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Subject:
From:
Pasamba Jow <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 22 Sep 2000 22:08:32 GMT
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This is another story that I think you will find interesting.

French flight to Iraq divides West



Iraqi hospitals are short of essential medical supplies

There have been tense exchanges at the United Nations over the flight of a
French plane to Iraq - the first direct flight from Paris since sanctions
were imposed on Baghdad.
The Dutch ambassador who heads the UN sanctions committee, Peter van Walsum,
criticised France for rejecting his request to delay the flight. And the
United States accused France of breaking sanctions.



[The flight is to] to fight against an intolerable situation which condemns
an innocent population to a slow agony

Flight organiser Father Jean-Marie Benjamin

About 60 French doctors, artists and sports personalities were on board the
plane, which landed in Baghdad at 1520 local time (1120 GMT) on Friday to
provide medical assistance and take part in a cultural festival.

France argued that as the flight was not commercial, it needed only to
notify the UN, and did not need special permission.

It maintains that it is not trying to erode sanctions, but merely
interpreting UN resolutions in a more liberal way than Washington and
London.

"You will not be surprised we don't have the same analysis of the
situation," the French ambassador, Jean-David Levitte said.

Security Council divided

"For many years now we have considered there is no flight embargo against
Iraq."

The flight was arranged by a private French group opposed to the
international sanctions imposed after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990.



Iraq has just reopened its international airport

The controversy was discussed on Friday by members of the Security Council,
which is divided on the sanctions.

British Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock said the issue would also be raised in
the European Union, which bans flights to Iraq.

"It is the only instance I can remember of a flight being notified to the
committee but then going against the procedures of the committee to wait 24
hours," he said.

Further flights

Mr van Walsum said he had was aware there were differing interpretations of
the UN sanctions. He added he had asked for the flight to be delayed so he
could ask each of the 15 members of the sanctions committee if they objected
to the flight.

Last week Russia flew a passenger flight to Iraq carrying humanitarian aid
and a number of oil executives.



Ordinary Iraqis have been hard hit by the sanctions

But it gave the UN sanctions committee a few days' notice, enabling other
countries to decide whether they wanted to raise any objections. None,
however, did.

France, for its part, gave the committee only a few hours' notice.

A second French group has announced plans for another flight on 29
September.

Iraq reopened its international airport last month to enable it to receive
international flights again, despite the sanctions.

Both France and Russia, close trading partners of Iraq before the invasion
of Kuwait, want the sanctions eased or lifted.

All security members say they want to see Iraqi President Saddam Hussain
accept the return of UN weapons monitors to Iraq.

But the BBC's UN correspondent, Mark Devenport, says that with prominent
countries at loggerheads over sanctions, the Iraqi leader is unlikely to
feel under any immediate pressure to give in to the council's demands on
weapons inspections.


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