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Demonstrators called Bush and Blair "terrorists" and "war mongers"
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KUALA
LUMPUR, October 11 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Hundreds of
anti-war demonstrators protested outside the British High Commission
in Kuala Lumpur Friday, October 11, against London's support for a
fresh U.S.-led war on 12-year-sanction-hit Iraq.
Some
300 people gathered after Friday's Muslim prayers, shouting:
"Death to [British Prime Minister Tony] Blair, death to [U.S.
President George W.] Bush," Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
The
demonstrators carried posters describing Blair and Bush as "war
mongers" and placards reading: "Blair and Bush are
terrorists, No war for oil, Stop the killings" and "Boycott
American goods."
A
police helicopter hovered above and dozens of riot police were on
standby outside the British High Commission and the nearby
U.S.
embassy, but the protestors dispersed
peacefully after 90 minutes.
Prime
Minister Mahathir Mohamad has expressed his opposition to any war
against
Iraq
without U.N. support, but his ruling
United Malays National Organization (UMNO) was not involved in the
demonstration.
The
protesters were from four opposition parties including the Parti Islam
SeMalaysia (PAS), as well as 11 non-governmental organizations (NGOs),
said AFP.
"We
are here to show our support for the people of
Iraq
against any invasion by the
superpowers, by the
U.S.
and its ally
Britain
," said PAS vice president
Mustaffa Ali.
Mustaffa
joined a 12-member delegation which delivered a protest note to
British High Commissioner Bruce Cleghorn, urging
Britain
to withdraw support for
U.S.
plans for war on
Iraq
.
"We
believe this is a war merely to protect and control the
United States
' interests in resources such as oil
and to assure
Israel
that
Iraq
is and forever will be
emasculated," the note said, according to AFP.
It
called on
Britain
to press the
U.S.
to allow the United Nations to deal
with
Iraq
.
Cleghorn
issued a statement denying that
Britain
was a war monger and saying his
country was allegedly "working vigorously" for a new U.N.
resolution on arms inspections in
Iraq
.
"We
want, if possible, to see a peaceful diplomatic solution" to the
Iraq
crisis, claimed Cleghorn. "The central issue is the return of the
U.N. inspectors with unfettered and unobstructed access, not regime
change," he added.
Iraq
has embarrassed both the
U.S.
and
Britain
by accepting a full unconditional
return of weapons inspectors – an action which German Defense
Minister Peter Struck described saying: "That has to be the
priority, and I believe it will also be part of any U.N. Security
Council resolution."
Cleghorn
further ruled out a war on
Iraq
was aimed at "regime change" after warnings by British Prime
Minister Tony Blair’s top legal advisers that any armed attack on
Iraq
with the aim of ousting Iraqi President Saddam Hussein would breach
international law.
Confidential
advice from Attorney-general Lord Goldsmith and Solicitor General
Harriet Harman sets out limited circumstances in which international
law could allow military action in support of existing U.N. Security
Council resolutions, and gives legal backing for action to enforce the
fresh resolution under negotiation at the U.N. But it rules out war to
achieve regime change, according to the Financial Times.
Were
the British government to breach international law, it could find
itself before the International Court of Justice facing charges for
breaching the U.N. charter, the paper said.
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