Galloway in Parliament - Somalia

 
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faceless
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Joined: 25 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 2:17 pm    Post subject: Galloway in Parliament - Somalia Reply with quote

GG's tabling an adjournment debate on Somalia this evening in Parliament. I'll try and record it in high-quality, but with it being unsure what time he'll be on I can't guarantee it. Whatever happens I'll have something available though.

I don't really know much about Somalia, so I'm sure it will be interesting.
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nekokate



Joined: 13 Dec 2006
Location: West Yorkshire, UK

PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 5:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm watching House of Commons Live at the moment (yes, I'm insane) and they're still in the meeting that started at 11.30am, so I'm not sure George's debate is going to get a chance today!

They are a bunch of complete toss-pots, most of the MPs. When they shout "eye" or "no" they do it in such a deliberately stupid way. Posh, Tory-boy, smirking nob-heads reclining in self satisfaction and bellowing "Noooooo!" like a cow giving birth.

They'll all piss off when George gets his time, though - they won't bother themselves with such trivia as the poor people of Somalia.
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nekokate



Joined: 13 Dec 2006
Location: West Yorkshire, UK

PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 5:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ah! I spoke too soon - he's on right now (18:52)
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faceless
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 6:20 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Just listening to Meg Munn flannel her way through what he asked now... I'll have it uploaded within the next 40 minutes or so.
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 6:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

doh - i've been flicking back and forth between the politics channel ( does that make me insane as well?! ) but have somehow managed to miss it Sad

i noticed on the leaflets for the protest against bushes visit at the weekend it had troops out of iraq, afghanistan and somalia
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nekokate



Joined: 13 Dec 2006
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 6:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am shaking my head and almost laughing at her response. Just utterly sick. She read, or should I say stuttered and stammered, from a pre-prepared speech that by definition did not address a single question George asked.

It's the political equivalent of asking "What do you think of the current music scene in Barbados?" and someone replying "Barbados is an independent island nation in the western Atlantic Ocean. It lies in the southern Caribbean region, where it is considered a part of the Lesser Antilles."
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luke



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PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 6:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

sounds a bit like that time galloway raised pakistan and hoon waffled on for ages ignoring any of the points george had raised
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nekokate



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PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 6:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 6:53 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

haha good one Kate

she'd sat there apparently disinterested in what he was saying all the way through, reading her notes, then started with the first line that he had just pointed out was incorrect...
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faceless
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 11, 2008 7:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote



The stream's audio goes out of sync, but the audio in download works fine.

http://www.humyo.com/F/56153-147573179
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Location: by the sea

PostPosted: Thu Jun 12, 2008 9:19 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

nekokate wrote:
I am shaking my head and almost laughing at her response. Just utterly sick. She read, or should I say stuttered and stammered, from a pre-prepared speech that by definition did not address a single question George asked.

It's the political equivalent of asking "What do you think of the current music scene in Barbados?" and someone replying "Barbados is an independent island nation in the western Atlantic Ocean. It lies in the southern Caribbean region, where it is considered a part of the Lesser Antilles."


i'm just watching now, she really is bad ... her emails munnm@parliament.uk if anyone wants to try and complain Smile

thanks for the upload faceless
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luke



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 13, 2008 2:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Ethiopia accused of war crimes to quell insurgency, with British and American complicity

'Ethiopia's government has committed extensive war crimes and crimes against humanity during a brutal counterinsurgency campaign in the remote Ogaden region, a report says today.

Human Rights Watch accuses the Ethiopian military of extrajudicial killings, rape, torture, forcibly displacing thousands of civilians and using food as a weapon of war in its attempts over the past year to defeat the Ogaden National Liberation Front, which claims to seek self-determination for the eastern region.

Satellite images published in the 130-page report show how villages have been burnt down to deny the rebels a support base - a tactic more often associated with the Darfur region of neighbouring Sudan.

The watchdog accuses the US, UK and other EU countries, who give Ethiopia £1bn a year in aid, of ignoring the abuses, thereby increasing the risk of further "devastation, famine and impoverishment in a region that already knows these trends too well"...'


full article at http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/jun/12/ethiopia.humanbehaviour
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 14, 2008 2:25 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Our Government’s Dirty Little Secrets
Saturday, June 14th, 2008
By George Galloway


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—

--------------

a transcript of what looks like just the first part. I suppose the rest wasn't scripted...
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