Ivo Skoric on Wed, 24 Oct 2001 22:21:02 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] (Fwd) At war with NATO |
Under the IHL, World Trade Center could not be a legitimate military objective - even if it was hit by a missile in the middle of the night - because it was in the middle of highly populated area, where civilian death was virtually inavoidable. But in the same sense the TV building in Belgrade hit by US missiles was not a legitimate military objective, was it? Civilians died, too. We shall see, though, how the case about that would play out in the European Court of Human Rights in Strassbourg. At least, Americans hit the RTS building in off-hours, during the night, and with an unmanned cruise missile - not with a Serbian airliner full of unsuspecting Serbian citizens. By hitting the towers at the beginning of the work day and with passenger airliners full of passengers, Al Qaeda obviously showed us that they didn't give a flying shit for the IHL, didn't they? ivo ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- Date sent: Tue, 23 Oct 2001 17:22:41 -0400 Send reply to: International Justice Watch Discussion List <JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU> From: Daniel Tomasevich <danilo@MARTNET.COM> Subject: At war with NATO To: JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU The European Court of human rights will hear the case against NATO's bombing of RTS and the violation of a right to life. Marani's rhetoric was subsequently reflected in statements by Nato leaders after the April 23 bombing. Tony Blair said: "It's very, very important people realise that these television stations are part of the apparatus of dictatorship and power of Milosevic, and that apparatus is the apparatus he has used to do this ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. It's the apparatus that keeps him in power." Propaganda equals power, power leads to ethnic cleansing, or so the Nato equation seemed to run. The truth appears to be that RTS was producing annoying propaganda about Nato leaders, including sketches involving an unflattering puppet of Bill Clin ton with a saxophone, was grossly misrepresenting Nato activities and also, embarrassingly, was on the ground to produce coverage of Nato blunders. Daniel (article not for cross posting) ------------------------------------------------------------- The Guardian Tuesday October 23, 2001 Serbia At war with Nato In 1999 coalition bombs killed 16 employees at Radio-Television Serbia. Tomorrow their relatives go to Strasbourg to accuse the UK and others of violating the right to life. Natasha Joffe reports In the early hours of April 23 1999, Nato bombed the head office of Radio-Television Serbia in Belgrade, killing 16 employees, mostly technicians and support staff, and injuring 16 others. Some victims had to be identified by a single personal effect: part of a sock, a ring. Mirjana Stoimenovski, mother of one of the victims, waited four days in front of the RTS building for news of her son's death. Tomorrow in a circular room in Strasbourg the European court of human rights will consider whether to hear a claim by relatives of five of those killed and one survivor that 17 Nato countries violated their right to life and the right to freedom of expression. The 17 countries - those, including the UK, which have signed up to the European convention on human rights - argue that the court should not entertain the application because the bombing took place in Yugoslavia, outside the territory of any of the signatories to the Convention. At this stage none of the countries has been required to put forward any explanation of what happened. If the judges decide that states can be held responsible for human rights violations outside European convention countries, they will probably not hear the case for several years. So the victims and the wider world face a long wait to receive answers to the questions raised by the bombing - questions which have acquired a new resonance post-September 11. Why did Nato deliberately bomb a civilian target that no one seems ever to have seriously suggested was performing any military function? How did the many foreign journalists who had been making use of RTS facilities know to leave the building before the attack? What, if any, warnings were given to Serbian authorities and RTS management prior to the strike? All the families have to go on at the moment are statements made by Nato spokespeople, military leaders and politicians at the time. These raise more questions than they answer. On March 26 1999, days after the Nato bombing of Serbia started, the talk was of "limiting collateral damage". Air Commodore David Wilby, Nato's chief military spokesman, was issuing reassurances about civilian targets: "We do everything that is humanly possible to make sure that our weapons are targeted on the right place, that we have done our homework to make sure that we are not targeting civilians, we're not targeting people, and we're not targeting civilian infrastructure." As the bombing intensified, there was growing concern that the targets might be widened to include the largely state-controlled Serb media. As late as April 12 Nato spokesman Jamie Shea was promising the International Federation of Journalists: "There is no policy to strike television and radio transmitters as such. Allied air missions are planned to avoid civilian casualties, including of course journalists." But by April 18 the concept of what constituted a legitimate target had apparently changed. Shea said at a press briefing: "I think the time has come to take a closer look at the Serb state media. It is not really a media at all; it is part of President Milosevic's war machine." Attacks followed on radio relay and TV transmitting stations. General Giuseppe Marani, a Nato spokesman, described these on April 21 as attacks designed to "disrupt the regime and degrade the FRY [Federal Republic of Yugloslavia] propaganda apparatus". Within two days Nato had graduated from bombing transmitters to bombing the RTS stu dios. Marani's rhetoric was subsequently reflected in statements by Nato leaders after the April 23 bombing. Tony Blair said: "It's very, very important people realise that these television stations are part of the apparatus of dictatorship and power of Milosevic, and that apparatus is the apparatus he has used to do this ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. It's the apparatus that keeps him in power." Propaganda equals power, power leads to ethnic cleansing, or so the Nato equation seemed to run. The truth appears to be that RTS was producing annoying propaganda about Nato leaders, including sketches involving an unflattering puppet of Bill Clin ton with a saxophone, was grossly misrepresenting Nato activities and also, embarrassingly, was on the ground to produce coverage of Nato blunders. What it wasn't covering were any of the atrocities committed against Albanians in Kosovo. As Shea put it: "The Serb media have alleged that Nato has deliberately bombed the elderly and the retarded; they have claimed that Nato has been dropping napalm bombs and firing radioactive missiles at targets; they have alleged that many of the refugees suffering on the border with the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia are in fact Macedonian Albanians doing this in collusion with Nato." All very irritating no doubt. However, under the Geneva Convention, "television channels and equipment" can be legitimate targets only if they are "an integral part of the military apparatus" - when, for example, they are being used for military communications purposes. When is a TV station not a TV station? According to President Clinton, when you don't like what it's saying: "Our military leaders at Nato believe, based on what they have seen and what others in the area have told them, that the Serb television is an essential instrument of Mr Milosevic's command and control. He uses it to spew hatred and basically to spread disinformation. It is not, in a conventional sense, therefore, a media outlet." But if we say that something ceases to be a media outlet because it lies or we don't like what it produces, aren't we inviting those conducting anthrax attacks on the US media to make the same point? Ironically, far from "disrupting the regime" and "degrading the propaganda appara tus" as Nato claimed, the RTS bombing seems to have caused suspension of the station's television channel for a mere five hours. In any event some observers doubt whether the majority of Serbs took the output of RTS (after years of state control) very seriously by this stage. What is certain is that Milosevic made considerable capital out of the RTS bombing. The human cost of the bombing is bleakly reflected in a list of the dead and injured which forms part of the application before the European court.It simply provides names, dates of birth and occupations - "Ksenija Bankovic, born in 1971, video mix, Jelica Munitlak, born in 1971, make-up artist" - but somehow transforms the dead from collateral damage into lost individuals. Many of those killed, we are told, opposed the Milosevic government. As Ljiljana Bererina, a survivor of the attack put it, "What does RTS represent for me? An interesting job. You can't imagine what it means in a poor country under an embargo to deal with international relations, to be in contact with foreign colleagues. But at home we never watched the news on RTS, we switched on the TV only when there was football." And even if RTS was producing highly effective propaganda, was Nato really justified in bombing it? Tim Gopsill of the National Union of Journalists (which protested against the bombing vigorously at the time) points out: "In wars everyone produces propaganda. Nato are making the BBC a target if you are legitimising the attack on RTS." Tony Fisher is an English solicitor who, with the Belgrade human rights centre and academics from the University of Essex, is presenting the applicants' case in Strasbourg. He says that while they are claiming monetary compensation for human rights violations, "their principal concern is to establish truth and accountability". As the headstone erected by the families of victims in front of the RTS building says: "Died on duty, following the Nato bombing. Why?" Some of the truth may eventually come out of the European court proceedings. Other questions will need to be answered in the Serb courts. Dragoljub Milanovic, the former head of RTS, has been charged with failing to order evacuation of the building despite allegedly knowing of the bomb threat. None of the station's senior officials or key journalists were on the premises. Witnesses say the editor-in-chief left an hour before the attack. The suspicion is that those who were on the premises had been deliberately left to die for propaganda purposes. The issues before the European Court transcend this particular tragedy. To what extent are we required to respect the human rights of those outside our own territory? Under what circumstances, if ever, are we justified in regarding civilian targets as part of someone's "war machine"? If Nato can play with the meaning of words, so, as we know, can the world's terrorists. And if the World Trade Centre was not a symbol of global capitalism, but just a place where people worked and in which they died, horribly, for no reason, then so was the RTS building. Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001 _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold