The excellent Mr. Pilger has excelled even himself in one of his latest pieces, in which there is much that should be brought to the attention of the populace at large but is not. Here then is a link thereto. It relates the many crimes of the Anglo-Saxon nations. Read and pass on. (By that ambiguous exhortation I do not intend to suggest that you should pass by, but that you might pass it on.) Even if you are, as am I, no advocate of "demo-cracy," his entire piece remains of the utmost importance to a chronicler of contemporary history.
Where are our Orwells, our Shelleys, our Blakes, our Pinters! Mr. Pilger laments. And he is especially telling on the British extirpation of the entire population of the Chagos Archipelago (a place I know to the extent of having sailed close past it in 1963), and on the gassing of all the dogs.
"The act of mass kidnapping was carried out in high secrecy. In one official file, under the heading, 'Maintaining the fiction,' the Foreign Office legal adviser exhorts his colleagues to cover their actions by 're-classifying' the population as 'floating' and to 'make up the rules as we go along.' Article 7 of the statute of the International Criminal Court says the 'deportation or forcible transfer of population' is a crime against humanity. That Britain had committed such a crime - in exchange for a $14 million discount off an American Polaris nuclear submarine - was not on the agenda of a group of British 'defence' correspondents flown to the Chagos by the Ministry of Defence when the U.S. base was completed. 'There is nothing in our files,' said a ministry official, 'about inhabitants or an evacuation.' "
Well! that is just a beginning. There is a great deal more in the article.
Where are our Orwells, our Shelleys, our Blakes, our Pinters! Mr. Pilger laments. And he is especially telling on the British extirpation of the entire population of the Chagos Archipelago (a place I know to the extent of having sailed close past it in 1963), and on the gassing of all the dogs.
"The act of mass kidnapping was carried out in high secrecy. In one official file, under the heading, 'Maintaining the fiction,' the Foreign Office legal adviser exhorts his colleagues to cover their actions by 're-classifying' the population as 'floating' and to 'make up the rules as we go along.' Article 7 of the statute of the International Criminal Court says the 'deportation or forcible transfer of population' is a crime against humanity. That Britain had committed such a crime - in exchange for a $14 million discount off an American Polaris nuclear submarine - was not on the agenda of a group of British 'defence' correspondents flown to the Chagos by the Ministry of Defence when the U.S. base was completed. 'There is nothing in our files,' said a ministry official, 'about inhabitants or an evacuation.' "
Well! that is just a beginning. There is a great deal more in the article.
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