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PRESS RELEASE Voices in the Wilderness UK [A]
26th April 2004
Contact 0845 458 2564 or 07791 486 484
CORPORATE ‘EXECUTIVES’ TO
GORGE IN TROUGH OF BLOOD-STAINED BANKNOTES OUTSIDE OIL AND
ARMS-TRADE BACKED IRAQ BUSINESS CONFERENCE
Activists call for workers rights and for reconstruction,
not rip-off. Tuesday 27th April, outside the New Connaught Rooms, 61-65
Great Queen Street, Covent Garden, 6.30pm
[PLEASE
NOTE THAT THIS IS A CHANGE OF VENUE SINCE FRIDAY'S
PRESS RELEASE] Twenty suited 'executives' wearing pig masks and bearing corporate
logos will gorge themselves in a trough of blood-stained banknotes
outside a major business dinner to symbolise the 'corporate
feeding frenzy' taking place at the conference 'Iraq Procurement
2004: Meet the Buyers' (which runs for 3 days at the New Connaught
Rooms, Covent Garden).
The protest - which takes place outside during the conference's
four course 'gala dinner' - has been organised by a number
of groups and individuals and is supported by the Green Party,
Voices UK, Campaign Against Arms Trade, Rhythms of Resistance,
Stop Esso, The Refugee Project, Peace in Kurdistan and No
Sweat amongst others. During the conference representatives
from 300 companies - including Shell, ExxonMobil, ChevronTexaco
and US arms manufacturer Raytheon - will be meeting members
of the US-installed Iraqi "government" to discuss
'the wide range of … opportunities available' to make
a profit out of the increasingly blood-soaked occupation
of Iraq [B].
Also attending the
conference will be Brian Wilson (Tony Blair's special envoy
on reconstruction) and former US Rear Admiral
David Nash (the man in charge of handing out $18bn worth of
US tax-payers money for the "reconstruction" of Iraq).
The conference takes place in the context of:
· a series of new laws, passed by the US last September,
that 'effectively put [Iraq] up for sale' to foreign investors
[C]; · a growing body of evidence that the way in which
the Bush administration has been 'treating [reconstruction]
contracts as prizes to be handed to their friends' has been
'delaying Iraq's recovery, with potentially catastrophic consequences'
[D] · the ongoing repression of workers rights in Iraq:
keeping Saddam's harsh 1987 labour law on the books, trying
to impose big wage cuts, raiding union offices, arresting union
leaders and refusing to grant unemployed Iraqis demands for
jobs-or-benefits [E] · US attempts to 'restructure'
- rather than cancel - Iraq's odious debts, which are likely
to 'rob Iraq of [its] economic freedom, by requiring that it
adhere to an IMF structural adjustment program' [F]
It also takes place in the wake of the killing of over 600
people in the US siege of Fallujah, 'the vast majority of [whom]
were women, children and the elderly' according to the director
of the town's general hospital [G].
Voices spokesperson Gabriel Carlyle said 'After three devastating
wars and thirteen years of comprehensive economic sanctions
Iraq desperately needs reconstruction. However, whilst billions
of dollars worth of contracts have been handed out to US and
British companies, today Iraq's hospitals remain in a dire
condition and Baghdad still only receives about 12 hours of
electricity a day. We are here today in solidarity with the
people of Iraq to demand that Iraqis be allowed to determine
their own economic future, for a reconstruction process directed
by the Iraqi people for the benefit of the Iraqi people - not
by big business for its own profit - and for justice for Iraq's
workers. The corporate feeding frenzy in Iraq must stop.'
The protest (Tuesday 27 April, New Connaught Rooms, 6-9pm)
- which will include music and free food - will also be addressed
by some of the Iraqis who have not been invited to the conference,
including representatives from the Union of Unemployed Iraqis,
the Organisation for Women's Freedom in Iraq, and Iraqi Democrats
Against Occupation. Amongst others speaking will be activist
Ewa Jasiewicz (recently returned from 8 months in Iraq) and
representatives from the Green Party, Stop Esso campaign, No
Sweat campaign, Jubilee Iraq, The Refugee Project and the Campaign
Against Arms Trade.
PHOTO-OPPORTUNITY: 20 'pigs' wearing corporate logos gorging themselves on a
trough of blood-stained bank-notes outside
the New Connaught Rooms, 61-65 Great Queen Street, Covent Garden,
6.30pm. (See www.newconnaughtrooms.co.uk/find.htm for
directions to the New Connaught Rooms).
CONTACTS
The following people are available to speak to the media:
* Ewa Jasiewicz (activist recently returned from 8 months
in Iraq where she reported extensively on workers rights):
07749 421 576
* Andrew Wood from Campaign Against Arms Trade (on Raytheon):
020 7281 0297
* Paul Ingram who works at a defence policy research institute
and is the Green Party European Parliamentary candidate: 07932
448 290 or 020 7639 2586
* Hani from Iraqi Democrats Against Occupation - just returned
from Iraq: 020 7252 5333
* Yasar from Jubilee Iraq (on Iraq's debt): 07958 216 162
* Mick from No Sweat (on workers rights in Iraq): 07904 431
959
* Houzan from the Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq (on
women's rights in Iraq): 0795 688 3001
* Estella from the Refugee Project: 0207 250 1315
* Cindy from Stop Esso (on ExxonMobil's participation): 020
7354 5708
* Dashty from the Union of Unemployed of Iraq (on workers rights
in Iraq): 07734 704 742
* Gabriel from Voices UK: 0845 458 2564 or 07947 839 992
NOTES
[A] Voices in the Wilderness UK has been campaigning on Iraq for the last six
years.
[B] See www.iraqprocurement.com
[C] See http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1047008,00.html
[D] Economist Paul Krugman, New York Times, 30th Sept. 2003
[E] See http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/article.php?id=4231
[F] See www.jubileeiraq.com
[G] www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1190263,00.html
See
more information about the protest
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