Letter from Dirk Adriaensens, for the BRussells Tribunal executive committee
Dear friends,
As was agreed upon in the meeting of Iraq activists in Madrid during the
International Seminar about the assassination of Iraqi academics and health
workers, the International Anti-Occupation Network has been established.
The active World Tribunal
on Iraq (WTI) committees that felt the need to keep on working together
after the dissolution of the WTI, decided to create some form of cooperation in
a loose network, in which every member could keep its independence. The basis
of our cooperation are the conclusions of the WTI, the Declaration of the Jury
of Conscience.
The concept is simple: every committee has its own website and dedicates an
international page for the activities of the network (or individuals, Iraq
activists who want to be part of this network). We decided not to create a new
website. The webpage on the BRussells Tribunal website can be found at:
http://www.brusselstribunal.org/IAON.htm
. As you can see, it is still blank.
Were present in Madrid: the WTI committees of Portugal, Sweden, Germany,
Belgium, Spain, NYC-2, other organisations and/or active individuals from the
UK, Spain, Belgium, Iraq, Sweden, Portugal, Germany. People from Tunesia,
Italy, France, who couldn't come to the Seminar, expressed their desire to
continue the international cooperation.
Most of the activists present in Madrid, and members of the WTI, have been
working together for the past 3 years. During that period, we learned to know
and trust each other. We have helped each other and some committees have
already worked closely together in different campaigns, like the current one
about the assassination of Iraqi academics.
We decided to broaden the WTI-network that already existed, and every
individual or organisation who agrees with the Istanbul platform text and
conclusions, is welcome to join the International Anti-occupation Network.
Paco Arnau of CEOSI (the Spanish
Campaign Against the Occupation), has created the beautiful logo. It can be
made in every possible language. Just let us know and we'll ask.
If you want to join this network, please let us know.
Underneath I'll copy the 10 proposals we had for the
future of the WTI, before some people decided to dissolve it.
Hope we can count on your cooperation and ideas.
In solidarity.
Dirk Adriaensens. For the BRussells
Tribunal executive committee
19 May 2006
10 proposals for The Future of The
World Tribunal on Iraq
Presented at the workshop on the WTI at the European Network for
Peace and Human Rights in Brussels 20/21 October 2005
Lieven De Cauter and Dirk Adriaensens
for the BRussells Tribunal committee
We first want to congratulate the Istanbul team for their fantastic
achievement. Those who said that Istanbul was not the right place to organise a
culminating session, have been proven wrong, not in the least because so many
Iraqis were able to come and testify. This would not have been possible in
Fortress Europe, neither in the US. This was what we all have worked for over
the last two years. And this session was the cherry on the cake. As an exercise
in resistance in the network society, consisting of a horizontal network with
different backgrounds and opinions, this WTI-process gives hope for the future,
because we managed to keep the International group together. So, let's stay
on that course. This initiative is much too important to let it be divided.
Unity is incredibly important if we want to achieve our goals: getting the US
and other foreign troops out of Iraq. We had our platform text to guide us. Now
we have the verdict which takes us one step forward. The WTI was able to unite
the peace movement in several countries. Let's keep on discussing with the
peace movement to undertake joint actions based on the WTI experience and
conclusions. The WTI was a beacon of trust when the peace movement was divided.
But there's still a lot of work to be done.
In Brussels we had our session almost more than a year ago (april 2004), and
we were facing the question what to do next, how to proceed according to our
conclusions. We decided to ACT. Some committees decided to dissolve, and we
really think that is not a correct decision, because there's a lot of
potential in this initiative. And because we were the opening session, we had
more time to think about the future, and we would like to share some of our
experiences and make some proposals for future cooperation. Our discussions now
should concentrate on how we will proceed. Lessons have to be drawn and we have
to be convinced that the best is yet to come. We're really looking forward
to a most interesting and fruitful cooperation. Here some proposals (with some
actions that are already in the process of materialising or done, as
examples).
1) 'Post production': spreading of the conclusions in all sorts of
manner, making a book, including all the conclusions of all the sessions, and a
selection of testimonies from all the sessions is planned since long.
Hopefully, it comes true. Still, a huge work has to be done: up to now, the WTI
is largely unknown by the broader public. t is something we find hard to
believe, but it's a fact. We have to be aware of that, and find ways to
change that.
2) Strong local committees in a global network. We need to rely on and if
necessary create strong local committees, who are able to work with the peace
movement of their countries, and propose actions if needed. We might need to
create more committees in countries where the WTI doesn't exist. We heard a
lot of echoes that the WTI experience should be repeated in the heart of the
Empire: the US. 2 NYC sessions weren't enough. And we already received
several requests to transfer sessions to the US. This is something to think
about. Another suggestion, and this one is coming from Iraqis, is nothing less
than to hold a tribunal in Bagdad. For them that would be the ultimate symbolic
gesture. If this is feasible at all, is open for discussion.
3) Division of labour. These committees should ideally try to divide tasks,
especially in monitoring the occupation, so that each committee has a
specialisation. It would be counterproductive if every committee does the same
work. So we propose to let the list know what your committee's plans and
possibilities are. Of course some actions can be common, or be brought together
at some point.
4) Positive Press action. The WTI has to be a bridge between the Iraqi and
Western anti-occupation voices. Translators are badly needed. We need more
non-embedded news from Iraq, from its citizens, when the press fails to do so.
We also need to translate important articles written by Western people to
translate into Arabic. This informing function, this Press function seems of
utmost importance to us (and we, in Brussels, have devoted much attention to
it, and have booked some successes with it). We definitely have to think about
how we can influence mainstream media and get our stories and views
published.
5) Parallel information: of course, Main stream Media don't have a
monopoly anymore. So we have to take that chance.
- We should keep exchanging hot information through our list serve.
- We should try and have very informative websites. Thanks to Dirk the
BRussells Tribunal website has become a website on Iraq with some
authority.
- We work with Uruknet, one of the best if not the best information site
available on Iraq. We can enhance this collaboration.
- We issued, in cooperation with the peace movement, the devastating report
on the medical in Iraq, by Dahr Jamail.
- We collaborated with the peace movement to make a Brochure including the
Istanbul conclusions and other articles on Iraq in French and Dutch.
These are just some examples of such parallel information.
6) Advisory boards/ 'Artists & Academics for Peace'. We need to
include people that were involved in our sessions as witnesses or jury or in
other ways, and to establish organisational ties with them. That's why we
created for instance an Advisory Committee. We have been able to discuss many
things thoroughly and to give advice. If we have this sort of advisory board of
specialists and people with authority and fame we can call upon them for
advice, to give feedback on texts and actions etc, but also for endorsing our
initiatives (like signing statements). We dream about an international
sensibilisation and mobilising action called "Artists & Academics for
Peace". We believe that we should try and break the press boycott on Iraq
in general and on WTI in particular, by mediagenic stance, with people like
Harold Pinter, Eminem, and Arundahti Roy (who led the final session). Maybe
this could surface around a benefit concert, for our legal and humanitarian
action medical aid. Which brings us to point seven.
7) Concrete legal and humanitarian actions. We have to think about legal and
other actions against the invasion, occupation and breaches of humanitarian
law. I give three examples:
a) The WTI can be a network with one or more websites listing and
documenting murdered academics in Iraq. That action is already starting up. It
seems very fitting in the line of the WTI process.
b) We could and should also document and take up the cases of missing
persons. Some steps have been taken already. , this seems to me very fitting in
the line of the WTI process.
c) trying to coordinate in collaboration with specialised NGO's medical
emergency aid. Even if this seems too ambitious for a loose network based on a
symbolic legal action, tis is in fact underway, with our Spanish friends. (More
information on this can be given by Bert De Belder and Dirk during the
discussion if necessary).
8) Political action. We think that we cannot avoid to go openly political
now and then. I give three examples.
a) we can propose protest actions to national and international peace
movement. For instance the appeal for an action on Sunday February 20th against
the visit of Bush to Brussels was very successful . Here, we would like to
propose very concretely Sunday march 19th 2006 as an international action day
against the War.
b) we can take sharp and well argued positions. For instance the Brussels
Tribunal issued a letter to Amnesty International criticising its collaboration
in the drafting of the Iraqi constitution. It was controversial to some WTI
members, but was signed by many witnesses, jury members and advocates.
c) the third one is very ambitious, but is suggested from inside Iraq: the
possibility of organising delegations, or "international observation
missions" to Iraq. For security reasons we don't give names of the
people who suggested this, but they have been and are very much involved in the
WTI process. Another Iraqi adds to this: "The countries saying they are
against the invasion and the opposition in all countries who participated in
the invasion beside the international organisations and NGO can send
observers.This is possible and we should work for it."
9) Academic activism. We think it is very important that we consequently
endeavor to make a synthesis between activism and academic research. The
recently founded IACIS, International Association of Iraqi studies (which held
its opening congress in London), could be an important partner in this. I give
one personal example of what this could be: Steve Graham, a professor of social
geography and urbanism has published a book on urbicide, the deliberate killing
of cities. We could try and document with urbanists, social geographers and the
like the serial killing of cities in Iraq. Nobody in my audiences, I keep
checking it out, even has heard about Tal Afar. If we would document it, we
could publish our findings and save these atrocities from oblivion.
10) Artistic activism. It is also important to speak to the heart. To find
new ways of expressing politics. The idea of a poetry collection to be
collected on a website is already taken up. We could envisage to document the
exhibition Abu Gulag Freedom Park that took place in a park in Baghdad last
year. We could even dream about making a travelling exhibition. But that is a
also very ambitious, maybe too ambitious plan in the sense that it involves a
lot of work and is not so directly political.
Time to Conclude. Some people claim that we cannot do other activities than
the tribunal. Most sessions are over now, so we have to stop. But the
war/occupation and the atrocities are going on (and if anything getting worse),
so stopping and leaving our Iraqi friends on their own is no option. A
possibility is, that we do, indeed, change the name. WTI: World Tribune on
Iraq. (Like IRC changed from Interhemispherical Resource Center to
International Relations Center), a shift, but one that not breaks the
continuity.
There are new sessions coming up. New organisations and individuals who want
to collaborate with us. There are more possibilities. We just summed up a few,
but we admit that this 10 point plan is ambitious. We think we should be and I
tell you why
An Iraqi said to me - I think it was after the opening session - that the
WTI as a network was the only real instance where the whole planetarian protest
to this war and subsequent occupation could be kept alive, continue and come
together. Let's not squander this trust and dismiss its appeal too quickly.
The silence in the main stream media on Iraq has become deafening. I checked it
out with many students groups: nobody has even heard about Tal Afar. (Nor about
the WTI for that matter) We have a tremendous responsibility. We have achieved
a lot, but there are still huge potentialities.
And for those who are unwilling to make an eternal commitment, those who
have to get back to their real jobs, we can say: the occupying forces are
already starting to think about withdrawal. Let's not give up now!
Lieven De Cauter and Dirk Adriaensens
for the BRussells Tribunal committee