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The Geneva conventions at 60: Unleashing the laws of war

The chasm is still too wide between noble Swiss ideas and the hard reality of locations where war is hell

WALK the calm, well-heeled streets of Geneva and there seems little to connect this metropolis in neutral Switzerland with the genocidal slaughter in Rwanda and the rape camps of Bosnia in the 1990s, or the appalling violence lately inflicted on civilians caught up in fighting in Darfur, Chad or eastern Congo. Yet decisions taken in Geneva do have an effect, both legal and humanitarian, on people in benighted places—and the world would be much happier if the effect was far greater.

The city is the UN’s humanitarian hub, headquarters to both its refugee and human-rights agencies. More memorably, though, it lends its name to a clutch of conventions, adopted six decades ago this month, initially with the horrors of two world wars in mind. Those agreements still form a bedrock for the laws of war and the protection of non-combatants. …

Happy birthday?

Imogen Foulkes
BBC News, Geneva

Geneva Conventions signing in 1949

The Geneva Conventions are 60 years old on Wednesday, but the anniversary comes amid concern that respect for the rules of war is small.

The three existing Geneva Conventions, which relate to the immunity of medical personnel on the battlefield and the treatment of prisoners of war, were extensively revised in 1949.

The fourth Geneva Convention, which stipulates that warring parties have an obligation to protect civilians, was added.

The fourth convention in particular was born out of the horrors of the World War II, not just the appalling atrocity of the concentration camps.

But the deliberate starvation of the city of Leningrad, and the indiscriminate bombing of Dresden and Coventry.

The conventions received widespread international support from the start, and today all 194 states have ratified them.

Unfortunately, signatures on paper have not led to respect for the conventions, and research conducted by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) – which is the guardian of the conventions – shows that civilians suffer most in armed conflict.

Little compliance

In World War I, the ratio of soldiers to civilians killed was 10 to one.

In World War II it became 50-50, and today the figures are almost reversed – up to 10 civilians killed to every one soldier.

ICRC delegate Florence Gillette with Mary

Last year’s brief war between Georgia and Russia is a case in point.

In just a few days, several hundred civilians are believed to have lost their lives, and tens of thousands were driven from their homes.

Along both sides of the closed "administrative boundary line" between Georgia and the breakaway republic of South Ossetia, dozens of villages are abandoned, the houses burned or bombed.

Mary Gelashvili, an elderly woman from the village of Tserenisi, has lost not just her house, which is destroyed, but her livelihood too.

Her fields are along the boundary line, and she can no longer get to them.

"No one should have the right to destroy my home," she says.

Under international law she is absolutely right. Indiscriminate damage to civilian life and property is forbidden.

"It’s true the Geneva Conventions didn’t help these people very much," admits Florence Gillette, head of the ICRC office in the Georgian town of Gori.

"The conventions actually state that all precautions should be taken to spare civilian lives and property, and not just lives and property but all infrastructure essential to survival.

"That’s part of the fourth Geneva Convention that all the parties to this conflict, the Russians and the Georgians, signed and ratified a long time ago."

Informal conflicts

One problem the ICRC has, however, in trying to encourage respect for the conventions, is that modern conflicts are often fought not between two identifiable formal armies, but between and among a variety of armed groups, including informal militias and even criminal gangs.

Destroyed apartments in Tskhinvali

Last year’s war between Russia and Georgia was classified by the ICRC as an international armed conflict.

Nevertheless local militias also took part in the fighting, and are believed to be responsible for at least some of the damage to civilian property.

"Certain key concepts in today’s armed conflicts have to be clarified," says ICRC President Jakob Kellenberger.

"It would be desirable to further develop certain aspects of the law, particularly those related to non-international armed conflicts."

The Red Cross insists that the real problem with the conventions is not their lack of relevance to modern warfare, but the continued lack of respect for them.

"That is the big question for all of us," admits Philip Spoerri, the ICRC’s head of international law. "We have to find ways to enforce these rules."

But enforcement is a very tricky issue. As guardian of the conventions and the world’s single most important humanitarian agency, the ICRC has no power to enforce, and would not want it.

"There we have to turn to bodies like the International Criminal Court," Mr Spoerri adds.

"Or the United Nations could enforce them, but of course we see there is not always the willingness to do so."

Obama commitment

At the same time the ICRC also rejects the suggestions which came from the then Bush administration that the Geneva Conventions are not really applicable in the "War on Terror".

ICRC visits largely destroyed village in Georgia

"It is extremely significant that the new administration of President Obama reaffirmed US commitment to the conventions," says Mr Kellenberger. "We welcome that."

Nevertheless the Red Cross knows more needs to be done to encourage respect for the conventions, in particular to strengthen the protection of civilians, and work is underway at ICRC headquarters to find ways of doing that.

In the meantime, Red Cross workers like Joyce Hood, a nurse in South Ossetia, are left to pick up the pieces of civilian lives shattered by conflict.

Ms Hood spends much of her time caring for five elderly people, the only remaining inhabitants of the now destroyed village of Satskheneti.

"In almost all these situations it is the elderly, the very young, the vulnerable normal people that bear the brunt of conflict," she says.

"They may not be injured by bullets but they suffer for a long time afterwards, they rarely get their life back to what it was before.

"There are so many conflicts, and mostly internal conflicts, not massive wars like we used to see last century – little conflicts to the rest of the world but to these people it’s enormous, their whole life is destroyed.

"Their life is totally turned upside down, for nothing."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fear is Not a Christian Value

If you are Christian, the importance of the Bible is obvious to you.If you are an atheist or a person of a different faith, please note that 76% of Americans identify themselves as Christians. Therefore, if you are trying to reach Americans with the t…

Israel condemned over evictions

Protester is removed by police from a demonstration outside the homes 2/8/09

The US has led international condemnation of Israel after it evicted nine Palestinian families living in two houses in occupied East Jerusalem.

Washington said the action was not in keeping with Israel’s obligations under the so-called "road map" to resolve the Israel-Palestinian conflict.

Jewish settlers moved into the houses almost immediately.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem in 1967 and later annexed it, a move not recognised by the world community.

The removal of the 53 people was also condemned by the United Nations, the Palestinians and the UK government.

Senior Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat said he was outraged at the action.

"Israel is once again showing its utter failure to respect international law," he said.

"New settlers from abroad are accommodating themselves and their belongings in the Palestinian houses and 19 newly homeless children will have nowhere to sleep."

‘Deplorable’

The operation to evict the Palestinians from the Sheikh Jarrah district of the city was carried out before dawn on Sunday by police clad in black riot gear.

It followed a ruling by Israel’s Supreme Court that Jewish families owned the land. Israel wants to build a block of 20 apartments in the area.

The families' belongings were put on the street - 2/08/09

"I deplore today’s totally unacceptable actions by Israel," the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Robert H Serry said.

"These actions are contrary to the provisions of the Geneva Conventions related to occupied territory.

"These actions heighten tensions and undermine international efforts to create conditions for fruitful negotiations to achieve peace."

The UK government said the Israeli action was "incompatible with the Israeli professed desire for peace".

"We urge Israel not to allow the extremists to set the agenda," the British Consulate in East Jerusalem said.

Sovereignty ‘unquestionable’

Israel considers a united Jerusalem to be the capital of the state of Israel.

"Our sovereignty over it is unquestionable," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month.

"We cannot accept the idea that Jews will not have the right to live and buy [homes] anywhere in Jerusalem."

The BBC’s Tim Franks in Jerusalem says the houses are in what is probably the most contested city on earth and the diplomatic ripples from the evictions will spread.

There are an estimated 250,000 Palestinians living in East Jerusalem and 200,000 Jews. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Palestinians evicted in Jerusalem

One of the evicted Palestinian women

Israeli police have evicted nine Palestinian families living in two houses in occupied East Jerusalem.

Jewish settlers moved into the houses almost immediately. The US has urged Israel to abandon plans for a building project in the area.

Israel has occupied East Jerusalem since 1967, a move not recognised by the international community.

The evictions have been condemned by the United Nations, the Palestinians and also the UK government.

‘Deplorable’

The operation to evict the 53 Palestinians in the Sheikh Jarrah district of the city was carried out before dawn on Sunday by police clad in black riot gear.

It followed a ruling by Israel’s Supreme Court that the land originally belonged to Jewish families. Israel wants to build a block of 20 apartments in the area.

Israeli riot police

The evictions were quickly condemned by the United Nations.

"I deplore today’s totally unacceptable actions by Israel," the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process, Robert H Serry said. "These actions are contrary to the provisions of the Geneva Conventions related to occupied territory.

"These actions heighten tensions and undermine international efforts to create conditions for fruitful negotiations to achieve peace," Mr Perry said.

Palestinian negotiator Saed Erakat said: "Tonight, while these new settlers from abroad will be accommodating themselves and their belongings in these Palestinian houses, 19 newly homeless children will have nowhere to sleep."

Sovereignty ‘unquestionable’

Israel considers a united Jerusalem to be the capital of the state of Israel.

"Our sovereignty over it is unquestionable," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month.

"We cannot accept the idea that Jews will not have the right to live and buy [homes] anywhere in Jerusalem."

The BBC’s Tim Franks in Jerusalem says the houses are in what is probably the most contested city on earth and the diplomatic ripples from the evictions will spread.

The UK joined in the condemnation of the evictions. "These actions are incompatible with the Israeli professed desire for peace," the British Consulate in East Jerusalem said. "We urge Israel not to allow the extremists to set the agenda."

There are an estimated 250,000 Palestinians living in East Jerusalem and 200,000 Jews. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Federer wants to play in Davis Cup playoff

GENEVA (AP) — Roger Federer reportedly wants to play in Switzerland’s Davis Cup playoff against Italy in September.
Severin Luethi, part of Federer’s coaching team, said the top-ranked player told him in May and again at Wimbledon that he intended to play in Italy.
“Nothing is definite yet, but there’s a good chance that our best players [...]

Canada challenges EU seal ban

Seal pup in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, Canada

The EU has agreed to ban the import of seal products – prompting a challenge from Canada which culls hundreds of thousands of seals each year.

European foreign ministers agreed on the ban following years of appeals from animal rights campaigners.

Products from traditional hunts by indigenous peoples in Canada and Greenland will be exempt from the ban.

Canada says the decision is not based on science and it will challenge it at the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The EU ministers’ decision follows a vote by the European Parliament in May to ban the sale of all seal products across the bloc’s 27 nations.

Ministers said on Monday that the ban was being put in place "in response to concerns about the animal welfare aspects of seal hunting practices".

Biggest hunt

Every year Canada kills about 300,000 seals off its east coast – the biggest such hunt in the world.

Hunters usually shoot the seals or bludgeon them to death with spiked clubs. The animals’ pelts, fat and meat are traded.

Anti-hunt campaigners say the practice is inhumane, and claim that some seals are skinned while still conscious.

"We are very disappointed with this ruling. We believe strongly this violates the World Trade Organisation guidelines"

Stockwell Day, Canadian international trade minister

Lesley O’Donnell, of the International Fund for Animal Welfare, welcomed the EU ban.

"We expect the commercial seal hunt to continue its inevitable decline until it is wiped out once and for all," she said.

However, Canada has insisted that the hunt is carried out humanely, and says it will launch a challenge at the WTO in Geneva.

"We are very disappointed with this ruling. We believe strongly this violates the World Trade Organization guidelines," said international trade minister Stockwell Day.

"It is in our view inappropriate that a trade decision is taken which is not based on the science, and for that reason, we are announcing that we’ll be pursuing an appeal of this vote today."

EU diplomats have said that the ban – which will affect the 2010 hunting season – will stop an annual trade of some 4.2 million euros (£3.6m or $5.9m).</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

EasyJet-barred Pete Doherty pays £10,000 for private flight from Spain

‘Babyshambles’ rocker Pete Doherty had to fork out about 10,000 pounds for a private jet from Spain, after he got drunk with his bandmates, and was barred from boarding an easyJet flight from Valencia to Gatwick.
“Mr Doherty’’s reputation preceded him following a previous incident with easyJet when he was removed from a flight to Barcelona [...]

Swine flu could hit up to 40 percent in US

ATLANTA (AP) — In a disturbing new projection, health officials say up to 40 percent of Americans could get swine flu this year and next and several hundred thousand could die without a successful vaccine campaign and other measures.
The estimates by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are roughly twice the number of those [...]

Roger Federer’s Mirka gives birth to twin girls

GENEVA (AP) — Roger Federer is playing a different kind of doubles.
Tennis’ top-ranked player became a father for the first time when his wife, Mirka, gave birth to twin girls Thursday.
“I have some exciting news to share with you,” Federer said on his Web site and Facebook page. “Late last night, in Switzerland, Mirka and [...]

Iran accused of ‘Zionist’ tactics

Protestors in Brussels hold posters of those they claim have been arrested and held in Iran for anti-government activities during a demonstration.

One of the defeated moderate candidates in Iran’s presidential election, Mehdi Karroubi, has accused security forces of using harsher methods than Israel.

"The behaviour of Iran’s security agents is worse than those of the Zionist in occupied Palestine," a statement on his website said.

Hundreds have been arrested following protests against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election last month.

Activists around the world demonstrated against the crackdown on Saturday.

Mr Karroubi and other moderate candidates say the 12 June election was marred by massive fraud.

Iran’s top election body, the Council of Guardians, has said the poll was free and fair. Officials results gave Mr Ahmadinejad more than 62% of the vote.

‘In the gutter’

Days of streets protests against the election results were violently suppressed, drawing international condemnation.

A letter to Intelligence Minister Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei posted on Mr Karroubi’s website says that "women were attacked with clubs and beaten and thrown in the gutters" during the protests.

"This is more painful in comparison to crimes committed by the Zionists against the oppressed people of Palestine… The Zionist aggressors have some reservations when it comes to confronting women."

Meanwhile activists have taken part in a "global day of action" on Iran.

Protests supported by leading groups such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International were held in many cities – including Sydney, Seoul, Geneva London, Brussels, Berlin, Dublin.

The demonstrators urged the Tehran authorities to free those arrested. Many held pictures of people they say remain in jail.

Some placards showed Neda Agha Soltan, the 27-year-old woman whose death was captured on a video that was posted on the Internet.

In Amsterdam, Iranian Nobel Peace prize laureate Shirin Ebadi called on the international community to reject the outcome of the election.

In Bishkek, the capital of the central Asian republic of Kyrgyzstan, nine human rights activists marching towards the Iranian embassy were detained and fined for illegally protesting.

Two days ago Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev won a second presidential term in an election criticised by foreign monitors.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Swine flu could hit up to 40 percent in US

ATLANTA — In a disturbing new projection, health officials say up to 40 percent of Americans could get swine flu this year and next and several hundred thousand could die without a successful vaccine campaign and other measures.

The est…

Swine flu could hit up to 40 percent in US

ATLANTA (AP) — In a disturbing new projection, health officials say up to 40 percent of Americans could get swine flu this year and next and several hundred thousand could die without a successful vaccine campaign and other measures.
The estimates by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are roughly twice the number of [...]

Amjad Atallah: The Obama-Likud Staredown: Who’s Going to Blink?

Let’s hope that the US does a better job in earning Israel’s respect than the Palestinians have in their negotiations thus far.

David Makovsky: Excerpt from Myths, Illusions and Peace: Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East

This is an excerpt from my new book, Myths, Illusions and Peace: Finding a New Direction for America in the Middle East, co-authored with Dennis…

‘Flesh-eating robot’ is vegetarian

It sounded like something pulled straight from a grisly scene in Terminator: an unstoppable military robot that powered itself by devouring everything in its path – including trees, grass and even, according to reports, dead bodies.

But after a string of headlines that labelled the machine a “corpse eater” and “creepy”, the robot’s creators have gone on a PR offensive to extinguish the rumour that their invention will feed on human or animal flesh.

The machine’s inventors say that the Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot – known as Eatr for short – does indeed power its “biomass engine” by digesting organic material, but that it is not intended to chomp its way through battlefields of fallen soldiers.

“We completely understand the public’s concern about futuristic robots feeding on the human population, but that is not our mission,” said Harry Schoell, the chief executive of Cyclone Power Technologies, one of the companies behind the machine.

“We are focused on demonstrating that our engines can create usable, green power from plentiful, renewable plant matter. The commercial applications alone for this earth-friendly energy solution are enormous.”

The remarkable move is in reaction to the buzz the project created when it emerged that it was already in the testing phase, thanks to funding from the Pentagon.

The concept was originally put forward in 2003, and has been pushed forward with money from the US military’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency, Darpa, a successor to the organisation that funded early development of the internet.

US officials hope that the steam-powered engine can be used by the military to create a self-sufficient robot that could survive on its own for months at a time. Possible uses put forward by the team include a battlefield ambulance or mobile gun turret.

The early version of Eatr runs on twigs, wood chips and other plant based material, fed into an engine that burns the material and uses it to propel itself around.

Another of the robot’s inventors, Dr Robert Finkelstein of Robotic Technology Inc (RTI), said that Eatr had built-in systems that would help it determine whether material that it ingested was animal, vegetable or mineral.

“If it’s not on the menu, it’s not going to eat it,” he told Fox News. “There are certain signatures form different kinds of materials that would distinguish vegetative biomass from other material.”

It can also use more conventional fuels, such as petrol, diesel or cooking oil, to keep going. But in a statement put out by the group, it reiterated that it would be illegal to create a robot that used dead bodies as an energy source.

“Descration of the dead is a war crime under Article 15 of the Geneva Conventions, and it is certainly not something sanctioned by Darpa, Cyclone or RTI.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


‘This will be our biggest pandemic’

As swine flu sweeps the planet, Margaret Chan, head of the World Health Organisation, tells how she is leading the battle against it – and the personal price she is paying

Although she would no doubt point out that swine flu should properly be called H1N1, there is something pleasing in the fact that the first thing Margaret Chan, director-general of the World Health Organisation, does when I enter her office is pick up a cut-out of a pig that has fallen on its face and carefully place it upright. A pink and gilt confection, it’s left over from celebrating the Chinese year of the pig in 2007: it was so cute, she says, that she couldn’t bear to throw it out.

A year earlier, Chan had been a surprise candidate in a surprise election (the previous incumbent died halfway through his term), but she won with a clear majority to become the first Chinese national to run a major UN agency. A rule change in 2005 (the WHO no longer has to beg states for information about threats to global health, but can just demand it) also makes her the most powerful public health official in history.

Tiny in her orange jacket and neat little orange-brown Miu Miu mules, she wears that authority not lightly, exactly, but naturally: in an organisation famed for its bureaucratic circumlocutions, she is refreshingly direct. It’s a strength she’s aware of – “I have a reputation for being a straight-talker, I will tell them the story like it is” – but that makes it no less striking, or true. (Also striking, for those who have witnessed it, is her penchant for bursting into song: she once punctured a tense moment at a summit about bird flu by singing a few lines of Getting To Know You, from The King and I.)

Months later, on 11 June 2009, she found herself the first WHO chief in 41 years to stand before the world and announce that a new virus had reached pandemic proportions. Right up until the last minute, scientists were calling her up and warning her to be careful about raising the threat alert so high — but the strict definition of “pandemic” is a new disease spreading uncontrollably through numerous countries, and on that count her decision has been completely borne out. On 11 June, swine flu had been registered in 74 countries; when we meet in Geneva four weeks later, it has just been confirmed in 140 countries.

Born in another year of the pig, 62 years ago, Chan began her career as a liberal arts graduate and a high school teacher of home economics, Chinese and English, but when her boyfriend moved to Canada to study medicine, she followed him. Finding that she still saw him very little, she applied to study medicine herself, in the same class. When they graduated they returned to Hong Kong, and in 1994 she was appointed as director of health there, with a staff of 7,000. Three years later, she faced a major outbreak of bird flu.

Chan learned then that clarity of communication is of utmost importance, and that over-reassurance can be as bad as no reassurance at all. She has in mind the (infamous in Hong Kong) moment when she was trying to tell people that it was still safe to eat chicken. “They asked me, ‘Do you eat chicken?’ and I said, ‘Yes, I do. I eat chicken every day.’” It’s the last sentence she regrets, because it is so patently undermining. No one would go on that kind of diet, right?

Her critics were not to know that it was, in fact, true: Chan did eat chicken every day, just as she has had a tuna sandwich every single lunchtime (barring official functions) for the five years she has lived in Geneva. Her job is so big, so unpredictable, that she says these fixed points are crucially important “to maintain my sanity”. So now it’s a tuna sandwich every day, and a session on a treadmill every morning.

But in Hong Kong the damage was done, and she eventually ordered a cull of all 1.5m chickens in the country. By the time the Sars epidemic came round in 2003, she was experienced and tough enough to have earned the nickname “Iron Lady”; although 299 people died in Hong Kong, and she was criticised in some quarters for being slow off the mark (she replied that she had found it hard to get accurate information from mainland China), most experts applauded her efficiency. She was headhunted to improve the WHO’s response to infectious disease threats because, as the then director-general told her, “You are the only person who has managed crises. I have many armchair experts. I need generals.”

Chan’s war has arrived with a vengeance. A 2007 WHO report, A Safer Future, estimated that a flu pandemic could affect more than 1.5 bn people, or 25% of the world’s population. Could swine flu be that big? “Quite likely. Quite likely. But it probably won’t happen in one run. It will probably come back [in two or three waves].”

How does she expect it to compare to other pandemics? “In terms of the number of countries affected and the number of people infected, this has got to be the biggest.”

Bigger than 1918? “If you’re talking about mortality then it’s different. 1918 is the biggest in terms of mortality. I would not like to make any predictions . . . I hope we don’t see the 1918 picture. But we should expect to see more people infected, and more severe cases coming up, including deaths.”

Swine flu is probably already much bigger than anyone knows. Ten days ago, only six countries in Africa had reported cases, but as Chan readily admits, this is rather misleading: until the WHO started sending out lab kits in early May, many developing countries had no means of testing for it. Furthermore, modelling suggests that swine flu has an attack rate of 30% — once it enters a country, the likelihood is 30% of citizens will catch it at some point.

In wealthy countries such as Britain, she observes, “The disease is self-limiting. Some even recover without medicine. But is it going to be the same in a country where they have a high proportion of people suffering from HIV? Or chronic malnutrition? Or diabetes? [all of which damage immune systems]?”

Pregnant women are among the groups most severely affected; already, every minute of every day, a woman dies in childbirth or pregnancy. Furthermore, unlike seasonal flu, H1N1 tends to affect previously healthy 30-50 year-olds; developing countries have large, young populations often living in crowded conditions.

As well as having no testing facilities, these countries will often have almost no access to antivirals such as Tamiflu. “Is it fair,” demands Chan, rhetorically, “for these countries to go into a pandemic empty-handed?” So she has gone, cap in hand, to the companies that produce them: Roche has just provided 5.6m free doses of antivirals, which Chan has dispatched to the developing world; she is angling for another 5-6m, and hopes they will soon come through.

“Vaccines are much more difficult,” she says with some understatement, “because of the limitations in production capacity.” Companies in Europe and North America, and a few small ones in Asia, are racing to make a vaccine to combat this new disease. “One should be available soon, in August. But having a vaccine available is not the same as having a vaccine that is proven safe. Clinical trial data will not be available for another two to three months.”

The process of acquiring a vaccine is already a salutary lesson in health inequality. “Most of the production capacity has already been booked up by wealthy countries. Again I have to ask the question: do the developing countries have to wait at the end of the queue? Because if that’s the case, they won’t have a vaccine for six months.”

So Chan is trying to persuade manufacturers to free up a percentage of their production capacity for developing countries – 10% is her modest request. “The most important thing is to have a supply of vaccine to protect, first and foremost, a functioning health system. It is always important to keep taking care of pregnant women, cancer patients, diabetics and so forth. And I’m also mindful that a certain amount of vaccine should be provided to countries so they can maintain a stable society — that they must vaccinate law enforcement officers, and fire brigades, for example. Making sure that society can function in a normal way.”

There is, of course, the caveat that swine flu has been “mild so far”. Many countries may opt not to vaccinate at all, or not to make it compulsory. But it is also the case that an estimated 250,000-500,000 people die every year from seasonal flu (not including those who die of respiratory failure or heart disease which hasn’t been traced back to an initial flu virus), and that the situation with swine flu could change at any moment. British scientists admitted this week that they were taken by surprise by swine flu’s sudden spread; Chan is aware that while it could work itself out with comparatively minimal damage, she could also suddenly find herself dealing with a far more virulent, more deadly mutation.

And that, of course, would be on top of the myriad other epidemics and crises currently demanding her attention; the massive health impacts of climate change, for example, which she is in no doubt “will be the defining issue of the 21st century”.

Declining food security will, she predicts, mean massive rises in people dying from malnutrition and diarrhoea, and probably more wars. More floods will mean more water contamination and issues with water security, and more deaths due to injuries and drowning. More waterlogged areas and changes in temperature will mean sharp rises in vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue fever.

“The prediction is that, within the next 10-20 years, food production in Africa will drop by 50%. If that’s the case, how many more people will go hungry? Remember that malnourished, stunted children cannot reach their education potential, which will have a massive social and economic impact.”

Chan worries, too, about massive rises in non-communicable diseases (cancer, diabetes, smoking-related illnesses) outside their traditional stamping grounds of the well-fed west. The trouble, from her point of view, is that these diseases attract nothing like the funds that, say, malaria or polio or HIV/AIDS do: “60-80% of the disease burden in developing countries is now due to so-called lifestyle diseases” – and yet, until the last two years when the Bloomberg and Gates foundations got in on the act, non-communicable diseases received no donor funds at all.

Then, of course, there are the ongoing battles — malaria (at least seven African regions have reduced deaths by half), polio, measles, HIV and TB, where another crisis of global proportions threatens: “The challenge is drug-resistant TB. And this is really huge. If it gets out of control,” Chan warns, “it will take us back to the pre-antibiotic era.”

And so her days begin at 7am, on her treadmill, and end hunched over her files late at night. Her husband opted not to come with her to Geneva (there would be nothing for him to do, and she travels frequently), so she lives alone in a flat five minutes’ walk away from WHO headquarters. She does not drive, and speaks so little French that when she first came she couldn’t even find a tin-opener in the shops.For 30 years her husband did all the cooking, so she had forgotten how – after a year and a half she fell ill with anaemia. Living apart from him for the first time in 50 years is taking its toll.

“I’m sorry!” she says, flapping her hands helplessly and wiping tears away. “When I talk about my husband . . . you know, he is so interesting, he is such a lovely man. I once said, ‘David, can I have a contract?’ He said, ‘What do you mean?’ I said, ‘Can I marry you again in the next life?’ It’s not easy. But it is the kind of sacrifice I think you have to make in the interests of global health.”

And it is a fixed term; she will be done in another two-and-a-half years. In the meantime, there are aeroplanes. The day after we met, Chan flew to Sharm-el-Sheikh to address the spouses of world leaders on maternal death rates; it was a brief stop on her way home to Hong Kong for a couple of weeks’ annual holiday. Although “with a pandemic,” Chan says wryly, “you can’t really be on leave” •

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Iraqi inquiry sees video of abuse

Baha Mousa and his family

A public inquiry into the death of an Iraqi civilian in British military custody six years ago is due to open.

Baha Mousa, 26, died during detention by soldiers from the former Queen’s Lancashire Regiment after his arrest at a Basra hotel with nine other Iraqis.

In 2007, a UK soldier was jailed for inhumane treatment and the Ministry of Defence has paid £2.8m in compensation.

The inquiry, led by Sir William Gage, will focus on the death, detainees’ treatment and British army methods.

The opening statement by Gerard Elias QC, counsel to the inquiry, is expected to take two weeks, and the entire inquiry about a year.

It will be divided into four modules which will examine:

  • The history of "conditioning" techniques used by UK troops while questioning prisoners from Northern Ireland in the early 1970s to the invasion of Iraq in March 2003
  • What happened to Mr Mousa and other Iraqi detainees
  • Training and the chain of command
  • Events since 2003 and any recommendations for the future

Mr Mousa was arrested at the Haitham Hotel in Basra, where he worked as a receptionist, on 14 September 2003.

SirWilliam Gage

British soldiers looking for weapons found assault rifles, pistols and suspected bomb-making equipment.

Hotel staff insisted the weapons were used for security but Mr Mousa and nine other Iraqi civilians were taken to a detention centre under suspicion of being insurgents.

Two days later Mr Mousa was dead. A post-mortem examination showed he suffered asphyxiation and had at least 93 injuries to his body, including fractured ribs and a broken nose.

After an initial investigation by the Royal Military Police, a six-month court martial followed with seven soldiers facing war crimes charges relating to Mr Mousa’s death.

In April 2007, all but one were cleared on all counts at Bulford Camp in Wiltshire, but Cpl Donald Payne, 36, was jailed for a year and dismissed from the Army.

Sleep deprivation

He also became the UK’s first convicted war criminal under the International Criminal Court Act.

The court martial revealed confusion among military officers about whether "conditioning" techniques – the "softening up" of prisoners before interrogation – were lawful or not.

Methods can include hooding, depriving detainees of sleep, as well as making them stand with knees bent and hands outstretched.

Prosecutors told the court martial the techniques were banned under the Geneva Convention but soldiers said they were common practice within some military units in Basra in 2003.

In July last year the MoD agreed to pay £2.83m in compensation to the families of Mr Mousa and the nine other men detained with him.

Attorney General Baroness Scotland has ruled that any soldiers giving evidence to the inquiry will be immune from disciplinary action even if it suggests they have lied or withheld information previously.

Their own testimony also cannot be used to decide whether to prosecute them but evidence from other witnesses could still lead to criminal proceedings.

Nearly all British troops were withdrawn from Iraq this summer.</p


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McDonald’s moves HQ to Switzerland

US fast-food chain will relocate to Geneva to take advantage of Swiss intellectual property tax laws

McDonald’s is shifting its European headquarters to Geneva, in a snub to the European Union, to benefit from Switzerland’s advantageous intellectual property tax laws.

The US fast-food chain is joining other foreign companies that have moved their European headquarters to a more favourable tax regime. US corporations that have based themselves in Switzerland include Kraft, Procter & Gamble, Colgate-Palmolive, Yahoo! and Google.

McDonald’s said its new European head office would be opened in Geneva before the end of the year. It will bring together all senior management, who are spread across four regional centres: London, Paris, Munich and Vienna. The company’s European president, Denis Hennequin, who until now has split his time between London and Paris, will be among the executives making the move to Geneva.

The four regional centres will remain open and the UK’s business will continue to be run from London by Steve Easterbrook.

A spokeswoman for McDonald’s said the move “will enable us to conduct the strategic management of key international intellectual property rights, which includes the licensing of those rights to McDonald’s franchisees in Europe, from Switzerland”.

She said the decision was “a long time in the planning” and was first announced internally in August 2008, denying that it was related to new UK tax rules that took effect at the start of the month.

The recent changes to the taxation of foreign profits relate to intellectual property rights such as patents, copyrights and trademarks. They have already prompted the publishing and conference group Informa to relocate its tax domicile out of the UK to Switzerland to escape “double taxation” – once abroad and again in Britain.

Under the new UK tax rules, the earnings companies receive from their overseas subsidiaries relating to “real” economic activity involving trade in goods and services will not be taxed by the UK authorities. But income derived from intellectual property rights does not fall into this category and will be taxed by HM Revenue & Customs, even if it has already been taxed overseas.

Other companies have recently moved from Britain to lower tax regimes such as Ireland, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. The list includes the advertising giant WPP, drugs group Shire, publishing company United Business Media, rented office group Regus, financial groups Henderson, Brit Insurance and Hiscox, and engineering firm Charter.

As part of governments’ efforts to stem corporate tax avoidance, there are moves under way to force multinational companies to reveal how much tax they pay in each jurisdiction they operate in.

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