Britain's
War in the
Cause of
Fear and
Ignorance
By John
Pilger
26/06/08 "ICH"
-- -- The
British
lawyer
Gareth
Pierce,
celebrated
for her
defense of
miscarriage
of justice
victims,
wrote
recently:
"Over the
years of the
conflict,
every
lawless
action on
the part of
the British
state
provoked a
similar
reaction:
internment,
‘shoot to
kill’, the
use of
torture,
brutally
obtained
false
confessions
and
fabricated
evidence.
This was
registered
by the
community
most
affected,
but the
British
public, in
whose name
the actions
were taken,
remained
ignorant."
Referring to
the conflict
in Northern
Ireland, she
was drawing
a comparison
with "our
new suspect
community,"
people of
Muslim
faith,
against whom
a vicious,
sectarian
and mostly
unreported
war is well
under way.
As Pierce
points out,
"internment,
discredited
and
abandoned in
Northern
Ireland" now
allows, not
42 days, but
"indefinite
detention
without
trial of
foreign
nationals,
the
‘evidence’
to be heard
in secret
with the
detainee’s
lawyer not
permitted to
see the
evidence
against
him." Those
snatched
from their
homes in
Britain
following 11
September,
2001 have
all but
vanished
into an
Anglo-American
gulag, which
in this
country
joins
Belmarsh
prison,
where people
are
consigned to
oblivion,
with
Broadmoor
psychiatric
prison,
where they
are sent as
they go mad,
and with
Kafkaesque
versions of
"home" where
others are
interred
under
"control
orders." One
of these
home
prisoners,
wrote
Pierce, "a
man without
arms, was
left alone
and
terrified,
unable to
leave the
flat or to
contact
anyone
without
committing a
criminal
offense,
subject to a
curfew and
allowed no
visits
unless
approved in
advance by
the Home
Office."
Going into
the garden,
arranging a
plumber,
speaking to
a child’s
teacher all
require
permission.
The families
go mad, too.
Preferring
"a quick
death … to a
slow death
here," one
man who took
a risk and
returned to
Algeria has
been lost in
the
subcontracted
gulag, where
his new
torturers
have given
"assurances"
to the
British
government
that they
will do him
no harm and
while they
do him harm
are
themselves
reassured by
the presence
of British
Petroleum,
the ethical
oil company,
which has
sunk £6
billion into
getting oil
out of
Algeria’s
southern
Sahara.
Another
subcontractor,
Jordan, is
held
economically
afloat by
the US so
that George
Bush’s
"renditions"
and torture
can proceed
there. No
British
court has
found any of
these people
guilty of
any crime.
In Britain,
as Tony
Blair, a
genuine
prima facie
criminal,
put it so
well, "the
rules of the
game have
changed."
As in the
Irish
conflict, it
is again the
ignorance of
us, the
public, upon
which the
state
relies. All
propaganda
is directed
at honing
this
ignorance
and
fabricating
a fear. This
is primarily
the task of
journalists.
The true
fear is in
Muslim
communities.
Visit them
and find
people
terrified by
your knock
on the door,
and women
who now
never go out
and the
children
wrapped in
nightmares.
In effect,
control
orders have
been served
on thousands
of British
citizens.
As Pierce
reminds us,
the Irish
had allies
in the
Catholic
Church and
the 40
million
Americans of
Irish
descent;
Muslims are
alone as
they watch
the British
state, with
its
"obstinate
incomprehension"
of their
faith, do to
them as it
would never
do to those
of other
faiths.
Imagine Jews
treated this
way. You
cannot
imagine it;
the
profanity is
too great.
The silence
of British
Jews, who
have the
history, is
also great.
As the
suppressed
facts of
"terrorism"
show,
Muslims are
by far the
most
numerous
victims – up
to a million
Iraqis dead,
including
500,000
infants,
during
"sanctions"
against Iraq
in the
1990s;
perhaps
another
million dead
when Blair
and his
mentor
ignited the
current
inferno;
countless
dead and
maimed in
Afghanistan
by weapons
that include
the British
thermobaric
bomb,
designed to
suck the air
out of human
beings. And
there is
Palestine,
an entire
nation under
a permanent
control
order.
Reviewing
this
monstrous
record, it
is no less
than amazing
that the
world’s most
violent
governments
– Britain is
now the
world’s
leading arms
merchant –
have
sustained
only two
retaliations
on their
home soil.
With every
hypocritical
act, they
beckon
another.
Moreover,
wrote Gareth
Pierce, "If
our
government
continues on
[this
destructive]
path, we
will
ultimately
have
destroyed
much of the
moral and
legal fabric
of the
society that
we claim to
be
protecting.
The choice
and the
responsibility
are entirely
ours."
John
Pilger was
born and
educated in
Sydney,
Australia.
He has been
a war
correspondent,
filmmaker
and
playwright.
Based in
London, he
has written
from many
countries
and has
twice won
British
journalism's
highest
award, that
of
"Journalist
of the
Year," for
his work in
Vietnam and
Cambodia.
His new
book, Tell
Me No Lies:
Investigative
Journalism
and Its
Triumphs, is
published by
Jonathan
Cape in
June.
http://www.johnpilger.com/
Copyright ©
John Pilger
2008
