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Nobel
laureate says 9/11 not as bad as IRA attacks
Foreign Desk Report
MADRID—Nobel prize winning author Doris Lessing said in an interview
published Sunday that the September 11 attacks had not been “so bad”
when compared to Irish Republican Army action. “September 11 was
terrible, but if one re-examines the history of the IRA, what happened
in the United States wasn’t so bad,” Lessing, who captured this year’s
Nobel literature prize told Spain’s leading El Pais daily.
The IRA waged a lengthy armed struggle against British rule in Northern
Ireland. It declared an end to its armed campaign in 2005. “Some
Americans believe I’m crazy. Many people died, two prominent buildings
fell, but it was neither as terrible nor so extraordinary as they
think,” Lessing said of the 2001 attacks in New York and Washington in
which about 3,000 people were killed. In similarly pointed remarks in
the Spanish translation, she described former prime minister Tony Blair
as a “little showman” who proved disastrous for Britain and US President
George W. Bush as a “world calamity.” “Everyone is weary of this man.
Either he is stupid or he is very clever,” Lessing said of Bush adding
that the US leader came from “a social class which has profited from
wars”.
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