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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Issue No. 37 October 28 - November 3, 2001 Quezon City, Philippines |
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War
in Afghanistan: BY
RAMEEZ RAHMAN
Back to Bulatlat.com Alternative Reader Index Karachi,
Pakistan --- In 1986, President Reagan bombed the city of Tripoli to teach
Colonel Khaddafi, the most wanted ‘terrorist’ of that time, a lesson.
Numerous civilians in residential areas, including infants and young children,
were killed. A conscientious journalist, Charles Glass, went into the areas to
gather information about the number of casualties. There, he found a letter from
a seven-year old girl, scribbled to President Reagan. It said, “Dear President
Reagan, I don't understand why you killed my sister and destroyed my doll.” Glass
tried to circulate this letter to newspapers and TV channels. He didn’t
succeed. No one in the ‘free media’ of the ‘land of the free and
civilized’ wanted this story. So, the world never saw any front-page story or
touching TV documentary about this girl and her doll. We never got to see her
smile as she talked about the good times she had when she played with her
sister. And we never did see her tears as she longingly asked God to bring her
sister back to her. We were never able to share her grief, even if from afar and
we were certainly unable, as we still are, to answer her disturbing questions.
One
wonders, how many such letters never saw the light of the day. And what those
letters might have said. A Japanese girl grieving for her dead parents? A
Vietnamese girl asking for her life to be spared? A hungry Iraqi boy asking for
food? A Palestinian boy pleading for freedom? Who knows? Perhaps,
unlike the Libyan episode, most of these letters were never even discovered by
anyone. They probably perished just like the innocent hands that must have
perished soon after writing them. Here are some of those letters, which might
have been. Though in their present form, they are the creation of imagination,
let us be in no doubt that such letters could have been written by children and
indeed, are still probably being written, in a world where ‘civilized’
people continue to deprive them of food and continue to snatch their dolls,
their happiness and their innocence. From
Hiroshima, Japan by Kimuko Seidi aged 10 to President Harry Truman: “Dear
President Truman, Please
excuse my handwriting. I am so severely burned that my hands keep shaking and I
can’t grab my pencil properly. I know that you are angry but please don’t
drop any more atoms on us. I am at my school. The atoms have killed
most of my classmates and teachers. I am waiting for a doctor but I think that
most of the doctors are dead too. The pain in my legs is so stinging. I wish
someone would cut them off. I can’t even see properly. Have you ever seen a
boy walking on his ankles? I saw one today; he had no feet. I also saw a girl
with her jaw missing and her tongue hanging out of her mouth. She was crying. I
am also crying right now. I don’t want to cry. I want to laugh but I am in so
much pain. Please send some American doctors.” Little
Kimuko couldn’t withstand the pain and died soon after. She was naïve
therefore she didn’t know that ‘civilized’ people only send the agents of
death: bombs, guns and planes. She didn’t know that they would never send
doctors because they themselves had declared that they wanted her to suffer in
order to make their point. Life magazine which is a prominent journal of the
country that is the self-proclaimed upholder of the highest humanitarian values,
showed a picture of a Japanese burning to death and commented: “This is the
only way.” She
thought her innocent little letter could melt the hearts of the ‘civilized’
people in the American establishment. But she never would have written this
letter had she heard what General Curtis LeMay of the US Air Force—the
‘crusaders for democracy and human rights’—had said at the time, “There
is no such thing as an innocent civilian.” The
‘civilized’ people answered her innocent plea for no more ‘atoms’ by
dropping another atom bomb on Nagasaki, which killed thousands more Kimuko’s.
Alas, poor Kimuko didn’t know that she wasn’t innocent for she was just a
child. From
My Lai, Vietnam by Lio Trong aged 12 to President Lyndon Johnson: “Dear
President Johnson, Please
tell your soldiers to stop killing any more villagers. We are simple farmers. We
have no weapons. They have just pushed thirty people into a ditch and killed
them. Men, women, and children. Babies too. Mama and little Vo Thi (my 2-years
old sister) are also dead. They were in our house when the soldiers set it on
fire. Mama tried to get out but she was too scared by the endless firing from
the machine guns. Father and I wanted to go to their help but a man in a
helicopter started throwing bombs at us. We ran to hide in the fields. We
watched helplessly as our house burnt down killing Mama and little sister. My
father is a simple farmer. We have no weapons. Please tell your soldiers to
stop. I don’t want to die…” Soon
afterwards, Lio and his father were also pushed into the ditch on the top of
other corpses. An American soldier set his weapon on automatic, pointed the gun
at Lio and emptied the clip into his head. A little while later, when the ditch
had been completely filled with dead people, a napalm bomb was dropped on it so
that nothing remained of the people inside it. Lio’s death and the deaths of
hundreds of other villagers came to be known as the My Lai Massacre. In
his book Flower of the Dragon, Richard Boyle, a free-lance journalist who went
to My Lai to investigate the massacre, says: “My Lai was not the act of one
man. It was not the act of one platoon, or one company. It was the result of an
ordered, planned and well-conducted campaign conceived at high command levels to
teach a lesson to the villagers of Quang Ngai province.” But
this massacre was not an isolated incident. All throughout the war, the ‘lords
of civilization’ continued to deliberately bomb schools and dispensaries and
attack civilian populations, as part of the ‘pacification’ of the people.
The main purpose was, as Lt. Col. William R. Corsonto, in charge of the
‘pacification’ teams, later admitted, ‘to destroy the hopes, aspirations
and emotional stability of the people.’ In
his foreword to the Bertrand Russell War Crimes Tribunal, Noam Chomsky writes,
“From 1965 through 1969 Vietnam was subjected to about four and a half million
tons by aerial bombardment. This is nine times the tonnage of bombing in the
entire Pacific theatre in the Second World War, including Hiroshima and Nagasaki
- over 70 tons of bombs for every square mile of Vietnam, North and South, about
500 pounds of bombs for every man, woman and child in Vietnam.” Five
hundred pounds of bombs for little Lio?! He couldn’t even have survived a
bullet. But then again the civilized people didn’t just want to kill him. They
wanted to make an example out of him. So that other children of the world always
remembered Lio’s fate and the message behind his fate: We are the masters of
the universe. Whosoever disobeys us shall be turned into powder and ash! From
Afghanistan by Dillawar Khan aged 8 to President George W. Bush: “Dear
President Bush, I
am an orphan. I have not eaten anything for four days. Before I used to get a
little food but now there is none. I heard that you are angry and you have taken
away my food. I am sorry if I have done anything wrong. Please give me food. I
will be happy even if it’s very little. With all the bombs that are being
dropped from your planes, I wonder when I may cease to exist. Perhaps it will be
better if I die. At least I won’t feel the crippling hunger that is my fate at
present. Give me food or give me bombs. I am waiting.” It
is not known if Dillawar is dead or alive. But it is a fact that most of
Dillawar’s friends have already died due to starvation. According to a UN
estimate some 7-8 million Afghanis are at risk of imminent starvation. And one
of the first demands from Pakistan made by the defenders of civilization was the
cutoff of food supplies. The drama of food supplies being airdropped is nothing
but a hoax, an eyewash to hide their crime. It is like enticing the people to
come out and pick the airdropped parcel only to get hit by the bullets and the
missiles that follow such packets. Ah!
Poor Dillawar. If he dies in the bombings, his death will be labeled as
‘collateral damage’. If he dies due to starvation, perhaps ‘the price will
be worth it’. Try to recall what Madeleine Albright, the former US secretary
of state, when asked how she felt about the fact that half a million Iraqi
children had died as a result of US economic sanctions. “We think the price is
worth it.” Civilized? Why
do little Dillawar and millions of other children like him have to die?
Doesn’t terrorism mean, the use of violence against ordinary civilians for
some political purpose? That be the case, don’t you think the killings of
Kimuko, Lio, and Dillawar and millions of other innocent children also
constitute terrorism? And what about economic terrorism? When millions of hungry
children are denied food due to the policies of the World Bank and IMF, isn’t
that also a form of terrorism? Isn’t it also a form of terrorism when millions
of children die each year of easily preventable diseases due to the greed of
pharmaceutical companies? So Dear President Bush, do you really want to combat international terrorism or is this yet another inhumane display of machismo to get your message across? Is little Dillawar innocent enough for you or are you still using the same yardstick by which you have already killed millions like him? Children of the world are waiting! Back to Bulatlat.com Alternative Reader Index We want to know what you think of this article.
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