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Why is war-torn Iraq giving $190,000 to Toys R Us?

 
 
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 03:58 am
Why is war-torn Iraq giving $190,000 to Toys R Us?

Naomi Klein

Iraqis are still being forced to pay for crimes committed by Saddam

Saturday October 16, 2004
The Guardian
Original URL: http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1328664,00.html

Next week, something will happen that will unmask the upside-down morality of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. On October 21, Iraq will pay $200m in war reparations to some of the richest countries and corporations in the world.
If that seems backwards, it's because it is. Iraqis have never been awarded reparations for any of the crimes they suffered under Saddam, or the brutal sanctions regime that claimed the lives of at least half a million people, or the US-led invasion, which the UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, recently called "illegal". Instead, Iraqis are still being forced to pay reparations for crimes committed by their former dictator.

Quite apart from its crushing $125bn sovereign debt, Iraq has paid $18.8bn in reparations stemming from Saddam Hussein's 1990 invasion and occupation of Kuwait. This is not in itself surprising: as a condition of the ceasefire that ended the 1991 Gulf war, Saddam agreed to pay damages stemming from the invasion. More than 50 countries have made claims, with most of the money awarded to Kuwait. What is surprising is that even after Saddam was overthrown, the payments from Iraq have continued.

Since Saddam was toppled in April, Iraq has paid out $1.8bn in reparations to the United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC), the Geneva-based quasi tribunal that assesses claims and disburses awards. Of those payments, $37m have gone to Britain and $32.8m have gone to the United States. That's right: in the past 18 months, Iraq's occupiers have collected $69.8m in reparation payments from the desperate people they have been occupying. But it gets worse: the vast majority of those payments, 78%, have gone to multinational corporations, according to statistics on the UNCC website.

Away from media scrutiny, this has been going on for years. Of course there are many legitimate claims for losses that have come before the UNCC: payments have gone to Kuwaitis who have lost loved ones, limbs, and property to Saddam's forces. But much larger awards have gone to corporations: of the total amount the UNCC has awarded in Gulf war reparations, $21.5bn has gone to the oil industry alone. Jean-Claude Aimé, the UN diplomat who headed the UNCC until December 2000, publicly questioned the practice. "This is the first time as far as I know that the UN is engaged in retrieving lost corporate assets and profits," he told the Wall Street Journal in 1997, and then mused: "I often wonder at the correctness of that."

But the UNCC's corporate handouts only accelerated. Here is a small sample of who has been getting "reparation" awards from Iraq: Halliburton ($18m), Bechtel ($7m), Mobil ($2.3m), Shell ($1.6m), Nestlé ($2.6m), Pepsi ($3.8m), Philip Morris ($1.3m), Sheraton ($11m), Kentucky Fried Chicken ($321,000) and Toys R Us ($189,449). In the vast majority of cases, these corporations did not claim that Saddam's forces damaged their property in Kuwait - only that they "lost profits" or, in the case of American Express, experienced a "decline in business" because of the invasion and occupation of Kuwait. One of the biggest winners has been Texaco, which was awarded $505m in 1999. According to a UNCC spokesperson, only 12% of that reparation award has been paid, which means hundreds of millions more will have to come out of the coffers of post-Saddam Iraq.

The fact that Iraqis have been paying reparations to their occupiers is all the more shocking in the context of how little these countries have actually spent on aid in Iraq. Despite the $18.4bn of US tax dollars allocated for Iraq's reconstruction, the Washington Post estimates that only $29m has been spent on water, sanitation, health, roads, bridges, and public safety combined. And in July (the latest figure available), the Department of Defence estimated that only $4m had been spent compensating Iraqis who had been injured, or who lost family members or property as a direct result of the occupation - a fraction of what the US has collected from Iraq in reparations since its occupation began.

For years there have been complaints about the UNCC being used as a slush fund for multinationals and rich oil emirates - a backdoor way for corporations to collect the money they were prevented from making as a result of the sanctions against Iraq. During the Saddam years, these concerns received little attention, for obvious reasons.

But now Saddam is gone and the slush fund survives. And every dollar sent to Geneva is a dollar not spent on humanitarian aid and reconstruction Iraq. Furthermore, if post-Saddam Iraq had not been forced to pay these reparations, it could have avoided the $437m emergency loan that the International Monetary Fund approved on September 29.

With all the talk of forgiving Iraq's debts, the country is actually being pushed deeper into the hole, forced to borrow money from the IMF, and to accept all of the conditions and restrictions that come along with those loans. The UNCC, meanwhile, continues to assess claims and make new awards: $377m worth of new claims were awarded last month alone.

Fortunately, there is a simple way to put an end to these grotesque corporate subsidies. According to United Nations security council resolution 687, which created the reparations programme, payments from Iraq must take into account "the requirements of the people of Iraq, Iraq's payment capacity, and the needs of the Iraqi economy". If a single one of these three issues were genuinely taken into account, the security council would vote to put an end to these payouts tomorrow.

That is the demand of Jubilee Iraq, a debt relief organisation based in London. Reparations are owed to the victims of Saddam Hussein, the group argues - both in Iraq and in Kuwait. But the people of Iraq, who were themselves Saddam's primary victims, should not be paying them. Instead, reparations should be the responsibility of the governments that loaned billions to Saddam, knowing the money was being spent on weapons so he could wage war on his neighbours and his own people. "If justice, and not power, prevailed in international affairs, then Saddam's creditors would be paying reparations to Kuwait as well as far greater reparations to the Iraqi people," says Justin Alexander, coordinator of Jubilee Iraq.

Right now precisely the opposite is happening: instead of flowing into Iraq, reparations are flowing out. It's time for the tide to turn.

·Naomi Klein is the author of No Logo, and Fences and Windows
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Type: Discussion • Score: 0 • Views: 1,100 • Replies: 10
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msolga
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 05:39 am
Obscene, totally obscene.
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 06:59 am
Yeah, Olga it amazed me. but I guess it barely rates against the west's habit of giving an amount of aid to third world countries that doesn't even cover the interest payments of their debts to the World Bank/IMF.

Why do I have to find this stuff in the Guardian and nowhere else? Silly me, Murdoch doesn't own the Guardian. Yet.
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msolga
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 07:10 am
Yeah, YET! Rolling Eyes

Incidentally, who does own the Guardian? Great newspaper!
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Thok
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 07:21 am
msolga wrote:

Incidentally, who does own the Guardian? Great newspaper!


Indeed. It's owned by the Guardian Media Group.
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 07:25 am
I'd never asked myself that - but...

Apparently it's owned by the Scott Trust which you can read about at http://www.gmgplc.co.uk/gmgplc/scott/scottintro/

It doesn't seem they have a set political agenda, although I'd guarantee Howard/Bush/Blair would hate them (if any of their supporters read anything other than TV guides - sorry it's late and I'm feeling bitchy)

Their mission statement seems to be 'lets sell papers and make money'

Well it worked for me - the Guardian Weekly is the only paper I will read in dead tree format, and I read it religiously (when heads of state write in the letters page you know it must have some respect). There is no Australian paper I will buy, though I will read Alan Ramsey in the SMH over your shoulder, and I'll steal the sport section when you're not looking.
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FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 07:49 am
That's just a little sickening. I'm interested to know how it would be justified.
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squinney
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 07:59 am
Sick!

Don't hold your breath, FreeDuck. I doubt it will ever be justified.

Sounds like the corporations know about this little back door entrance to the bank and can use it in many instances outside of Iraq where one country interferes with their profits. Makes one wonder where else it might have been applied.
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 08:10 am
It's cruel & bizarre ... You put sanctions on the place for years causing untold hardship for ordinary people, bomb the place to smithereens for reasons that keep changing, then send in foreign companies with lucrative contracts to rebuild the place ..... meanwhile you make Iraqi citizens pay through the nose to huge corporations as reprisal for Saddam's actions. When are they going to get a break? Rolling Eyes
0 Replies
 
Acquiunk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 08:18 am
Sounds a little like the treaty of Versailles.
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hingehead
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Oct, 2004 07:57 pm
That's a scary thought Acquiunk - we know what the treaty of Versailles led to...
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