Labour Friends of Iraq
Building support for the new Iraq

lfiq1.jpg

Home
Who we are
What we do
How you can be involved
January 22, 2005

LFIQ: who we are and why we were formed

Today’s Independent (see below) carries a report which quotes LFIQ criticisms of the leadership of the Stop the War Coalition. Their response is to claim that we are “a group established to campaign in support of Blair's strategy and against the Stop the War Coalition." Let’s try to unpick this. We are an independent Labour group and bring together people from all wings of the party. Some will have supported Tony Blair on some things, others will have actively opposed his policies of one or more issues.

Our Joint President Harry Barnes MP is well-known as one of “Blair’s bastards” and is a member of the Socialist Campaign Group but we have all come together to support Grassroots Iraq.

Most of our activists were strongly opposed to the war and took part in Stop the War activities. A minority wasn’t and didn’t. But what unites us is not opposing the STWC but favouring solidarity with the nascent labour movement. I feel sure that most people will see through Andrew Murray’s attempt to metaphorically mark “unclean” on our door by saying we’re a Blairite front.

And the most important issue is how Labour Party activists, trade unionists and others on the decent left increase their solidarity with the Iraqi unions and democrats.

And let’s not forget, either, that this is not some petty or arcane debate between totalitarians and democrats but concerns people’s lives. We would not be at all interested in criticising Stop the War leaders if they had done the decent thing and fully and readily done what so many did without prompting and forcefully condemned the murder of Hadi, a good and brave comrade.

Gary Kent

Anti-war movement divided over trade unionist's murder
By Andrew Grice Political Editor
Independent 22 January 2005

The murder of a prominent trade unionist in Iraq has provoked a split in the anti-war movement in Britain over whether he should be seen as a hero or a collaborator with the American-led occupation.

The torture and killing of Hadi Saleh in Baghdad on 4 January has become a litmus test of whether campaigners who opposed the Iraq war should "move on" and embrace moves towards democracy in the country. The more moderate voices in the anti-war camp have accused hardliners of failing to condemn the murder and implying it was a justified act by insurgents.

Mr Saleh, the international officer of the Iraqi Federation of Trade Unions, spent five years in jail during Saddam Hussein's regime. He returned from exile abroad after Saddam's fall to try to establish trade unions in the new Iraq. Allies say he was tied, blindfolded, severely tortured and strangled by an electric cord as part of a campaign by the "Iraqi resistance" to eradicate democrats.

His killing has been condemned by trade union bodies around the world, including the TUC, and many critics of the war. But the Stop the War Coalition has been accused of remaining virtually silent - a charge it dismisses as a smear by opponents.

Gary Kent, director of Labour Friends of Iraq (LIFQ), said yesterday: "This horrible murder has galvanised the decent left who mostly opposed the war but cannot stomach ambiguities or worse on the so-called resistance. It illustrates there is a large faultline on the left about post-war Iraq. Some armchair revolutionaries are happy to fight to the last drop of someone else's blood. But the elementary notion of solidarity with Iraqi trade unions is fast winning the day, and about time too."

The Labour MP Harry Barnes, the group's joint president, claimed the leadership of the Stop the War Coalition was "noticeably silent" about the killing until it was forced to make a brief comment.

He said: "I was very proud to support the Stop the War Coalition but its leadership has now degenerated into an unrepresentative and totalitarian rump. For me, the war was wrong but we just have to recognise that things have changed and now give increased and active solidarity to all those forces within Iraq who are desperately trying to rebuild civil society, make the elections work, preserve the unity of their country and see the withdrawal of foreign troops."

Ann Clwyd, Tony Blair's special envoy on human rights in Iraq and LIFQ's other joint president, said: "Hadi was a brave patriot who stood up for workers' rights under Saddam Hussein and suffered severely at the hands of the secret police."

Andrew Murray, chairman of the Stop the War Coalition, said: "We condemn all civilian deaths in Iraq, including those tens of thousands which are the responsibility of the occupying forces. And we recognise the right of Iraqis to resist the unlawful occupation, which is at the root of violence in Iraq and is the consequence of the war."

He accused LFIQ of using the murder to attack the anti-war movement. "This is a group established to campaign in support of Blair's strategy and against the Stop the War Coalition."

Search this site:
PO Box 2421, Reading, RG1 8WY, U.K. - Email: info@labourfriendsofiraq.org.uk - Phone: +44 (0)7 774 071 864