Sunday, April 27, 2003

Galloway targeted

NOTES: George Galloway, a British MP, is a known
sympathiser with Saddam Hussein. He has visited
Baghdad several times and has met with Saddam and
other Iraqi leaders. He opposed the war. He is very
outspoken. He led several anti-war rallies in London.
He was a communist in Scotland before he embraced the
Labour party in the 70s and rose through the ranks to
become an MP from Glasgow, Scotland. He is known for
his support for the Palestinians and other Arab causes
and in fact these positions have given him respect
among liberal Britons. Therefore, the ongoing campaign
against him is widely seen as retribution by his
pro-Israeli defractors.


by pv vivekanand

BRITISH MP George Galloway is fnding himself under
attack from several quarters for his refusal to
endorse the US-British war against Iraq. He might even
face charges of treachery in a court of law for having
"incited" British soldiers against obeying orders to
fight in Iraq.
What is not said in public but what the waves say is
simple: Galloway took his case against war on Iraq
took too far and insulted and humiliated his Labour
party boss and Prime Minister Tony Blair and his
colleagues. And now the Blair camp is itching to get
back at him through whatever means available.
Blair has the option to take party disciplinary action
against Galloway, but he seems to have opted not to do
so if only because it might have a negative bearing on
him as a vindictive man.
The charges, formal and informal, from his pro-Blair
Labour Party members and the media, include:
-- He stepped beyond party lines when he commented
during an interview with Abu Dhabi Television that
Blair and George Bush were "wolves" and urged British
soldiers not to obey "illegal" orders to wage war
against Iraq.
-- His urging to the soldiers could be construed as
treachery under a 1934 act, and that is being touted
by a private group of lawyers representing British
service personnel to file a private case against him.
The Crown Prosecution Service has declined to wage its
own case but has cleared the lawyers' bid to sue
Galloway, an MP from Glasgow long known for his
involvement with Middle Eastern affairs and as a
friend of Saddam Hussein.
-- Galloway is accused of taking money from Saddam -
£375,000 a year -- by the Telegraph newspaper.
Galloway has denied the charge and is suing the paper,
but the paper says it has found documents that suggest
that its report is accurate. It is ready for a fight
with Galloway.
-- Galloway is accused of "misusing" funds he
collected for the Mariam Appeal to fund medical
treatment of Iraqi victims of the UN sanctions against
Iraq. Gallowway has again challenged the charge, but
the attorney general's office has launched an
investigation into the charges.
-- Galloway is accused of having indirectly a member
of the Al Qaeda group who is suspected of having
played a role in plotting bombings against US
embassies in Africa.
That charge stemmed from a visit he paid to Morocco in
1996 in order to explore a possible deal between the
Saudi government and London-based Saudi dissidents of
the Committee for the Defence of Legitimate Rights.
Galloway has admitted in parliament that Saudi
dissident Saad Al Fagih paid for the trip. Later it
was found that Fayigh bought a satellite phone on
behalf of Fagih for Khaled Al Fawwaz, another Saudi
dissident. Fawwaz is currently held in a British
prison fighting a US effort to get him extradited to
stand trial in an American court.
-- The satellite phone bought by Fayigh was shipped to
Mohammed Atta and was used in plotting for the August
1998 bombings of the US embassies in Tanzania and
Kenya, says the Observer newspaper.
Mohammed Atta, according to the CIA, headed the group
of suicide hijackers in the Sept.11, 2001 attacks in
New York and Washington after having plotted the
bombings in Africa in 1998.
However, there is no insinuation that Galloway had any
knowledge of Al Qaeda activities or he had known Osama
Bin Laden at any point.
Galloway, who describes the accusation that he
collected money from
Saddam Hussein as a "lie of fantastic proportions."
has called that the
investigation into the Mariam Appeal resembled a
"witch hunt."
Galloway has always been involved in Middle Eastern
affairs. It was
that involvement which propelled him into the
forefront of leftist
politics in the UK since the 1970s.
Galloway is not fazed by the "incitement charge."
'I hope to have chiselled on my gravestone: 'He
incited them to disaffect'," he says.
"The people who have betrayed this country are those
who have sold it
to a foreign power and who have been the miserable
surrogates of a
bigger power for reasons very few people in Britain
can understand," said
Galloway,
The investigation into the Mariam Appeal funds is
implicitly linked to
charges that Galloway collected money from Saddam
Hussein.
In a response to Lord Goldsmith, the attorney general,
Galloway said:
"Given your, to many, extraordinary decision to
declare the war on Iraq
legal, despite the opinions of the UN secretary
general and
international law experts around the world, it would
be perverse for you to now declare my anti-war work
illegal under British law."
The Telegraph, which levelled the charge that Galloway
took money from
Saddam, says it stands by its report. Furthermore, it
also followed up
the first report by alleging that Saddam tried to
protect the MP from
the potential scandal of being linked to the Iraqi
secret service, the
Mukhabarat.
It says that it had found documents in Iraq suggesting
that Galloway
was given a percentage of Iraqi oil sales -- worth
about £375,000 a year
through the oil-for-food programme.
The Telegraphs says that would "look forward" to a
legal battle with
Galloway.
In yet another charge, another British paper reported
finding the copy of a letter written in 1998 by the
then foreign secretary, Robin Cook. to Galloway
refusing Galloway's allegation that four members of
the UN weapon inspectors in Iraq were Israeli spies.
The copy of the letter, which was found in the
post-war ruins of the foreign ministry building in
Baghdad last week, was allegedly sent by the head of
the Iraqi interest section in London to the deputy
foreign minister. While it was not classified as a
confidential document, the "clinch," says the
newspaper, was that the iraqi diplomat's covering note
to the deputy minister was dated four days after the
date it was sent by Cook to Galloway. It showed
Galloway's collusion with the Iraqi regime throughout,
the newspaper suggested.