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Patriot for Al Gore
Degradation of the environment of Iraq ( and other places around the world during a "time of war" ) regardless of who does it, by not providing proper water and electricity is a human rights abuse. Defiling their environment through bombing and the use of Depleted Uranium which not only kills civilians but has killed and sickened our own troops, is also a war crime in my opinion. What do you think?
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Is Environmental Destruction a War Crime?

In Iraq and elsewhere, it is not just guns and missiles that kill people. Yet international law seems powerless to heal nations ravaged by conflict.
Armies have been despoiling the environment of the Middle East for millennia. But it was the 1991 Gulf War, says Jay Austin, a senior attorney with the Washington, D.C.-based Environmental Law Institute, that dramatically revealed the limitations of international law in governing the environmental ravages of wartime.

Saddam Hussein's environmental crimes were on an epic scale. During the Gulf War, his forces torched hundreds of Kuwaiti oil wells. When that conflict was over, he drained the vast Mesopotamian marshlands of southern Iraq as an act of collective punishment against the mostly Shi'a "Marsh Arabs," who had the temerity to oppose his rule.

Now that Saddam is gone, who is responsible for the health of the Iraqi environment? Before the current war started, Secretary of State Colin Powell famously warned President Bush of the "Pottery Barn rule": If you break it, you own it. But was that rule supposed to apply to the environment? And if so, who was to enforce it?

The clearest prohibition of environmental abuse in wartime is contained in the 1977 Protocol I Additional to the Geneva Conventions. But the United States has refused to ratify the protocol, with the Pentagon claiming that its humanitarian tilt "would thwart quick victories in war." According to Ken Hurwitz, an international humanitarian-law specialist with Human Rights First in New York, "The problem is that although the United States has accepted many of the provisions of Protocol I in practice, it has specifically rejected Article 55." This bars "methods or means of warfare which are intended, or may be expected, to cause widespread, long-term and severe damage to the natural environment."

If the Geneva Conventions offer no remedy, what about the laws that govern the postwar conduct of a victorious occupier? "You're more or less stuck with the Hague rules," says Hurwitz, referring to the 1907 Fourth Hague Convention, which makes no mention of the environment. Yet while occupying forces often take a minimalist view of their responsibilities, the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq did exactly the opposite. It demanded sweeping legal powers to remake Iraqi society, arguing that peace and security depended on reviving the economy and guaranteeing the provision of basic services. In the process, the coalition -- unintentionally, no doubt -- assumed broad responsibility for protecting key elements of the Iraqi environment.

The centerpiece of the reconstruction effort was to restore electrical power and clean water. And even if international law offered few enforceable provisions in these areas, U.S. law most certainly did.

In October 2003 Congress appropriated $18.6 billion for Iraqi reconstruction. The lion's share of work in the power and water sectors was given to the Bechtel Corp., the giant San Francisco-based engineering concern. Like all federal contractors, Bechtel was bound by the regulations of the government agency that issued its contract.

The agency in question was the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID), which awarded Bechtel two contracts worth a total of $2.8 billion. About $1.8 billion of this was earmarked for "assessing and repairing selected power, municipal water and sewage systems."

Bechtel said that it would repair water treatment and distribution systems in 15 cities within six months; within a year, every town in Iraq was to have potable water. At the same time, Paul Bremer, administrator of the Coalition Authority, vowed that electricity production would rise from about 4,400 to 6,000 megawatts by the time the occupation ended in June 2004. None of this happened. Power output remained stalled at the depleted prewar levels, and Iraqis were forced to swelter through a second summer of rolling blackouts.

Clean water is directly related to the reliability of power supplies. Iraq's sewage treatment system, which relies on a network of pumping stations, breaks down when blackouts occur and the pumps stop running. When this happens in Baghdad, for example, huge quantities of raw sewage and industrial waste pour directly into the Tigris River, the city's only source of drinking water. The result, says Bathsheba Crocker, a post-conflict reconstruction expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., is "an increase in water-borne diseases, everything from cholera to hepatitis and chronic diarrhea."

Far from being the key to increased security, water and power supplies instead became a principal focus of roiling public discontent. By April 2004, a USA Today/CNN/Gallup poll found that just 11 percent of Iraqis believed "coalition forces are trying hard to restore basic services such as electricity and clean drinking water."

It's tempting to let Bechtel off the hook by citing the inevitable delays caused by violence, sabotage, and looting. But in fact Bechtel's problem was that it often moved too fast, not too slow. Above all, the company rode roughshod over AID's environmental regulations. In June 2004, on the eve of the transfer of sovereignty, the agency published a scathing audit of Bechtel's performance. In 60 of its 72 projects, Bechtel had failed to carry out an adequate environmental review before starting work. AID has the power to issue exemptions, but it had declined to do so in Bechtel's case, given the critical environmental importance of its projects.

The Iraq occupation has shown again that international law remains a dead letter as far as the environment is concerned, while U.S. law is easily flouted by private contractors. The challenge now, says Jay Austin, "is to harness some of our newfound awareness to the task of reforming international law. In the same way as we've learned to address human rights issues and the movement of refugees, so we're beginning to apply some of the lessons to the issue of environmental damage and the health of civilian populations."
-- George Black
http://www.nrdc.org/onearth/05win/briefings.asp
heritage
March 04, 2005

Somalia's secret dumps of toxic waste washed ashore by tsunami
From Jonathan Clayton in Johannesburg

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,18...1509979,00.html

THE huge waves which battered northern Somalia after the tsunami in December are believed to have stirred up tonnes of nuclear and toxic waste illegally dumped in the war-racked country during the early 1990s.

Apart from killing about 300 people and destroying thousands of homes, the waves broke up rusting barrels and other containers and hazardous waste dumped along the long, remote shoreline, a spokesman for the United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) said.

“Initial reports indicate that the tsunami waves broke open containers full of toxic waste and scattered the contents. We are talking about everything from medical waste to chemical waste products,” Nick Nuttal, the Unep spokesman, told The Times.

“We know this material is on the land and is now being blown around and possibly carried to villages. What we do not know is the full extent of the problem.”

Mr Nuttall said that a UN assessment mission that recently returned from the lawless African country, which has had no government since 1991, reported that several Somalis in the northern areas were ill with diseases consistent with radiation sickness. “We need more information. We need to find out what has been going on there, but there is real cause for concern,” he added. “We now need to urgently send in a multi-agency expert mission, led by Unep, for a full investigation.”

An initial UN report says that many people in the areas around the northeastern towns of Hobbio and Benadir, on the Indian Ocean coast, are suffering from far higher than normal cases of respiratory infections, mouth ulcers and bleeding, abdominal haemorrhages and unusual skin infections.

“The current situation along the Somali coastline poses a very serious environmental hazard not only in Somalia but also in the eastern Africa sub-region,” the report says. Toxic waste was first dumped in Somalia in the late 1980s, but accelerated sharply during the civil war which followed the 1991 overthrow of the late dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.

Local warlords, many of them former ministers in Siad Barre’s last government, received large payments from Swiss and Italian firms for access to their respective fiefdoms.

Most of the waste was simply dumped on remote beaches in containers and leaking disposable barrels.

Somali sources close to the trade say that the dumped materials included radioactive uranium, lead, cadmium, mercury and industrial, hospital, chemical and various other toxic wastes. In 1992, Unep said that European firms were involved in the trade, but because of the high level of insecurity in the country there were never any accurate assessments of the extent of the problem.

In 1997 and 1998, the Italian newspaper Famiglia Cristiana, which jointly investigated the allegations with the Italian branch of Greenpeace, published a series of articles detailing the extent of illegal dumping by a Swiss firm, Achair Partners, and an Italian waste broker, Progresso.

The European Green Party followed up the revelations by presenting to the press and the European Parliament in Strasbourg copies of contracts signed by the two companies and representatives of the then “President” — Ali Mahdi Mohamed — to accept 10 million tonnes of toxic waste in exchange for $80 million (then about £60 million).

Abdullahi Elmi Mohamed, a Somali academic studying in Sweden, told The Times that this worked out at “approximately $8 per tonne, while in Europe the cost for disposal and treatment of toxic waste material could go up to $1,000 per tonne”.

Mr Ali Mahdi, who then controlled north Mogadishu and who worked closely with the UN during its disastrous 1992-95 humanitarian mission to the country, has always refused to discuss the issue even though an Italian parliamentary report subsequently confirmed many of the allegations.
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