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Wednesday, March 19, 2003 5:35 AM
Fearing
Prosecution, Powell Slams Belgian Law
Powell lamented "this
kind of legislation.makes it hard for us to go
to places, it puts you at such
easy risk."
WASHINGTON, March 18 (IslamOnline.net & News
Agencies) - Fearing
prosecution in over perpetrating war crimes during the
1991 Gulf War,
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell warned Belgium that its
status as
an international hub may be jeopardized.
Seven Iraqi
families filed a lawsuit Tuesday, March 18, in Belgium
against former U.S.
president George Bush, incumbent Vice President
Dick Cheney, Powell and
retired U.S. General Norman Schwarzkop for the
bombing of a civilian shelter
in Baghdad that killed 403 people on the
night of February 12-13, 1991.
"It's a serious problem," said Powell, adding Washington had
deep
concerns about Belgium's "universal competence" law, which
allows
legal proceedings against people accused of war crimes, crimes
against
humanity or genocide regardless of their nationality or location.
"The Belgian legislature continues to pass laws and modify them
over
time which permit these kinds of suits," he said in an interview
with
reporters from international news agencies at the State Department.
"We have cautioned our Belgian colleagues that they need to be
very
careful about this kind of effort, this kind of legislation,
because
it makes it hard for us to go to places, it puts you at such
easy
risk," Powell said.
"It affects the ability of people to travel
in Belgium without being
subject to this kind of threat," he said.
"For a place that is an international centre they should be a
little
bit concerned about this."
Heads of state, prime ministers and
foreign ministers are immune from
the Belgian law while in office, but some
30 current of former
political leaders are facing legal action under the
legislation,
including Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Cuban
President
Fidel Castro.
Powell claimed that officials at NATO
headquarters in Brussels had
problems with the law but stopped short of
suggesting that the North
Atlantic alliance might move its operations
elsewhere because of the
concerns.
"I know its a matter of concern at
NATO headquarters now, an
international headquarters sitting there in Belgium
where not just
U.S. officials but officials from anywhere in the world such
as Sharon
can be subject to this kind of litigation," he said.
Sharon
could face legal action for war crimes by 23 Palestinians who
survived a
massacre by an Israeli-allied militia at two refugee camps
in Beirut in 1982.
"If you show up, the next thing you know you're being ... who
knows?,"
Powell said, slapping his hand on a table in a motion that appeared
to
indicate either being served with a lawsuit or being arrested.
Cheney was U.S. defense secretary at the time of the first Gulf
War,
while Powell was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
Schwarzkopf
commander of the Operation Desert Storm.
The families who
brought the action are either victims or relatives of
victims who died in the
attack, according to socialist lawmaker
Patrick Moriau, who accompanied the
Iraqi plaintiffs when they filed
their lawsuit.
Powell said he
understood that plans were being made now for another
lawsuit to be filed
under the same law against President George W.
Bush and Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld even before the start of a
new invasion of Iraq.
"They are getting ready to accuse current President Bush and
Don
Rumsfeld ... for whatever might happen," he said.
Belgium is
fiercely opposed to the looming U.S. war on Iraq, and was
among three
countries, along with Germany and France, which caused a
crisis at NATO in
February by refusing to back a U.S. request to boost
Turkey's defences.
Brussels also this month refused to expel an Iraqi diplomat
as
requested by the United States.