Statement on the
Bombing of Afghanistan
by Senator Douglas Roche, O.C., October 26,
2001
(The following
statement was made at a Press Conference of Prominent Canadians
Calling for a Halt to the Bombing of Afghanistan in Toronto)
The relentless bombing of Afghanistan, now in its
18th day, goes beyond the intent of United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1368. When the Security Council gave its assent "to
take all necessary steps" to respond to the September 11
attacks, it did not approve a bombing campaign that would kill
innocent civilians in their Afghan villages, drive 70 percent
of the people in Herat (population 800,000) out of their homes,
kill 10 civilians yesterday on a bus at the city gates of Kandahar,
and destroy a Red Cross warehouse among other unfortunate acts
of what is drily called "collateral damage."
It may seem comforting to say that civilians are
not targeted, but it is not "collateral damage" when
thousands of refugees fleeing the bombs are jammed along the Afghanistan-Pakistan
border in unspeakable conditions. UNICEF warns that the crisis
"is threatening the lives of millions of women and children"
and that "1.5 million children may not make it through the
winter." Christian Aid, which reported that 600 people have
already died in the Dar-e-Suf region of northern Afghanistan due
to starvation and related diseases, says needy people are being
put at risk by government spin-doctors who are showing a callous
disregard for life.
The bombing of Afghanistan, one of the most desperate
and vulnerable regions of the world, is producing an international
catastrophe. The bombing is immoral, unproductive and only by
the most dubious logic can it be said to possess even a shred
of legality.
As Article 51 of the U.N. Charter makes clear,
it is the Security Council that has the authority and responsibility
to maintain or restore international peace and security. Let me
emphasize: the bombing coalition, in exceeding the exercise of
the right of self-defence, which gave a legal cover to the bombing,
has sidelined the legitimate authority of the Security Council
to manage this crisis.
It is said that the invocation for the first time
of Article 5 of the NATO Charter provides the legal grounds for
Canada to give its support to the military campaign. The Article
provides the solidarity that an attack on one member will be considered
an attack on all and thus NATO will take the responsive actions
it deems necessary. But where has it been proven that the government
of Afghanistan, despotic as it is, engineered or carried out the
attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon? It has yet
to be confirmed that any of the 19 suspected hijackers comes from
Afghanistan. Is the belief that Osama bin Laden, the terrorist
leader, is in Afghanistan justification for imposing catastrophe
on the whole populace?
Continued bombing is not what the United Nations
intended. The bombing must stop now - and Canada, to be faithful
to its own values, must press the United States and its coalition
partners to call a halt so that humanitarian aid can reach the
desperate people of Afghanistan.
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