Friday 12 April 1991

SAFE HAVEN IS ONLY OPTION

Tribune leader, 12 April 1991

The Labour leadership is right to give a qualified welcome to John Major's plan for a "safe haven" for Iraqi Kurds in northern Iraq.

Mr Major's initiative deserves a welcome because a safe area to which the Kurds can escape, protected by the international community, is an urgent necessity. The Kurds cannot be left to Saddam Hussein's bombers, tanks, helicopter gunships and death squads, and Turkey and Iran cannot cope with the influx of refugees from Kurdistan. As Kurdish opposition spokesmen have said, a "safe haven" inside Iraq is the only option left.

This said, the Major plan is not perfect. This is not for the reasons that the United States has put forward - that it involves an unwarranted interference in internal Iraqi affairs, and that a "safe haven" could be seen by Kurds as the nucleus of an independent Kurdish state, thus threa­tening the territorial integrity of Iraq and ultimately destabilising the whole region.

The world has a perfect right to interfere in the internal affairs of a state hi which a people is threatened with extermination by a brutal fascist dictator. Nor should the world community object if a safe haven is seen by the Kurds as a basis of a state of their own: the Kurds have as much right to their own state as anyone else. The status quo is not worth defending just because it is the status quo.

No, the main problem with Mr Major's initiative is that it is unclear. Mr Major has given few indications of the size of the proposed "safe haven", how it would be enforced against Iraqi opposition, possibly armed, how it would be administered and how long it would continue to exist. Of course, the urgent priority now is simply to provide sanctuary for the Curds - which means getting George Bush to agree to the plan hi principle. But the details are important. The last thing the Kurds need to wind up with after all their suffering is their own Gaza Strip.

SOCCER ON THE SLIDE

The decision of the Football Association to create a breakaway 18-member Premier League in England is bad news for all except the biggest clubs, who already dominate the game to an unacceptable degree. It is perhaps true that, if fewer league games were played, the England team could field fresher players. But England play a handful of matches every year and it is absurd to reduce still further the already slim chance of most clubs to make the big time merely in order to give England managers an easier life.

The Football League as currently constituted works reasonably well, allowing good teams to move up the divisions quickly and letting poor teams sink fast. With just one team being relegated and replaced in the prop­osed Premier League, the excitement of English football will be significantly reduced.

The best that can be said for the FA's proposal is that it is not as bad as a completely exclusive 10-member or 12-member "superleague", which is what the big clubs really want. But that is not saying much.