From owner-imap@chumbly.math.missouri.edu Fri Oct 8 10:45:09 2004
Date: Thu, 7 Oct 2004 11:07:03 -0500 (CDT)
From: President, USA Exile Govt.
<prez@usa-exile.org>
Subject: Anglo-American Genocide
Article: 192532
To: undisclosed-recipients: ;
From: Gary Kohls
<gkohls@cpinternet.com>
Subject: Fascism Alert: US and British genocidal acts to make room
for a military airbase.
http://www.guardian.co.uk
There are times when one tragedy, one crime tells us how a whole system works behind its democratic facade and helps us to understand how much of the world is run for the benefit of the powerful and how governments lie. To understand the catastrophe of Iraq, and all the other Iraqs along imperial history's trail of blood and tears, one need look no further than Diego Garcia.
The story of Diego Garcia is shocking, almost incredible. A British colony lying midway between Africa and Asia in the Indian Ocean, the island is one of 64 unique coral islands that form the Chagos Archipelago, a phenomenon of natural beauty, and once of peace.
Newsreaders refer to it in passing: American B-52 and Stealth
bombers last night took off from the uninhabited British island of
Diego Garcia to bomb Iraq (or Afghanistan).
It is the word
uninhabited
that turns the key on the horror of what was done
there. In the 1970s, the Ministry of Defence in London produced this
epic lie: There is nothing in our files about a population and an
evacuation.
Diego Garcia was first settled in the late 18th century. At least 2,000 people lived there: a gentle creole nation with thriving villages, a school, a hospital, a church, a prison, a railway, docks, a copra plantation. Watching a film shot by missionaries in the 1960s, I can understand why every Chagos islander I have met calls it paradise; there is a grainy sequence where the islanders' beloved dogs are swimming in the sheltered, palm-fringed lagoon, catching fish.
All this began to end when an American rear-admiral stepped ashore in
1961 and Diego Garcia was marked as the site of what is today one of
the biggest American bases in the world. There are now more than 2,000
troops, anchorage for 30 warships, a nuclear dump, a satellite spy
station, shopping malls, bars and a golf course. Camp Justice
the Americans call it.
During the 1960s, in high secrecy, the Labour government of Harold
Wilson conspired with two American administrations to sweep
and
sanitise
the islands: the words used in American
documents. Files found in the National Archives in Washington and the
Public Record Office in London provide an astonishing narrative of
official lying all too familiar to those who have chronicled the lies
over Iraq.
To get rid of the population, the Foreign Office invented the fiction
that the islanders were merely transient contract workers who could be
returned
to Mauritius, 1,000 miles away. In fact, many
islanders traced their ancestry back five generations, as their
cemeteries bore witness. The aim, wrote a Foreign Office official in
January 1966, is to convert all the existing residents ... into
short-term, temporary residents.
What the files also reveal is an imperious attitude of brutality. In
August 1966, Sir Paul Gore-Booth, permanent under-secretary at the
Foreign Office, wrote: We must surely be very tough about this. The
object of the exercise was to get some rocks that will remain
ours. There will be no indigenous population except seagulls.
At
the end of this is a handwritten note by DH Greenhill, later Baron
Greenhill: Along with the Birds go some Tarzans or Men Fridays
...
Under the heading, Maintaining the fiction
, another
official urges his colleagues to reclassify the islanders as a
floating population
and to make up the rules as we go
along
.
There is not a word of concern for their victims. Only one official
appeared to worry about being caught, writing that it was fairly
unsatisfactory
that we propose to certify the people, more or
less fraudulently, as belonging somewhere else
. The documents
leave no doubt that the cover-up was approved by the prime minister
and at least three cabinet ministers.
At first, the islanders were tricked and intimidated into leaving;
those who had gone to Mauritius for urgent medical treatment were
prevented from returning. As the Americans began to arrive and build
the base, Sir Bruce Greatbatch, the governor of the Seychelles, who
had been put in charge of the sanitising
, ordered all the pet
dogs on Diego Garcia to be killed. Almost 1,000 pets were rounded up
and gassed, using the exhaust fumes from American military
vehicles. They put the dogs in a furnace where the people
worked,
says Lizette Tallatte, now in her 60s, .. and when
their dogs were taken away in front of them, our children screamed and
cried.
The islanders took this as a warning; and the remaining population were loaded on to ships, allowed to take only one suitcase. They left behind their homes and furniture, and their lives. On one journey in rough seas, the copra company's horses occupied the deck, while women and children were forced to sleep on a cargo of bird fertiliser. Arriving in the Seychelles, they were marched up the hill to a prison where they were held until they were transported to Mauritius. There, they were dumped on the docks.
In the first months of their exile, as they fought to survive,
suicides and child deaths were common. Lizette lost two
children. The doctor said he cannot treat sadness,
she
recalls. Rita Bancoult, now 79, lost two daughters and a son; she told
me that when her husband was told the family could never return home,
he suffered a stroke and died.
Unemployment, drugs and prostitution, all of which had been alien to their society, ravaged them. Only after more than a decade did they receive any compensation from the British government: less than #3,000 each, which did not cover their debts.
The behaviour of the Blair government is, in many respects, the
worst. In 2000, the islanders won a historic victory in the high
court, which ruled their expulsion illegal. Within hours of the
judgment, the Foreign Office announced that it would not be possible
for them to return to Diego Garcia because of a treaty
with
Washington—in truth, a deal concealed from parliament and the US
Congress. As for the other islands in the group, a feasibility
study
would determine whether these could be resettled. This has
been described by Professor David Stoddart, a world authority on the
Chagos, as worthless
and an elaborate charade
. The
study
consulted not a single islander; it found that the
islands were sinking
, which was news to the Americans who are
building more and more base facilities; the US navy describes the
living conditions as so outstanding that they are unbelievable
.
In 2003, in a now notorious follow-up high court case, the islanders
were denied compensation, with government counsel allowed by the judge
to attack and humiliate them in the witness box, and with Justice
Ousley referring to we
as if the court and the Foreign Office
were on the same side. Last June, the government invoked the archaic
royal prerogative in order to crush the 2000 judgment. A decree was
issued that the islanders were banned forever from returning
home. These were the same totalitarian powers used to expel them in
secret 40 years ago; Blair used them to authorise his illegal attack
on Iraq.
Led by a remarkable man, Olivier Bancoult, an electrician, and
supported by a tenacious and valiant London lawyer, Richard Gifford,
the islanders are going to the European court of human rights, and
perhaps beyond. Article 7 of the statute of the international
criminal court describes the deportation or forcible transfer of
population ... by expulsion or other coercive acts
as a crime
against humanity. As Bush's bombers take off from their paradise,
the Chagos islanders, says Bancoult, will not let this great crime
stand. The world is changing; we will win.