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World News
Vol. 25 Issue 26 April 3, 2003
 
Content is Provided by:
DW TV Logo - Internatinal News Content Provider

  Cradle of Civilization Under Threat
 


The ruins of the ancient Parthian city of Hatra, north of Baghdad, are a Unesco World Heritage Site.

As if loss of civilian life and a devastated infrastructure weren't enough, many fear the war in Iraq could result in "collateral damage" to unique historical treasures, wiping out thousands of years of history.

Thursday saw the U.S. military accuse Iraqi forces of firing rockets at the holy city of Najaf in what Cencom deputy chief of operations Brigadier General Vince Brooks
described as the Iraqi regime's "strategy of deliberately putting scared sites in danger."

Najaf is home to the Ali mosque, which holds the tomb of Imam Ali bin Abi Talib.
Reuters reported that as paramilitary fighters loyal to Saddam Hussein hid in the
mosque, a crowd gathered outside, apparently believing U.S. troops were trying to
seize the building. It was just one of many battles fought around one of Iraq's many
sacred sites in recent weeks.

Scholars around the world recognize Iraq as a cradle of human civilization, home to
many important landmarks of the Judeo-Christian tradition as well as holy Muslim
sites. A succession of cultures and traditions gave Iraq and its region an incredible
wealth of monuments of civil and religious architecture, artworks, historic cities, and
numerous archaeological sites.

The Sumerians, Babylonians and Assyrians all had their homeland in Mesopotamia,
now modern Iraq. Basra Al-Qurna, just north of Basra, is reputed to be the site of the
Garden of Eden -- complete with a gnarled tree known as "Adam's tree."

A black market in cultural treasures

After a decade of neglect and cultural theft, this rich heritage is now in serious peril.
Many monuments already sustained serious damage by bombs and low-flying aircraft
in 1991.

McGuire Gibson, an Iraq specialist at the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute,
recently told National Geographic that many prominent archaeologists are also
concerned about looting -- an ongoing problem in Iraq since the first Gulf War, when
the international embargoes on Iraq resulted in massive cutbacks for the Iraqi
Department of Antiquities and Heritage.

Iraqi museum curators say that the ensuing lack of funds meant the state could no
longer pay guards or investigate reported violations of sites, which paved the way for
regular plundering of archaeological sites and illegal trade in Mesopotamian artifacts.
Over the last decade, Iraq has been gradually robbed of its antiquities.

Claus Peter Haase from Berlin's Museum for Islamic Art told DW-TV that one reason
for widespread looting is that "everyone is preoccupied with issues other than the
preservation of cultural heritage."

As the U.S.-led strike on Iraq enters its third week, archaeologists, museums and
politicians alike are expressing grave concern over the fate of cultural heritage in Iraq.

Under the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the
Event of Armed Conflict, adopted in the wake of the massive destruction of cultural
heritage during the Second World War, cultural property must be respected even when
hostilities are conducted. The United States, Britain, Australia and Iraq are all
signatories to the convention.

Cultural shields

But military sources say Iraq may be using important historical sites to shield its army from attack. Australia's defense forces spokesman Brigadier Mike Hannan said coalition forces had pulled back from attacking Iraqi military vehicles sheltering at Ctesiphon, a third century AD site about 35 kilometers south of the besieged capital Baghdad. Brigadier Hannan said Iraq was using antiquities in the same way that it had used human shields and civilian centers like hospitals to inhibit coalition attacks.

That Saddam Hussein has made strategic use of Iraq's cultural sites is no secret -- the landmark Ziggurat of Ur stone temple, for example, is located next to a military airbase.

Culture as a casualty of war

But the military pounding of Iraq is bound to take its toll on the country's 1,000 recognized archaeological sites. One of the first acts of the war was an attack on the museum in Saddam's home town of Tikrit. The important Shi'ite pilgrimage site Kerbala -- situated near a chemical weapons plant -- reportedly also came under heavy bombardment during fighting earlier this week.

Archaeologists say that if further shrines are hit, the allies even risk alienating pro-American Shi'ites in southern Iraq --indeed, if too many religious sites are destroyed by the war, there would be a huge outcry from the general population.

Claus Peter Haase believes ongoing combat will "fan the flames of those seeking conflict between Islam and western civilization," saying that "it provides ample proof for people who accuse western interests of recklessness in their claim to impose order on the Islamic world."

The United Nations dubbed last year its Year for Cultural Heritage. The year-long event was partly a response to the Taliban's willful destruction of historical treasures such as the giant figures of the Buddha in Bamiyan, Afghanistan. It remains to be seen whether the lessons of history have been learned.


  Schröder Urges U.N. Role for Post-War Iraq
 


Gerhard Schröder: "There was an alternative to war."

German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder on Thursday renewed his criticism of the U.S.-led war in Iraq and said the United Nations must have a central role in any post-war reconstruction.

In a major foreign policy speech to parliament, Schröder also said  Iraq's territorial integrity must be guaranteed and its natural resources need to be controlled by the Iraqi people.

"The United Nations will be indispensable for the reconstruction process," Schröder said. "Because reconstruction is more than just the repair of buildings, oil fields and infrastructure."

Schröder's speech comes as U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell meets his European counterparts in Brussels to discuss what will be a massive effort to rebuild Iraq after the war. Several European nations have expressed concern that the United States is preparing to forego a multilateral political solution after defeating the regime of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

The United States has not explicitly said it would install a military commander to lead Iraq after the war, but Washington is sure to want influence in Baghdad after leading the war effort to oust Hussein. But nations such as France and Germany are loath to help pay for
rebuilding Iraq on Washington's terms after opposing the war in the first place.

Anti-war stance remains popular

Schröder's anti-war stance has been extremely popular in Germany and in Thursday's speech the chancellor renewed the government's commitment to its peace policies, saying only the United Nations should be able to sanction the use of military force to solve
international conflicts.

"We were and are convinced that there was an alternative to war. Iraq could have disarmed peacefully through international inspections," he said. "Now as then, this government considers it a mistake that this path was not taken."

Angel Merkel, leader of the opposition Christian Democrats, said the anti-war stance of Schröder's center-left coalition was a populist move, which ended up taking pressure off Iraq to work with U.N. weapons inspectors. "It made war more likely, rather than unlikely," she said.

Despite his rejection of the U.S.-led war, Schröder said he hoped Saddam Hussein's dictatorship would be quickly toppled and the Iraqi people could take control of their affairs as soon as possible.

Joint E.U. peacekeepers

He also said the war presented an opportunity to press ahead with the development of a common E.U. foreign and defense policy. Schröder said a first step could be to set up a joint E.U. peacekeeping troop for U.N. operations instead of each nation sending its own contingent. He also reiterated support for a European foreign minister.

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer on Thursday mooted the idea of proceeding
with joint security policy with only a small core of E.U. member states. In an interview
with the Handelsblatt newspaper, Fischer said if a solution could not be agreed upon in a E.U.-wide treaty, then countries that were willing could move forward on their own. He said other E.U. nations would then be able to join later on as they wished.

In his speech to parliament, Schröder singled out the importance of having Britain on board any such initiative: "t's particularly important to me that Great Britain, which has been so important for driving European security and defense policy in the past, is part of this process."

Some European politicians have singled out British Prime Minister Tony Blair's unwavering support for U.S. President George Bush as a main cause of the rift within Europe over the war in Iraq.


 


International Breaking News

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The Next Saudi Arabia?

Russian oil en route to the United States
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Mr. Bean: "I am not Funny"

The man with the rubber face
The comedy "Mr. Bean" delighted audiences all over the world. Now British actor Rowan Atkinson is back -- this time in the role of a wanna-be James Bond. DW-WORLD spoke to the man who claims he "is not funny."  >>>

Galileo Gets Go-Ahead

The EU says the Galileo system is a civil intiative
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When the Internet Gives You a High

You have a problem when this is all you want to do all the time!
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