constituency into an impregnable fortress of real Labour values. Blair
and his peculiar allies, his army of right-wing hacks and control-freaks,
may well besiege it. But they will have their work cut out to overcome it.

(George Galloway is Labour MP for Glasgow Kelvin and a columnist for the
Scottish Mail on Sunday.

      [log in to unmask])

      Features 8 April 2003

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