George
Galloway MP: Stop British complicity in human rights abuses
in Somalia |
12/06/2006
Respect MP George Galloway yesterday secured a debate in Parliament
where he exposed the British government's complicity in major human
rights abuses in Somalia, under occupation by Ethiopia in the name
on the "war on terror".
Full
transcript of George Galloway's speech, taken from Hansard.
Mr.
George Galloway (Bethnal Green and Bow) (Respect):
A Government ready to rely on those friends of liberty, the Democratic
Unionist party, to shred the liberties of our own people are almost
by definition unembarrassable, but I hope this evening to add to
the issues ventilated in a recent Channel 4 “Dispatches”
programme to adumbrate the extent to which the tragedy in Somalia,
which so many people are now becoming aware of, is another of our
Government’s dirty little secrets.
We
must start the story in Ethiopia, where 4 million people, according
to the United Nations, are facing starvation and 120,000 Ethiopian
children have just one month to live, according to last week’s
media reports. Television viewers were shocked to see the pictures
last week of the widespread suffering redolent of 1984 and the great
famine of that year.
The
US and Britain immediately pledged $90 million in famine relief.
Just one week after its appeal to the international community for
famine relief, the Ethiopian Government increased their military
budget by $50 million to $400 million. The regime in Addis Ababa—when
I knew them in the 1980s, they were pro-Albanian Maoists—are
the most militarised and heavily armed in Africa. They are in a
state of perpetual war or preparation for war with one neighbour,
Eritrea, and they are supporting anti-Government rebels in Sudan,
many believe with western connivance.
Most
astonishingly of all, the Government of Ethiopia—that starving
country whose little children are fly infested, kwashiorkor swollen,
famished and famine stricken—have been encouraged, armed,
trained, financed and otherwise facilitated to invade and occupy
their neighbour, Somalia, and create a reign of terror in that land,
which is testified to by this voluminous Amnesty International report,
which, if I had time, I would extensively quote from.
Somalia
has lost thousands of dead as a result of the Ethiopian invasion.
Millions have been displaced. Somalia, under Ethiopian occupation,
is the grimmest prison state in Africa—far worse than Mugabe’s
Zimbabwe. Who has done the encouraging, the arming, the training,
the financing and the facilitating? The same US and British Governments
who donated the $90 million to the same Ethiopian Government who
are burning their money and burning the villages, the neighbourhoods
and the people of occupied Somalia.
This
Government are never done talking about the shortcomings of African
leaders. Just last week in Rome, the Secretary of State for International
Development was roaring at Robert Mugabe, yet there has not been
a squeak out of him, or any other Minister, about the much bigger
crime in which we are ourselves deeply complicit. Is it any wonder
that African opinion considers so much of what we have to say about
misgovernance in Africa to be the deepest, most cynical hypocrisy?
Two
weeks ago, Channel 4’s “Dispatches” team took
terrifying risks to bring us the latest from occupied Mogadishu.
That was undoubtedly an award-winning documentary. It was memorable
for many reasons, not least the scene in the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office when the Minister of State, Lord Malloch-Brown, his face
frozen in horror, was confronted by Aidan Hartley with the central
case of the documentary makers. For the benefit of Members who did
not see the programme—the Minister will certainly have seen
it; she would hardly be sent out to bat on this wicket without being
shown it—that central case was that, in the grim prison state
of occupied Somalia, the fingerprints of our country and our Government
were all over the scene of the crime.
The
President of the puppet regime imposed by the Ethiopian army in
Somalia turns out to be British. He spends much of his time here—well,
it is dangerous in Somalia, after all—and has property and
family here. After presiding over a gang of torturers, murderers,
grand larceners and extortionists, he flies back to England. Then
there is the police chief whose officers kidnap people for ransom,
which they extort from people living in our own country—in
Leicester, in Birmingham, in London. They torture people, make them
disappear, and kill them if their families will not pay. He too
is British. As for the former Interior Minister who presides over
an interior of mass refugee camps, starvation and misery, and who
stands accused of stealing international aid and diverting food
for political purposes—why, he is British as well.
Guess
who is paying the wages of the murdering, kidnapping, torturing,
quisling police force in Ethiopian-occupied Somalia? That’s
right: we are. The public dictatorship in Somalia is a very British
crime, especially as our own Government—in particular, that
pocket-sized Palmerston to whom I referred earlier, the Secretary
of State for International Development—are so voluble on the
subject of other problems in Africa.
So
how did we get here? How did we get into bed with the former pro-Albanian
Maoists of the Government in Addis Ababa? I am afraid that the answer
is our old friend, our old acquaintance, the policy of “my
enemy's enemy is my friend”. The policy that has got us into
so much trouble, from Afghanistan to Iraq and many other parts of
the world, is what lies behind this obscene paradox.
We
are supporting the Ethiopian Government’s occupation of Somalia
because George Bush told us to: because Somalia is a front line
in George Bush’s ill-conceived, counter-productive, utterly
discredited, "about to be booted out in the United States"
so-called war on terror. We were against the former Government of
Somalia because they were an Islamic Government, just as we are
against the Government in Sudan because they are an Islamic Government,
and just as Ethiopia, on our behalf, opposed the Government in Eritrea
because they are an Islamic Government.
This
policy, having been such a disaster around the world, is now in
full force in Somalia, and but for Channel 4’s “Dispatches”
hardly anyone in Britain would know anything about it. No British
Minister has come to the Dispatch Box to explain why British taxpayers’
money is being paid to a police force in Mogadishu that is accused
of kidnapping people and extorting ransom money from British citizens.
No British Minister has come to explain—unless we interpret
Lord Malloch-Brown’s frozen face as an explanation—why
we are so heavily involved with a puppet regime that is bereft of
political and public support in Somalia.
This
policy of backing anyone whom Bush tells us to back—this policy
of backing anyone who is against those whom we, today, perceive
ourselves to be against—is morally utterly vacuous. Arguably
worse than that, however, is the fact that it is a total, dismal
failure, as we have found in Afghanistan to our bitter, bitter cost,
not least this very week. The very mujaheds whom Mrs. Thatcher’s
Government lauded, supported and armed are now murdering and killing
our soldiers in Afghanistan.
This
policy is not only morally bankrupt, it is politically disastrous.
Afghanistan is the perfect example, but the Ethiopian Government
preside over a country where famine and mass starvation stalk the
land. They are being helped militarily to invade, occupy and threaten
their neighbours. What can that conceivably do for our standing
in Africa, or for our credibility when we lecture the Governments
of Sudan or Zimbabwe?
It
would be bad enough if our difficulties in that respect were confined
to Africa, but the problem is much worse. The Somalians are the
tallest people on earth, but they are virtually invisible, politically,
on the international stage and in this country. Yet there are hundreds
of thousands of Somalians here, either because they have European
Union passports or because they are refugees from the very fighting
that we initiated and are now fuelling. Increasingly, young Somalis
are furious, bitter and angry. They nurse their wrath as they watch—on
Somali television or other Muslim channels—the carnage being
wrought in their country.
Two
million people in Somalia are living as refugees, out of a population
of 11 million. That is almost a fifth of the total: to scale it
up, in our country that would amount to 12 million people. There
are another 1 million Somali refugees in neighbouring countries,
and God knows how many hundreds of thousands are scattered across
the EU.
In
their bitter exile, the sons—and may be the daughters too—of
those Somali families are being brought up bitter and furious at
the role played by the west in the problems that they see on their
televisions screens. We have spent hours this afternoon trying to
deal with the problem of terrorism, but we cannot see how that connects
with the way that we constantly infuriate young Muslim boys and
girls with the double standards and injustices of our policy towards
their countries and the countries from which their parents come.
We
cannot see the connection between the growth of extremism and our
actions. The Government are always looking for a cleric or an organisation
to ban or to blame for the radicalisation of Muslim youth in Britain.
But those young people do not need a cleric or an organisation to
radicalise them: they just have to watch the news and see what our
Government are doing in Muslim countries such as Somalia.
I
know that the Minister has seen Channel 4’s “Dispatches”
programme. She will not claim otherwise, even though she is answering
a debate on human rights in Somalia. I hope that she will do a better
job than Lord Malloch-Brown did when it comes to explaining how
are taxes are being used. Among other things, that tax money could
be used to help starving people in Ethiopia. It could be used to
keep our pensioners warm in winter or to keep some post offices
open.
I
see that the hon. Member for Poplar and Canning Town (Jim Fitzpatrick),
who is Under-Secretary of State for Transport and the Minister responsible
for closing post offices, is standing by your Chair, Mr. Deputy
Speaker. I hope that that counts as being in the House and that
it is therefore in order for me to refer to him.
The
British tax money that I have mentioned could have been used for
a better purpose, but instead it is being spent on the security
forces in Somalia, which Amnesty International, as well as Channel
4, accuses of widespread abuses of human rights—of torture,
murder, disappearances, kidnapping, extortion and grand larceny.
Why
are we allowing the Interior Minister of Somalia to travel back
and forth into our country unmolested when he is accused by aid
agencies of purloining international aid—desperately needed
emergency aid for hungry people—for himself and for political
purposes for his political clan? Why are the Government not stopping
him at the border and questioning him about where the money went
that was put into Somalia and has disappeared?
Aid
agencies will not now, by and large, set foot in Somalia, so catastrophic
has the situation there become. I ask the Minister why we are supporting
the President, the Interior Minister and the chief of police in
Somalia, and allowing them to come and go freely without answering
the charges that are being made against them?
When
will the Government at least condemn the human rights abuses in
Somalia? Amnesty has voluminously recorded them, but not a squeak
has come from the Government, which has never done roaring at Sudan
or Zimbabwe. Why? Because we are deeply complicit in that. Indeed,
we are paying for it; we are paying for the security services that
are committing these crimes in Somalia.
The
Government might think that because most Somalis in Britain do not,
for one reason or another, have votes, they can be ignored—that
tall as they are, they can be disregarded. However, the truth is
that the Somali community in Britain’s loathing of the actions
of our Government is a ticking time bomb in Britain.
I,
if not the Minister, am constantly exposed in my constituency, and
in Birmingham and Leicester and other places, to the anger of these
young Somalis. There is a disaster waiting to happen. I hope that
the Minister will announce today that, in the wake of the Channel
4 revelations, she will investigate the allegations properly, and
that she will report her findings to the House.
I
am talking in my speech tonight about not only the current British
Government’s foreign policy towards the horn of Africa and
Afghanistan, but about previous Governments’ foreign policies,
too. I remember being on the Opposition Benches and accusing the
then Prime Minister, Mrs. Thatcher, of having opened the gates to
the barbarians by her support for the so-called mujaheddin in Afghanistan
so many years ago. The policy that our Governments have followed
of “my enemy’s enemy is my friend” has proved
to be fatally flawed everywhere that it has been tried, and it is
now being tried all over again in Somalia.
Many
Somalis will be watching our debate this evening—word is out
about it in the Somali community, and it is being shown on Universal
TV and other Somali channels. For their sake, I hope that the Minister
will come clean about the dreadful problems that exist, and I also
hope that she will say some words to the Ethiopian Government.
Mark
Pritchard (The Wrekin) (Conservative): I congratulate
the hon. Gentleman on having secured this debate. I apologise for
having arrived late for it; I was caught somewhat unawares as it
began early. What is best for Somalia and its people is, of course,
security.
Does
the hon. Gentleman accept that the Ethiopian Government are providing
security in Somalia at present, and that they want to withdraw from
Somalia at the earliest possible moment? Will he also join me in
encouraging the United Nations, the African Union Mission in Somalia—AMISOM—and
the African Union to ensure that troops are put back into Somalia
in order to give Somalis that security, which they need? Ethiopian
troops want to return to Addis Ababa.
Mr.
Galloway: I do not accept that at all, and it seems
that I know the Ethiopian Government rather better than the hon.
Gentleman does. As I explained before he came in, I knew them when
they were pro-Albanian Maoist guerrillas in the Tigrean People’s
Liberation Front. I knew all the leaders—they are now the
Government Ministers—and I know that they have no intention
of withdrawing from Somalia unless they are forced to do so.
They
want to occupy Somalia because they have been paid to do so by the
Government of the United States and our own Government. The Ethiopian
Government are doing a job for what they imagine to be the western
part of the international community. I see the Minister for closing
post offices laughing. His constituency contains many Somalis, as
does mine, and I hope that the camera caught him laughing.
The
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport (Jim Fitzpatrick):
I apologise for intervening on the hon. Gentleman, but I must point
out that I did not laugh at anything that he has been saying so
far.
Mr.
Galloway: I shall not go further down that track.
Perhaps the camera caught the verisimilitude.
The
truth is that the Ethiopian Government are carrying out a service
for the people who give them weapons, for the people who give them
money and for the people who give them diplomatic and political
support. They are having a beano in the Ethiopian embassy next week.
Perhaps
the hon. Member for The Wrekin (Mark Pritchard) will go to it; he
will certainly get an invitation in the post following his intervention.
The Ethiopian Government are having a beano in the Ethiopian embassy
in London to celebrate the 17th anniversary of their coming to power,
and it is going to be a very grand event.
That
event comes at a time when the Ethiopian Government’s own
people are starving to death. Their children are starving to death—120,000
children have a month to live—they are invading and occupying
their neighbouring countries and nobody says boo about it. In fact,
far from saying boo, people are saying, "Here's some more military
and financial aid to do it."
That
is because the Government of President Bush, who are utterly discredited
and on their way out, with virtually nowhere to go except Downing
street on Sunday for one last photo call, regard the defeat of the
former Islamic Government in Somalia as part of their war on terror.
That
is what this is all about. Ethiopia is playing the role of hammer
in the horn of Africa for the policy of the United States and its
war on terror. That is what Ethiopia is doing, so it will not withdraw
until a new American Government, hopefully with a Kenyan-affiliated
President, tell them that actually this policy is deeply flawed.
The
puppet regime of British citizens imposed on Somalia by the Ethiopian
invasion would not last five minutes if the Ethiopian forces withdrew—that
regime would have to withdraw with them. So, any Government who
come to power in Somalia in the future will be filled with hatred
of Britain and the United States.
That
is the problem that we keep making everywhere; we intervene either
to prop up tyrants or to support tyrants because we do not like
the tyrants that they are fighting against, and we generate still
more problems for ourselves. We wonder why that is, and we agonisingly
debate anti-terrorism laws. We wonder why so many people in the
Muslim world want to hurt us.
We
wonder why so many young people in the Muslim world are so bitter
and angry about us that they want to hurt us. Is it any wonder?
Can it be any wonder to any sane person? I beg the Under-Secretary
of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs to believe me when
I say that it is because of the kinds of policies that I have described.
I
talk to Somalis all the time, and I know that the rage the Somali
community both in Britain and around the world feels about Britain
and America’s role in their country generates terrorists.
As the right hon. Member for North Antrim (Rev. Ian Paisley), who
saved the Government’s bacon earlier this evening, is in his
place and as we spent so many hours discussing anti-terrorism, let
me spell it out: we are making new terrorists in Britain with our
policy towards Somalia, with our double standards and with our hypocrisy.
Mark
Pritchard: While the Government of Ethiopia are
not perfect—indeed, there are Governments closer to home who
are not perfect—it is right that human rights abuses by the
Somali security services are fully investigated. Nevertheless, does
the hon. Gentleman accept that if Ethiopian troops withdrew, it
would create a security vacuum in which terrorist groups, including
al-Qaeda, would create mayhem in the horn of Africa, which is a
key strategic location, and that would come back to haunt us?
Mr.
Galloway: I said in this House when it was recalled
a few days after the atrocity of 9/11 that if we handled it the
wrong way we would make 10,000 new bin Ladens. We have handled it
the wrong way, and we have made 10,000 new bin Ladens. The problem
of al-Qaeda in Somalia has been made worse by the western intervention
and the Ethiopian invasion. Far more people have been recruited
to a narrow, fundamentalist, separatist, violent Islamism by our
policy than ever would have been if that policy had never been formed.
The
hon. Gentleman obviously has not read the Amnesty International
document. The Ethiopian forces are not providing security: they
are providing mass murder and terror in occupied Somalia. The refugee
camps are full with 2 million people. No one can walk on the streets
of Mogadishu. Channel 4’s reporters were almost killed making
their programme. Some of the team on the same vehicle with them
were shot dead live on television—
Mark
Pritchard: By Somalis.
Mr.
Galloway: I do not know if they were shot by Somalis
or Ethiopians. The point is that the country has been plunged into
utter lawlessness, and to pretend that the Ethiopian Government
are providing security is completely ridiculous. The words Somalia
and security should not even be mentioned in the same sentence.
There
may be a need for African Union forces or Arab League forces. This
conflict will go on and I hope that the Minister will not claim
that the deal reached this week is any kind of solution to the problem.
The people who are doing the fighting are not involved in the deal.
It is like a peace process in the north of Ireland that excluded
the people who were doing the fighting. That is what has happened
in relation to Somalia in the past few days.
I
am grateful for the extra time that I had for this debate, and I
apologise for my churlish point of order, which turned out to be
entirely misconceived. I hope for some answers from the Minister
this evening.
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