(April 2, 2003) A reporter questioning Ari Fleischer about the Iraq situation, asked: "Does the President have a feeling on what should be done with Iraq’s debt?
Analysis: Russia-U.S. ties strained by war
(April 2, 2003) Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov is quoted to the thorny issue of Iraq’s $7.5 billion debt to Russia, admitting for the first time that "Saddam is neither friend nor brother to us, and he will never repay (Iraq’s) debts to us."
A clean slate for Iraq
(March 31, 2003) A recent New Yorker article endorsed Probe International’s position on Iraq’s odious debts, articulated in a National Post opinion piece on Feb. 12, 2003, by Larry Solomon and Probe International’s Pat Adams.
A war for France’s oil – The real reason Chirac backed Saddam
(March 29, 2003) Iraq makes a new exhibit for the argument that natural resources are more a curse than blessing. Since his earliest days, Saddam has channeled the country’s oil revenue through his personal accounts and used it to amass weapons and buy off supporters.
Liberation means freedom from debt
(March 29, 2003) Dr. Eric Herring argues that the liberation of the Iraqi people means freedom.
Africa debates odious debt
(March 19, 2005) A non-binding resolution passed by Nigeria’s House of Representatives last week to halt payments on the country’s $35 billion external debt has provoked some strong responses.
A forum on the Chalillo dam controversy in Belize
(March 13, 2003) On March 13, 2003, people on all sides of the Chalillo dam controversy will discuss the legal actions in Belize and the implications for Canadian public policy and governance of Canadian companies investing outside Canada.
Advancing the Odious Debt Doctrine
(March 11, 2003) McGill University legal scholars have completed an investigation into the Doctrine of Odious Debts, and concluded that it is both “morally compelling” and “relatively well supported under international law”.
Iraq strengthens air force with French parts
(March 7, 2003) France now has an estimated $4 billion in debts owed to it by Iraq as a result of arms sales and infrastructure construction projects. The debt is another reason U.S. officials believe France is opposing military force to oust Saddam.
The strange case of Falluja 2
(March 6, 2003) According to the Guardian, confidential files reveal Tory ministers’ roles in the approval of a gas-producing facility in Iraq and plans to hide it from the U.S.
How deal got the green light despite nerve gas warning
(March 6, 2003) From 1982 on, Saddam Hussein was filling an arsenal of shells and bombs with mustard gas and nerve agents at his main chemical munitions complex, Muthanna, in the desert 50 miles north-west of Baghdad.
Britain’s dirty secret
(March 6, 2003) A chemical plant was secretly built by Britain in 1985 behind the backs of the Americans. Ministers in the then Thatcher government secretly gave financial backing to the British company involved, Uhde Ltd, through insurance guarantees.
U.K. export credit agency secretly funded Iraqi chemical weapons plant
(March 1, 2003) Earlier this year, journalist David Leigh documented the fascinating story of how a chemical plant the U.S. identified as a key component in Iraq’s chemical warfare arsenal, was secretly built by Britain in 1985 with financial backing from the government’s export credit agency, Export Credits Guarantee Department. The British taxpayer was forced to write a compensation cheque for ?00,000 to the German-owned company after final checks on the plant, completed in May 1990, were interrupted by the outbreak of the Gulf war.
Apartheid South Africa as a Case Study for Cancellation of Illegitimate Debt
(March 1, 2003) It is the illegitimate nature of the apartheid regime and the odious nature of the apartheid system that defines the illegitimacy of the apartheid debt.
U.S. geotechnical expert says AMEC studies ‘inaccurate and incomplete’
(February 21, 2003) This means that the designers lack the information on which to provide an assuredly satisfactory and safe structure.


