Australian
Senate Passes No Confidence Vote on Iraq
Canberra, Feb. 5 2003 (VOA News) -- Australian Prime
Minister John Howard has suffered a historic defeat
in the upper house of Parliament over his handling
of the Iraq crisis. Opposition parties passed a motion
of no-confidence in the government, illustrating the
deepening divide in Australia over the country's involvement
in any war in the Gulf.
It
is the first time in more than 100 years an Australian
prime minister has suffered a vote of no-confidence
in the Senate. The motion condemns the government's
decision to deploy troops to the Persian Gulf in preparation
for war.
Australia
and Britain are the only countries so far to join
the United States in moving troops to the Middle East
as the build-up toward a war with Iraq continues.
Senators
from the main Labor opposition combined with the leftwing
Greens, Democrats and Independents on Wednesday to
pass the no-confidence vote by 34-31.
The
Senate also declared its opposition to an attack on
Iraq by the United States and its allies, including
Australia, and insisted the disarmament of Iraq should
only proceed under the authority of the United Nations.
The
no-confidence motion is an embarrassment to the conservative
administration and is a symbolic victory for the opposition.
It does not, however, carry any legislative authority
and does not weaken Mr. Howard's position as prime
minister.
There
is more unease for the Howard government on a leaked
diplomatic correspondence between Australia and New
Zealand, which suggests the prime minister has already
committed his forces to a war in Iraq.
Mr.
Howard has denied the allegations, claiming the memo
refers to Australian navy vessels patrolling an exclusion
zone in the Gulf.
The
Labor leader Simon Crean is not convinced. He thinks
an e-mail from the mother of a serviceman aboard the
HMAS Kanibla, a navy ship heading to the Persian Gulf,
proves Australia has been ready for war for months.
"The
mother of one of the troops on the Kanibla has just
blown him out of the water in that regard," he
said. "She says that the preparations for the
deployment in relation to the Gulf and support for
a war in the Gulf was taking place back in September
and October."
On
Tuesday, Prime Minister Howard told Parliament that
military action was the only language Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein could understand and it is time the
international community deals with the threats his
regime poses to the rest of the world.
The
United States says Iraq has been developing weapons
of mass destruction in violation of United Nations
resolutions and the terms of its 1991 surrender in
the Gulf War. Washington says that Baghdad must disarm
or risk military attack.
--
Phil Mercer - Voice of America in Sydney
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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