A Man-made Tsunami

A Man-Made Tsunami
Terry Jones
Article ID: 1200 | 448 Reads

I am bewildered by the world reaction to the tsunami tragedy. Why are newspapers, television and politicians making such a fuss? Why has the British public forked out more than £100m to help the survivors, and why is Tony Blair now promising “hundreds of millions of pounds”? Why has Australia pledged £435m and Germany £360m? And why has Mr Bush pledged £187m?

Of course it’s wonderful to see the human race rallying to the aid of disaster victims, but it’s the inconsistency that has me foxed. Nobody is making this sort of fuss about all the people killed in Iraq, and yet it’s a human catastrophe of comparable dimensions.

According to the only scientific estimate attempted, Iraqi deaths since the war began number more than 100,000. The tsunami death toll is in the region of 150,000. Yet in the case of Iraq, the media seems reluctant to impress on the public the scale of the carnage.

I haven’t seen many TV reporters standing in the ruins of Falluja, breathlessly describing how, in 30 years of reporting, they’ve never seen a human tragedy on this scale. The Pope hasn’t appealed for everyone to remember the Iraqi dead in their prayers, and MTV hasn’t gone silent in their memory.

Nor are Blair and Bush falling over each other to show they recognise the scale of the disaster in Iraq. On the contrary, they have been doing their best to conceal the numbers killed.

When the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health estimated the figure of 100,000 killed in Iraq and published their findings in one of the world’s leading scientific journals, the Lancet, Downing Street questioned their methodology, saying “the researchers used an extrapolation technique, which they considered inappropriate, rather than a detailed body count”. Of course “a detailed body count” is the one thing the US military will not allow anyone to do.

What is so odd is the way in which so much of the media has fallen into line, downplaying the only authoritative estimate of casualties in Iraq with the same unanimity with which they have impressed upon us the death toll of the tsunami.

One of the authors of the forenamed report, Dr Gilbert Burnham, said: “Our data have been back and forth between many reviewers at the Lancet and here in the school, so we have the scientific strength to say what we have said with great certainty.”

So, are deaths caused by bombs and gunfire less worthy of our pity than deaths caused by a giant wave? Or are Iraqi lives less worth counting than Indonesian, Thai, Indian and Swedish?

Why aren’t our TV companies and newspapers running fundraisers to help Iraqis whose lives have been wrecked by the invasion? Why aren’t they screaming with outrage at the man-made tsunami that we have created in the Middle East? It truly is baffling.

**Terry Jones is a film director, actor and Python. His book Terry Jones’s War on the War on Terror is published this month by the Nation

Published by The Guardian**

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

....... and its not just Iraq that sympathy needs to be shown for.....
what about the people killed in Afghanistan, Palestine, Chechnya, Kosovo, Bosnia, Kashmir, Indonesia etc ??....

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

Tsunami devastation and the disaster in Iraq are not comparable. The author of this article is an idiot. There is no reason why countries should not provide aid to Tsunami victims.

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

and there are innumerable reasons why Iraqi's shouldn't be compensated (whether or not its US, coalition or world)??

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

each event has its own place and can't be compared...

the impact of the tusnami was on 13 countries, not just 1...and it virtually wiped out whole towns in parts of indonesia, no survivors left...also, the current death toll is estimated at 289,000, by far the highest death toll to a natural disaster in my knowledge...

i'm not saying the the situation in iraq, chechnya, afghanistan, palestine etc is by any means better...but it certainly can't be compared to this...ultimately, man does have control over the so called "man-made tusnami" in this article...and regardless of the terrible situation and conditions in those regions, constant efforts are being made to resolve the issues...i'm not going to comment on what type of efforts, or how successful they've been, but regardless, its an ongoing thing...on the other hand, a natural disaster like the actual earthquake and tsunami that hit so many countries and affected so many ppl is not under anyones control...

so yea, i agree with Fayz, the writer of this article is an idiot to compare the 2 things...

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

Fayz..... Quote >> ** Of course it's wonderful to see the human race rallying to the aid of disaster victims, but it's the inconsistency that has me foxed. Nobody is making this sort of fuss about all the people killed in Iraq, and yet it's a human catastrophe of comparable dimensions.**

The author is not opposed to providing aid to the tsunami victims, his main concern is why 'they' can provide aid for the tsunami victims and not for the other innocent loss of lives as mentioned above...

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

Can you please provide a link?

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

Its a shame that people indulge in this kind of politicisation of natural calamities. If muslim blood was cheap then these countries would not have come forward with the help because majority of people died were Muslims as well.

Re: A Man-made Tsunami

source >>> A man-made tsunami