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Albright definitely gets the message that she is not welcome in Oxford

sociétélibre | 28.10.2003 21:50 | Anti-militarism | Oxford

On Tuesday October 28th, Madeleine Albright came to Oxford form a signature session of her new book at Borders, followed by a talk at the Oxford Union. Many actions took place very succesfully; she definitely got the message that she wasn't welcome in Oxford.

Here is a report of what I saw or heard of, and a few pictures I took.

banners outsite Borders
banners outsite Borders

vigil at the entrance
vigil at the entrance

more banners and vigil
more banners and vigil

welcome to Borders!
welcome to Borders!

cops accompany protesters out of Borders
cops accompany protesters out of Borders

loud radical poetry inside Borders
loud radical poetry inside Borders

posters and pots and pans inside Borders
posters and pots and pans inside Borders

posters without flash :-)
posters without flash :-)

the signature session, well attended by cops, security guards and photographers
the signature session, well attended by cops, security guards and photographers

heated discussion...
heated discussion...

the discussion continues...
the discussion continues...


It all started around 5:30pm in front of Borders. The signature session was meant to start at 6:00pm. A vigil was held outside Borders to welcome people going to the session, remembering the 500 000 Iraqi children that were "a price worth paying" according to Albright. Protesters also had many banners and posters and were handing out leaflets explaining why they were protesting against Madeleine Albright. Then protesters went inside Borders. The session was downstairs, and most protesters were refused access to the basement, although quite a few managed to go to the session anyway. Protesters upstairs in Borders read loud radical poetry, shouted slogans, hold banners and made lots of noise and rhythms with pots and pans, all along the session, which finally started quite late, around 6:40, and lasted less than an hour.

Also, at least a dozen protesters managed to get downstairs to deliver their message to Albright in many different ways. We unfortunately couldn't see exactly what was happening downstairs from the ground floor, but as I understood die-ins were staged, with fake blood, and other actions. Many protesters were accompanied out of Borders or upstairs by cops.

Then Albright tried to leave Borders. Many people thought that actions were all over... definitely not! While the session was going on, protesters blockaded all the entrances of Borders to make sure that Albright couldn't leave Borders for her talk in the Union. She tried to leave by a hidden garage, where her car and her officers were waiting for her. But protesters sat down in the street and stopped her from leaving Borders, while dancing at the rhythms of pots and pans... She had to wait in her car for a while, until cops decided to take her out and run through Borders to board a police van waiting for them at the front. But protesters were faster than them and reached the van before it left, shouting slogans and delivering loudly their message to Albright. The van finally left, but when it arrived to the Union, which is very close to Borders, protesters were already there waiting for Albright. When Albright saw that, the van turned back and left probably for a hidden entrance to the Union.

She probably managed to get into the Union, probably a bit late. But many protesters were at the talk inside the Union, prepared to ask her very difficult questions. Definitely it wasn't an easy night in Oxford for Madeleine Albright...


Here is what was written on the leaflet handed out at Borders and at the Oxford Union:


MADELEINE ALBRIGHT: WAR CRIMINAL?

Madeleine Albright, former US Secretary of State, is in Oxford to promote her memoir.
Tuesday 28 October 2003: Borders (6 pm), Oxford Union (8.30 pm)

Albright presents herself as a multilateralist, feminist, and liberal icon.

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:

- Justified death of half a million children in Iraq as a result of sanctions: "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price - we think the price is worth it" ("60 Minutes", 12 May 1996).

- Stalled deployment of further UN troops in Rwanda and threatened to veto any proposal that would increase UNAMIR forces in the country. 800,000 people died in the ensuing Rwandan genocide (Human Rights Watch).

- Advocated bombing of Serbia in 1999, despite CIA warnings that this would increase Serb violence against Kosovar Albanians. Overrode Colin Powell's reluctance to commit military forces until there was a clear political objective with comment: "What's the point of having this superb military that you're always talking about if we can't use it?" 580,000 people displaced, several thousand killed in the resulting ethnic cleansing in Kosovo; 500 Serb civilians killed in illegal NATO airstrikes (Human Rights Watch).

- Consistently blocked UN attempts to criticize Israel’s treatment of Palestinians. Warned Secretary-General Boutros-Ghali not to publish UN report stating that Israel's 1996 bombing of the U.N.-run refugee camp in Qana, Lebanon, which killed more than 100 refugees, was intentional. Threatened to veto Boutros-Ghali’s second term as punishment for disobedience. Successfully executed punishment.

HOW DIFFERENT IS ALBRIGHT FROM BUSH ?

- Albright criticises Bush for saying: "At some point, we may be the only ones left. That's ok with me. We are America." She advises a more multilateralist approach. ("Bridges, Bombs, or Bluster?", Foreign Affairs, Sept/Oct 2003)

- Albright in office sounded exactly like Bush:
"If we have to use force, it is because we are America! We are the indispensable nation. We stand tall, and we see further into the future." (NBC Today show, February 19, 1998)
"We recognize this area as vital to US national interests and we will behave, with others, multilaterally when we can and unilaterally when we must." (Middle East International (London), Oct. 21, 1994, p. 4)

- Apologises for using phrase "assertive multilateralism": "By this I meant that when America acted with others, we should lead in establishing goals and ensuring success. I didn't in any way rule out the possibility that we would have to act on our own in self-defence or to protect other vital interests - multilateralism certainly has its place as a foreign policy tool, but the term is without appeal - especially to Americans. The word has six syllables, includes some Latin, and ends with an "ism"." (Madame Secretary, p. 176)

sociétélibre

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

Update

28.10.2003 22:40

apparently she had lots of problems getting into the Union because of protestors, and only managed to go in 40 minutes late to cries of shame, shame, shame... :-)

an update of this part of the protest will probably follow in another news post!

very successful action, congratulations all!

sociétélibre


War Criminal in Norwich Tomorrow night. All Welcome!!

28.10.2003 22:51


Madelaine Albright
Former U.S.Defence Sec and butcher of innocents LIVE!! Wednesday 29th Oct
THE ARTHUR MILLER CENTRE INTERNATIONAL LITERARY FESTIVAL AUTUMN 2003
Lecture Theatre 1, University of East Anglia, Norwich. 7 p.m.

Get there early!!

Gnasher


Albright's most foolish comment

29.10.2003 10:27

Apparently one of the protesters spoke to Albright who admitted that the comment about half a million dead Iraqi's being worth US safety was the most foolish comment she'd ever made. A bit late for apologies, I think.

Niki


That Comment

29.10.2003 14:13

We can be sure it was one of the stupidest things she has ever said. Utterly stupid, but only in the sense that it must have been so horribly embarrassing for her and the US administration.

She let the politician's veil of semantics slip and said something that was actually honest. It must have been honest; 500 000 children dying must have been a price worth paying. Irelevant of the quantification of the humanitarian catastrophe in Iraq, or the discomfort at the public outrage following Madeleine's statement in May 1996, the Clinton administration continued to block efforts to lift the sanctions against Iraq.

In 1997 the controversial 'food for oil' programme was implemented. This was nevertheless highly critised as being an ineffectual emergency measure that did not reverse, and at its best shielded few civilians from the extreme effects of the economic sanctions. This programme saw the resignation of two distinguished UN officials, Dennis Halliday in January 1999 and Hans Von Sponeck in February 2000, who had both held the post of UN Assistant Secretary General and Humanitarian Co-ordinator in Iraq. Further resignations, calls by over 70 members of Congress and other nation states did nothing to deter the government's 'policy on auto pilot'.

It was a stupid thing to say but with political suicide avoided and a move from her position as UN Ambassador to Secretary of State (1997-2001) it would seem fair comment that she really didn't actually give a fuck.....

Well done to all those in Oxford, except those who scoffed the chocolate soya dessert without a thought of sharing and caring with Ms Albright.

t


sorry about the soya dessert

29.10.2003 18:40

sorry the soya dessert was too good to waste on her
O

tasted too good


Nice one!

03.11.2003 11:08

Nice action, well done to all involved, respect from Cardiff!

Good to see a bit of fast thinking and fancy footwork can keep them guessing - no way out and no way in, put a big smile on my face!

Can you guys now do something about her boss's successor? Please...

Col Buendia


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