Red

Red

Red

1 October 2006Review

New Internationalist 2006; ISBN 1 904456 48 0; £8.99.

A veteran of the anti-roads movement, Jo Wilding first travelled to Iraq in August 2001 as part of the UK anti-sanctions movement, returning in February 2003 to witness the (re)invasion and then again in November 2003 to tour the country with the circus of the title. In April 2004 she was one of a tiny handful of internationals to witness the US siege of Fallujah first-hand, riding an ambulance in the city (over 300 women and children were killed during the siege as fighter bombers attacked…

1 September 2005News

"When I pass protesters every day at Downing Street, and believe me, you name it, they protest against it, I may not like what they call me, but I thank God they can. That's called freedom." (Tony Blair, 7 April 2002.)

Eleven people charged with taking part in "unauthorised" demonstrations in the new anti-protest zone around Parliament (which came into effect on 1 August) intend to challenge the zone's legality when their case(s) come to trial later this year. Meanwhile, the courts…

1 December 2003Review

Bush in Babylon: The recolonisation of Iraq, Verso 2003, ISBN 1 85984 583 5, £13. Regime Unchanged: Why the War on Iraq Changed Nothing, Pluto Press 2003, ISBN 0 7453 21992, £10.99

Tariq Ali has delved deep into the scholarship on 20th century Iraq to produce his provocative and timely book Bush in Babylon, which takes as its focus the history of Iraqi resistance to the British empire and what this suggests for the future.

Whilst polemical in tone the book is never less than engaging - though the reader should be warned that Ali often asserts interesting claims without providing his sources. Hopefully Bush in Babylon will inspire Ali's readers to delve…