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Suffer the children [Fisk, Pilger, BBC Lies Documented]
Herald Sun [Australia] ^ | 16jun03 | Andrew Holt

Posted on 06/18/2003 1:35:54 PM PDT by aculeus

JOHN Pilger was far from the only journalist to believe -- incredibly -- it was our fault that Iraqi children were dying in their hundreds of thousands.

Oh, no. Time magazine in 1998 even reported on the parade of children's corpses that Saddam Hussein staged through Baghdad's streets to persuade Western journalists of our guilt, and warned of the "anger and despair of Iraq's people".

But I mention Pilger because you may have seen his documentary, Paying the Price: Killing the Children of Iraq, which screened on SBS in 2000 and is perhaps the best example of the wicked myth that is now being exposed by ashamed Iraqi doctors.

In Pilger's film, the Australian-born activist "journalist", who was recently the subject of a fawning exhibition at the Melbourne Museum, is shown touring a Baghdad hospital's children's ward.

The footage is harrowing, and the tragedy is real.

There are skeletal children just hours from death, children catatonic with pain, children too weak to blink.

And there's an Iraqi doctor who silkily explains that many such children could have been saved -- if the United Nations hadn't imposed sanctions on Iraq that stopped these children from getting food and drugs.

Pilger, who has built a career in demonising democracies like ours, believed it. Believed it greedily. Thanks largely to our sanctions, he said, "at least 200 children are dying every day". The "viciousness" of our embargo -- imposed to stop Saddam from building more weapons -- could be called a "genocide".

IT is a sign of the naivety and self-congratulatory self-loathing of our cultural elite that Pilger was by no means unusual in endorsing such an evil, almost incredible, accusation of the West.

"The American insistence that sanctions against Iraq be continued has led, by reliable accounts, to the slow death of at least 500,000 children," purred the ABC's Phillip Adams.

"It is estimated that half a million children have died as a result of the sanctions," declared the ABC's Foreign Correspondent.

Even at the start of the war in Iraq, correspondents such as A Current Affair's Jane Hansen made their pilgrimages to Baghdad's children's hospital to show us the dying that was, they implied, at least in part caused by our sanctions.

And intellectuals here -- too eager as always to believe the worst of us -- believed this, too.

The sanctions caused "the deaths of children on a scale far exceeding that caused by any military weapon in history," wrote Malcolm Fraser in a letter co-signed by Chris Sidoti and Peter Garrett -- people happy to think we're so evil that we also stole Aboriginal children, keep refugees in "concentration camps" and rape Mother Earth.

And the prominent Middle East correspondent Robert Fisk, a regular ABC [Australia] guest, not only claimed perhaps "a million" Iraqi children were dying from our "madness", but said "mass funerals for babies -- 70 in one cortege on the last count -- made their way through Baghdad".

B UT now for the truth -- because the peddlers of such corrosive hate-speech must be exposed and shamed, if not into silence then into moderation.

Iraqi doctors now say what our intellectuals and our reporters should have felt in their bones. Iraq's children were dying not because of us, but because of Saddam. And even the parades of dead children were part of a monstrous hoax.

Dr Amer Abdul a-Jalil, the deputy resident at Baghdad's Ibn al-Baladi Hospital, has told the London Telegraph that "sanctions did not kill these children -- Saddam killed them".

"Over the past 10 years, the government in Iraq poured money into the military and the construction of palaces for Saddam to the detriment of the health sector," he said.

"Those babies or small children who died because they could not access the right drugs, died because Saddam's government failed to distribute the drugs."

As the hospital's chief resident, Dr Hussein Shihab, confirmed to Newsday: "We had the ability to get all the drugs we needed. Instead of that, Saddam Hussein spent all the money on his military force and put all the fault on the USA. I am one of the doctors who was forced to tell something wrong -- that these children died from the fault of the UN."

Dr Azhar Abdul Khadem, a resident at Baghdad's Al-Alwiya maternity hospital agreed: "Saddam Hussein, he's the murderer, not the UN."

In fact, Dr Oasem al-Taye, who now runs the Baghdad Children's Hospital, said last week that after Saddam's fall he'd found plenty of medical supplies and equipment at a hospital once reserved for leaders of Saddam's regime.

"They were willing to sacrifice the children for the sake of propaganda," he said bitterly.

THE parades of dead children were part of that same propaganda.

Doctors say hospitals were forced to keep the bodies of babies who had died prematurely or of natural causes for up to two months until Saddam had enough to stage a parade of the little corpses, with women bussed in to act as "mourners", screaming insults at the US in front of television cameras.

"All 10 hospitals in Baghdad were involved in this and the quota for the parade was between 25 and 30 babies a month, which they would say had died in one day," Dr Hussein al-Douri, deputy director of the Ibn al-Baladi hospital, told the Telegraph.

Muslims traditionally bury their dead immediately, so keeping the bodies of the babies added to the grief of their parents.

"The mothers would be hysterical and sometimes threaten to kill us," said al-Douri, "but we knew that the real threat was from the government. They would have killed our families."

Why didn't more commentators understand this?

Why didn't they assume we might expect such crimes, such lies, from a savage dictatorship?

It is not enough to say such folk had no way of knowing the truth, given Iraqis were too terrified to tell it. Some people did try to expose the hoax, but few would listen -- just as Left gurus like Noam Chomsky refused to believe Cambodian refugees who tried to tell us of Pol Pot's genocide.

In 1999, for instance, Saddam was caught smuggling baby milk and children's medicines to India.

Last year, the BBC interviewed an Iraqi refugee who told how the parades of coffins were run. And human rights groups warned for years of Saddam's depravity.

But too often, it seems, our intellectual class preferred to hear the stories that confirmed its prejudices against the West. See, even now, how eagerly it believed the lie that Baghdad's antiquities museum had been cleaned out by looters -- perhaps even by the barbaric Yanks.

WHAT made this phenomenon worse is that under Saddam too many Baghdad-based correspondents were too scared to tell the full truth about him.

CNN has now admitted censoring reports of Saddam's brutality that could get its Baghdad correspondents into trouble, and the ABC's Mark Willacy conceded he faced a dilemma: "Do you fully report what you're seeing and what you're hearing or do you hold back in case you get deported?"

The answer for the diplomatic correspondent of Britain's Channel 4 News was to hold back.

"There was one occasion when we did censor ourselves," Lindsey Hilsum admitted last week.

She'd decided not to report that the US was right -- that she'd seen for herself on the night of the deadly explosion in a Baghdad market that Iraq was indeed hiding missile launchers in residential areas.

"If I'd said that, I think we would have been thrown out the next day," she said.

Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil. I wonder if we even dare recognise true evil any more.

This is one small gain we can take, then, from the war in Iraq. What we learn now of the horror that gripped Iraq may end our dangerous and wilful ignorance.

There is such a thing as evil in this world, after all. And, believe me, it isn't us.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bbc; corrections; deceit; mediabias; retractions
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1 posted on 06/18/2003 1:35:55 PM PDT by aculeus
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To: aculeus
"There was one occasion when we did censor ourselves," Lindsey Hilsum admitted last week.

She'd decided not to report that the US was right -- that she'd seen for herself on the night of the deadly explosion in a Baghdad market that Iraq was indeed hiding missile launchers in residential areas.

"If I'd said that, I think we would have been thrown out the next day," she said.


No Excuse. FU Lindsey. This makes me VERY mad.
2 posted on 06/18/2003 1:43:16 PM PDT by Frank_Discussion (May the wings of Liberty never lose a feather!)
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To: aculeus
He tells it like it is.I'm sick of the wailing of reporters and writers who always criticize the west and give tyrants a break.
3 posted on 06/18/2003 1:44:14 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: Willie Green
I wonder if Pat Buchanan will apologize to his own country for smearing it and lying about it. He was the biggest pimp on the so-called "right" for the "dying Iraqi children" myth.
4 posted on 06/18/2003 1:46:42 PM PDT by wideawake (LIE PAT! LIE!)
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To: mvpel
Self-ping for http://grex.cyberspace.org
5 posted on 06/18/2003 1:48:09 PM PDT by mvpel (Michael Pelletier)
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To: aculeus
Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil. I wonder if we even dare recognise true evil any more.


No, they wouldn't recognize Evil. They only know that THEY are "good" and therefore anything that they believe is "good" and ANY means that reaches their end is "good". They ARE Evil. Putting himself at the center of the Universe is the universe is the point at which Man becomes Evil. The death camps simply flow from that first and only necessary act. See Hitler.
6 posted on 06/18/2003 1:48:55 PM PDT by TalBlack
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To: Frank_Discussion
But..but..they'd have lost access and the capacity to mislead and edit the truth!Ratings would suffer!
7 posted on 06/18/2003 1:49:56 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: wideawake
No
8 posted on 06/18/2003 1:55:47 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: aculeus
I wonder how people like Fisk can live with themselves.

D


9 posted on 06/18/2003 2:31:13 PM PDT by daviddennis (Visit amazing.com for protest accounts, video & more!)
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To: wideawake
"I wonder if Pat Buchanan will apologize to his own country for smearing it and lying about it. He was the biggest pimp on the so-called 'right' for the 'dying Iraqi children' myth."

Exactly.

10 posted on 06/18/2003 3:35:36 PM PDT by cake_crumb (UN Resolutions=Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
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To: wideawake
Here's one of Patsie's more egregious screeds:

Toward a More Moral Foreign Policy

    " Woodrow Wilson called sanctions the "peaceful silent deadly remedy." Today, they may fairly be called America's silent weapon of mass destruction whose victims are almost always the weak, the sick, the women and the young. When Arab terrorists murder Israeli children, we Americans are rightly filled with horror and disgust. But what do Arab peoples think of us when U.S sanctions bring death to literally thousands of Iraqi children every single month? Can a nation that declares piously it will never stoop to assassinating tyrants, but wields a sanctions sword that slaughters children, truly call itself "the home of the brave?" "

What a vile, disgusting human being.

11 posted on 06/18/2003 3:37:35 PM PDT by TomB
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To: Allan
Bump
12 posted on 06/18/2003 3:43:57 PM PDT by Allan
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To: TomB
I'm no fan of Whoopi, but she was right for once when she said that Pat was the basis for the movies "Dangerous minds" , "Clueless", and "Dumb & Dumber"
13 posted on 06/18/2003 4:45:24 PM PDT by Jacob Kell (I got a six-pack of whoop-ass riding shotgun with me, son!)
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To: aculeus
The basic fact, as the Iraq war demonstrated fully again, is that leftists cannot tell the truth. Let me put in another way. Leftists (like Pilger, Fisk, and others) will deliberately utter the most vile lies to advance their stupid and criminal cause which is the destruction of free-market, western civilization. The willingness of other western countries to believe these lies reflects as poorly on them as it does on the people who lie to them. At some point these countries have to extricate their craniums from their posteriors. I'm afraid it won't be any time soon.
14 posted on 06/18/2003 5:08:40 PM PDT by driftless ( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: aculeus
bttt
15 posted on 06/18/2003 6:36:43 PM PDT by ellery
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To: aculeus
Aculeus...anyone with a smidgeon of knowledge about international affairs knows that the money through sanctions was getting through to Iraq, but Saddam himself cared little for his people, and used the money for his own benefit.

Also, much of the Food for Oil programme money lay idle in FRENCH banks.

People like Pilger and Fisk AMAZE me.
For one minute I don't doubt that they believe Saddam Hussein to be a bad man. But they prefer to point the finger at Western Governments rather than single out reponsibility to the person who actually causes the pain.

Then when the Western Governments decide to FIX the problem. They argue for the dictator 'underdog'.

I work with a guy, who is a former Reuteurs journalist, who at one point worked with Robert Fisk. He regards Fisk as a 'detached wanker'.

I'm getting really MAD now typing this post so I should stop.

But I hope these guys get their heads out of their own arses soon. Before the shit fills their nostrils and they can't smell the coffee!




16 posted on 06/18/2003 6:48:44 PM PDT by Happygal
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To: aculeus
IT is a sign of the naivety and self-congratulatory self-loathing of our cultural elite that Pilger was by no means unusual in endorsing such an evil, almost incredible, accusation of the West.
17 posted on 06/18/2003 8:59:21 PM PDT by victim soul
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To: aculeus
Yeah that's what I'm talking about. Bolt's exposé is exactly what the Left deserves, and on many more issues besides.
18 posted on 06/18/2003 10:05:54 PM PDT by beckett
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To: aculeus
Last year, the BBC interviewed an Iraqi refugee who told how the parades of coffins were run.

How Saddam 'staged' fake baby funerals

19 posted on 06/19/2003 1:27:44 AM PDT by Stultis
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To: aculeus
CNN has now admitted censoring reports of Saddam's brutality that could get its Baghdad correspondents into trouble

The News We (CNN) Kept To Ourselves [must read]

20 posted on 06/19/2003 1:34:44 AM PDT by Stultis
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