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» BNW : Biafra Nigeria World Message Board: the Voice of a New Generation » BNW News, Current Events, and Politics Forums » The Great Forum » We are now a client state

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Author Topic: We are now a client state
Sylva
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We are now a client state

quote:
Britain has by now lost its sovereignty to the United States and has become a client state. As Tony Blair flies in to Washington today to be patted on the head by the US Congress, this is the sad truth behind his visit. No surprise, therefore, that the planned award to him of a congressional medal of honour for backing the US invasion of Iraq has been postponed. To be openly patronised in that way, under the circumstances, would be just too embarrassing.
quote:
Sir Rodric Braithwaite, former head of the joint intelligence committee and former ambassador to Moscow, published earlier this year a little-noticed but devastating analysis in a small highbrow magazine, Prospect, of the price we are now paying to the US in loss of sovereignty
quote:
Of the Tomahawks purchase, he wrote: "The systems which guide them and the intelligence on which their targeting depends are all American. We could sink the Belgrano on our own. But we cannot fire a cruise missile except as part of an American operation."
In Nigeria, free an fair elections would produce a president that is people-oriented, accountable to the nation, not liable to use the police to overthrow the governors, etc. Under such conditons, Nigeria/Africa would go a long way to reducing the gap between the continent and most developed countries, the latter depending on the US for everything, including their defence. This would prevent some of those deveoped countries coming to Africa to "make guy".

quote:
The third awkward fact is that Britain cannot expel the US from its bases on British territory, or control what it does there. Some, such as RAF Fairford, are well known - surrounded by armed guards as the huge B52s roared off nightly to bomb Baghdad. Others are remote, particularly Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, where any British citizen who attempts a landing will rapidly find himself arrested. The bases are given bogus British names - such as RAF Fairford or RAF Croughton - because Britain is ashamed of all this. "The British have never questioned the purposes for which the Americans use these bases," Braithwaite wrote. "The agreements which govern them leave us little scope to do so. It is yet another derogation from British sovereignty."
Anybody nation that advocates foreign presence in Nigeria should opt out of the country. It is better to educate African masses so that they would oppose to foreign occupation.

quote:
The sixth fact is that Britain cannot protect its citizens from US power. Blair faces an outcry as he flies into America because the US refuses to return two British prisoners for a fair trial; rather, they have to face a Kafkaesque court martial at Guantanamo Bay.

Blunkett agreed that the UK would extradite Britons to the US in future, without any need to produce prima facie evidence that they are guilty of anything. But the US refused to do the same with their own citizens. The Home Office press release concealed this fact - out of shame, presumably. Why did the US refuse? According to the Home Office, the fourth amendment of the US constitution says citizens of US states cannot be arrested without "probable cause". The irony appears to have been lost on David Blunkett, as he gave away yet more of Britain's sovereignty. If we really were the 51st state, as anti-Americans imply, we would probably have more protection against Washington than we do today.

Bola Ige, under Obasanjo's administration signed an agreement to extradite Nigerians to the US without the US doing the same. It is no longer a bilateral relationship and Nigerians should oppose to it.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,999605,00.html [/QUOTE]

[ July 19, 2003, 06:17 AM: Message edited by: Sylva ]

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1) Everything you can imagine is real->Picasso

2) They taught you the praises of their God, and these hosannas, when tuned into your sorrows, gave you the hope of a better world to come-->Patrice Lumumba

Posts: 379 | Registered: Apr 2003  |  IP: Logged
   

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