Deirdre Newman Bombs exploded on the UC...
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Deirdre Newman
Bombs exploded on the UC Irvine campus Thursday as part of a rally
against a potential war in Iraq.
The bombs only rained down flour, and the soldiers throwing them
at civilians were only students in costume.. But the fact that the
flour coated anyone who stood in their way was meant to illustrate
how innocent civilians would die if the U.S. bombed Iraq.
About 150 passersby witnessed the war simulation created by 14
organizations on campus -- including the Society of Arab Students,
Campus Progressive Alliance and Amnesty International -- to protest a
possible war in Iraq and to advocate for a comprehensive change in
American foreign policy that champions freedom and democracy.
“We greatly oppose the war in Iraq and we’ve always opposed
sanctions because we have a humanitarian perspective that innocent
men and women should not die for any cause,” said Osama Abuljebain,
20, co-president of the Society of Arab Students.
The first purpose of the rally was to oppose a war in Iraq and
illustrate the harrowing situation in the country as a result of the
economic blockade put in place in August 1990 by the United Nations
Security Council in response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait.
The sanctions cause 50,000 adult deaths every year, and Iraq now
has a mortality rate of more than 200 people every day, according to
information the society passed out at the rally.
The speakers used statistics and tried to remain unemotional in
their rhetoric so their point of view would be taken seriously, said
Kareem Elsayed, 17, a society member.
“We want to be objective in our approach and educate people about
our perspective and want to make sense,” Elsayed said. “We don’t want
to get all hotheaded, because then logic is thrown out the window,”
Mark LeVine, assistant professor of modern Middle Eastern history
and Islamic studies, spoke about the need to transcend antiwar speech
and focus on the larger context of American foreign policy.
“The main thing was to shift the discourse to being opposed to
this particular war to a positive vision for American’s foreign
policy because, in my opinion, even if we stop this particular war
for this particular time, the causes and policies that are making the
war on terrorism happen are never going to change,” LeVine said. “The
[antiwar] movement needs to grow and mature and move into a new
phase.”
LeVine enumerated specific ideas that rally attendees could
pressure the government to adopt in its foreign policy, such as
adding to the U.N. Security Council countries like India, Brazil and
other Third-World countries. The U.N. could also freeze political,
economic and non-humanitarian aid to any country that doesn’t meet
stringent standards of human rights and democracy, such as China,
Israel and Russia, which LeVine called “perhaps the biggest terrorist
state, considering what’s going on in Chechnya.”
Rally attendees were divided in their reaction to the speakers’
messages.
Syed Ali, 21, said he supported the protesters’ antiwar position.
“You can’t say, if you have a grievance with another country,
[that] you can bomb them,” Ali said. “That just causes violence. And
if we’ve learned anything from history, violence doesn’t get you
anywhere.”
A student from Indonesia said she felt the students who spoke
against war gravely underestimate Saddam Hussein.
“I’m not for a war, but we have to get rid of Saddam,” said Angie,
who did not want to disclose her last name. “If we give him enough
chance, he will drop a bomb on the United States.
“And I’m not even an American. If I said this at home [in
Indonesia], in front of other Muslims, I’d probably be hung,” she
said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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