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Showing posts with label event. Show all posts
Showing posts with label event. Show all posts

Friday, July 04, 2008

"Jury acquits Bangor Six"

{This post, from Janet M Eaton via Laura Savinkoff at the Boundary Peace Initiative suggests that the trial of the Bangor Six "may show respect for dissent." This is no open and shut case, as the article makes clear. But it should be understood in the context of another jury trial about protest against another war in which the Raytheon Six were exonerated.

Back in the days when I taught workshops in civil disobedience, I took three basic pre-requisites from Thoreau's essay on the subject: Before you act against the law, 1) You must exhaust all other avenues of recourse; 2) The law you are breaking must be a wicked law, not just a disagreeable one; and 3) You have to accept responsibility for the consequences of your actions.

Donaldson's article makes it clear that the protesters met the first criterion. The possibility that local law required the breaking of an international one suggests that the second criterion was also met though probably not all would agree. That the Six went to trial and did not flee or attempt to flee implies that the third criterion was met too. Since the protesters appear to have made an effort to meet all three of these criteria, the argument that they broke the law and that is all there is to it, simply ignores the facts.

Arguably more important, the Raytheon case and the Bangor case demonstrate that the spirit of the millions of people who poured into the streets in January, February and March 2003 to oppose the war in Iraq, although it was betrayed over and over again by gutless governments practically everywhere, including "democratically-elected" ones, that spirit is alive and well on juries from Ireland to Maine. Evidence suggests it is also alive in embattled democratic movements in Egypt, Turkey, Pakistan, Indonesia, Spain, Israel and the Occupied Territories as well. It may even be alive in Canada, Australia, the UK. -jlt]

In late April, six peace activists stood victorious in front of Maine's Penobscot County Superior Court. ..A jury had acquitted them on criminal trespass charges for failing to obey a police request that they end their sit-in protest at the closing of U.S. Sen. Susan Collins' office in the Margaret Chase Smith Federal Building.

These men, dubbed the "Bangor Six," believed that the Constitution was being violated by the Bush administration's involvement in Iraq and sought redress of their grievances as provided by the First Amendment. They were protesting President Bush's proposal to increase U.S. combat troops in Iraq to support a military effort known as the "surge." Unanimously, the jury decided in the protesters' favor.

This unanimous verdict that freed six protesters of trespassing charges may show respect for dissent.

Surprisingly, this precedent-setting case remains below the national radar, even though it's not the first time that Maine anti-war activists have stepped up to the plate.

fyi-janet


===============================

Leigh Donaldson, "Has Maine Set a Precedent on Anti-War Protests? A unanimous verdict that freed six protesters of trespassing charges may show respect for dissent," Portland Press Herald, June 30, 2008.


In late April, six peace activists stood victorious in front of Maine's Penobscot County Superior Court.

A jury had acquitted them on criminal trespass charges for failing to obey a police request that they end their sit-in protest at the closing of U.S. Sen. Susan Collins' office in the Margaret Chase Smith Federal Building.

It should be noted that six other protestors also had been arrested, but pleaded no contest, paid fines and were released.

These men, dubbed the "Bangor Six," believed that the Constitution was being violated by the Bush administration's involvement in Iraq and sought redress of their grievances as provided by the First Amendment.

According to several e-mails in response to a related article that appeared in the Bangor Daily News, actual trial witnesses stated that all of the defendants took the stand and expressed their opinions regarding their actions and the Iraq war in a calm, deliberate manner.

They were protesting President Bush's proposal to increase U.S. combat
troops in Iraq to support a military effort known as the "surge."

Universally, they asserted that they had made numerous attempts to communicate directly with Sen. Collins, to no avail. Their consensus was that the Constitution prevailed over local ordinances.

The jury was instructed to set aside their feelings about the war, and
was also allowed to consider whether or not the defendants believed they had "license and privilege" to consciously choose to break Maine law because they thought international law had been violated.

Unanimously, the jury decided in the protesters' favor.

Surprisingly, this precedent-setting case remains below the national radar, even though it's not the first time that Maine anti-war activists have stepped up to the plate.

According to Pax Christi Maine, a Catholic peace movement affiliate, "There have (to date) been 25 peace activists arrested at Sen. Collins' Bangor office and 36 arrested at Sen. Olympia Snowe's office since the beginning of the (Iraq) war."

Local opposition to the "Bangor Six" and other war protesters remains alive and kicking in Maine, despite controversial statements made by Penobscot County District Attorney Christopher Almy, who expressed to the Bangor Daily News his belief that this verdict was an indicator of Mainers' disgust toward the Iraq "debacle."

Almy and others have since suggested that these types of cases might be handled differently in the future, perhaps within the federal court system.

Along with widespread praise, these men have had to withstand rigorous
public scrutiny. They have been challenged as being draft dodgers with too much free time, typical liberal elites and so on.

Interestingly, at least two of the six are war veterans, including Dud
Hendrick, a Naval Academy graduate and former Air Force officer who volunteered for two tours in Vietnam and who now teaches peace studies at the University of Maine at Orono, and Doug Rawlings, a veteran of combat in Vietnam and an active member of Veterans for Peace.

Other arrested advocates include a college professor, retired school-teacher, a college administrator, a farmer, a carpenter and a nationally known artist.

A prevailing complaint is that, in the eyes of some, these people simply broke the law and should be punished. In their opinion, doing something illegal to make a point doesn't hold water. Trespassing on government property is illegal. Period.

Opponents to this view might suggest that government buildings belong to all Americans, and, as taxpaying citizens we have the right to express our convictions on these properties.

My mind takes me to those 12 selected citizens who arrived at this unanimous verdict. There is no way on Earth to pick 12 people who agree about anything. Consensus is the order of the day in the courtroom.

The reality is that in general, human beings don't like the idea of being arrested for voicing their opinions. Nor do they appreciate being cordoned off to a "protest area" far removed from the officials who should hear their grievances.

Could this trial have been avoided? I think so. All these peaceful citizens were trying to do was express their concerns to elected representatives.

They were denied an opportunity to speak with them and then treated as
criminals.

Elected officials, in any office, are accountable to the people who put them there. And, the actions of peaceful objectors do not make them any less American or patriotic.

Public servants from all states must be more responsive to their constituents. They should not ignore the voices of any one of us, especially if they disagree with our views.

Leigh Donaldson is a Portland writer whose book about the antebellum African-American press in the Northeast is due for publication in 2009. He can be contacted at:leighd@lycos.com

Copyright © 2008 Blethen Maine Newspapers
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GE Free Kootenays hosts Percy Schmeiser

On July 10, 2008, G.E. Free Kootenays and Kootenay Food Strategy Society is hosting an evening with Percy Schmeiser.


A Classic David vs. Goliath Story


Percy Schmeiser is a farmer from Bruno, Saskatchewan whose fields were contaminated with a genetically engineered variety of canola in 1998. He has since been in several court battles with agribusiness giant Monsanto. Percy and his wife Louise are the recent recipients of the 2007 Right Livelihood Award “for their courage in defending biodiversity and farmers’ rights”.

Percy's most recent victory came after a 2.5 year battle, when in March 2008, Monsanto finally agreed to pay the $660 it cost Schmeiser to clean up the company’s patented plants from his farm. Percy and his wife Louise have been touring the world telling their amazing stories.

We are requesting support from like-minded businesses, and organizations to help support this event. The event will accommodate an information table for any information you would like to distribute or display to those in attendance.

The goals for G.E. Free Kootenays include primarily; education, protecting farmers, and providing alternatives for farmers and consumers. Time is of the essence regarding halting the proliferation of Genetically Engineered Foods.

This event will be used to launch the Kootenay Food Strategy Society's G.E. Free Kootenays campaign. - a sub-group of G.E. Free B.C. that will begin working to ensure that farmers in the Kootenay regions of B.C. will never have to endure the pressure and intimidation such as that faced by farmers like Percy Schmeiser. Most importantly, the campaign will ensure that viable alternatives are available to farmers currently growing G.E. crops.

Thursday July 10th 2008
Brilliant Cultural Centre
1876 Brilliant Road, Castlegar B.C.
7:00pm … Doors open 6:30, Admission by Donation


Please distribute the information in this announcement to your members or associates in order that they have the opportunity to attend this inspiring and educational event.

The event has already received support from Greenpeace, Society for a G.E. Free BC, Mountain Equipment Co-op, GE Free Solutions, Kootenay Co-op Radio, Kootenay Food Strategy Society, Deconstructing Dinner, West Kootenay EcoSociety, Wildsight, Kootenay Country Store Co-operative, and Canadian Biotechnology Action Network
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Nonviolent Conflict Intervention Training

[Some people really swear by this training. Seems like a good idea. Here in the Kootenays it is sponsored by hard-working social justice organizations. I pass it along for what it's worth. -jlt]

Nonviolent Peaceforce invites you to participate in a one day...

Nonviolent Conflict Intervention Training

Where: Brilliant Cultural Centre near Castlegar and Nelson, BC

When: Saturday, Aug. 23, 9AM-5PM

Cost: Workshop Fee $40, and by Donation

RSVP: Space is limited. Pre-register by contacting:

madelynmackay@hotmail.com, (250)-767-3005

The Nonviolent Conflict Intervention Training lets you explore how nonviolent methods can lessen or prevent conflict— in your daily life, in your community, and around the world. The NCI curriculum was developed by Nonviolent Peaceforce of North America (www.nonviolentpeaceforce.org and www.npcanada.org).



The one-day workshop is filled with hands-on exercises and role plays that will introduce you to:

  • Basic nonviolent communication and conflict resolution methods
  • How you can use these skills when you come across conflict in your daily life
  • How local and international peace teams use nonviolent strategies in larger conflicts.




To make a difference…

We believe that basic training in Nonviolent Conflict Intervention (NCI) Training should be as common as training in CPR. If someone has a heart attack, CPR can keep that person alive until the underlying cause of the attack can be addressed. NCI allows an individual, a relationship, or a community to survive without physical or emotional injury until the underlying cause of the conflict can be resolved.

Begin now…

The Nonviolence Conflict Intervention Training is open to everyone.

The fee for the workshop is $40 and by donation. The workshop fee covers materials and light snacks. Lunch is $8.

The training is a full day. We ask that participants commit to staying the entire day.

Co-sponsors: Nonviolent Peaceforce Canada, Kootenay Region United Nations Association, USCC Working Groups, Boundary Peace Initiative, Diversity Education Group, Voice of Women for Peace

Space is limited— please RSVP! Contact Madelyn Mackay at

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Saturday, June 07, 2008

Jenin Freedom Theater performs Arna's Children

Recommended by Sam Bahour at ePalestine


Dear friends,

If you are in the WASHINGTON D.C. or BALTIMORE area, I strongly recommend you take the chance to see Arna's Children -- heart-wrenching, but speaks volumes of the deep humanity that still exists in this world.

SALUTING CULTURE AS RESISTANCE as we approach 42yrs of Israeli military occupation,
Sam


THE JENIN FREEDOM THEATRE TODAY

JULIANO MER KHAMIS and DR. MERVAT AIASH
of the JENIN FREEDOM THEATRE present
CULTURE AS RESISTANCE

at the Amercian-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) Convention,
June 14-15


*****

Please join us at these public events in the Washington/Baltimore area:

WASHINGTON:

BUSBOYS AND POETS, 14th and V NW, Sun. June 15th, 7–9:00pm

Screening "Arna's Children", discussion and fundraiser in the Langston Room,
free admission

THE JERUSALEM FUND, 2425 Virginia Avenue, NW, Mon. June 16th, 6:30-8:30pm
Dinner and discussion, $25 admission

BALTIMORE:

MISSION HELPERS CENTER, 1001 W. Joppa Road, Towson, MD, Tue.
June 17th, 7pm

Screening "Arna's Children", discussion and fundraiser, free admission
Sponsored by Baltimore Tikkun, Mission Helpers of the Sacred Heart,
AFSC Baltimore Urban Peace Program, and the Morgan State University
Muslim Students Association


*****


JULIANO MER KHAMIS is a Palestinian Israeli; Jew, Arab, actor, director and political activist born in Israel to an Arab father and a Jewish mother. His film "Arna's Children" is a moving and critically praised documentary about the children's theater founded in the Jenin refugee camp by his late mother Arna—and the fate of 3 of the young troupe members.

"Speechless. Silent. I cannot move. I just sit here, watching the screen, reading the names of Arna's children."
—Arjan El Fassed, The Electronic Intifada

DR. MERVAT AIASH, professor of fine arts at the Arab American University in Jenin, is Chairperson of the Board of The Freedom Theatre. She provides an important leadership model and is a link between the theater and the university community. She understands the role of culture and the arts as social development, healing and resistance to the occupation.

THE JENIN FREEDOM THEATRE was destroyed in 2002 by the Israeli Occupation Forces but in 2006 Juliano returned to Jenin to rebuild and renew Arna's work. The Jenin Freedom Theatre now runs a full program of computer skills, photography, acting, psychodrama, and visiting theatrical productions in the refugee camp. Plans are underway for an accredited drama school to begin in the fall. See www.thefreedomtheatre.org for more information.

For more information or to schedule an interview,
contact Dorothy Zellner, Friends of the Jenin Freedom Theatre
at dorothyzellner@gmail.com or 917 439 3470
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Saturday, May 31, 2008

Global Security Institute, Spring newsletter table of contents

Disarmament and Peace Education Activities

* India Celebrates 20 years of the Rajiv Gandhi Plan
* Overcoming Nuclear Dangers Conference, Harvard University
* GSI Board Member Christie Brinkley Receives Smart Cookie Award from Condé Nast
* Thinking Outside the Bomb: Action on nuclear weapons, the environment and health
* California State University lecture: Religious, ethical and legal dimensions of WMD
* Nobel Peace Laureates for a Better World, Haverford College
* Educating Students at the Model United Nations, New York
* American Bar Association Showcase Presentation with Richard Belzer
* Israeli Civil Society Experts Reach Out to International Community


Middle Powers Initiative Activities

* Article VI Forum, Dublin
* Advancing a Nuclear Weapons-Free NATO
* MPI Events at the NPT PrepCom, Geneva
* MPI Chairman’s Address to the IPPNW Congress, New Delhi
* Expert Seminar in Canada

Bipartisan Security Group Activities

* Letter to Congress Opposing RRW
* US-India deal: Advocacy for responsibility in nuclear trade
* Advocating for a High-Level Panel on Space Security
* Statement on Wall Street Journal op/ed

Parliamentarians for Nuclear Non-proliferation and Disarmament Activities

* NATO Parliamentary Assembly event
* PNND Co-Presidents' Statement on International Women's Day
* Pugwash, Parliamentarians and Political Will, July 10-12 2008
* PNND in Africa

Global Security Institute In the Media

* Jonathan Granoff on Air America Radio
* Radio, print and video features
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Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Judy Rebick, "Indigenous People Defending Their Land and Our Environment," May 25, 2008.

Recommended by Grant Clubine

Judy Rebick's ZSpace Page / ZSpace

On Monday May 26, Indigenous people will gather from across Ontario, including the remote North, on the lawns of Queen's Park to insist that governments and industry recognize their right to say no to mining and forestry on their lands. Travelling by bus and even by foot, they are coming to participate in four days of sacred ceremonies, teach-ins, drumming, music, readings and a mass rally that they are calling a Gathering of Mother Earth Protectors.

In a sign of what is to come Aboriginal people are not only standing up for their rights , they are defending the environment against unbridled industrial development. Across the Americas, from Brazil to Bolivia to the Boreal Forest in Northwestern Ontario, Indigenous people are leading the way to a more sustainable future and a more democratic political system that roots out the vestiges of colonialism. Here in Toronto environmentalists are joining with unions, students, churches, urban Aboriginal, children's rights, anti-poverty and immigrant groups to support them. All of us are working under the leadership of three Indigenous communities who have put themselves on the line to demand respect for their inherent rights and changes to the law to protect the environment. They are Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug , known as KI, Ardoch Algonguin First Nation and Grassy Narrows and they are willing to go to jail if necessary to protect the land for future generations.

Two of the three communities sponsoring the events have leaders in jail for contempt of court because they refused drilling on their land without permission. Retired Ardoch Algonquin chief and university professor Bob Lovelace was sentenced to six months in jail three months ago. He started a hunger strike last week and now is suffering solitary confinement.

Six leaders from the community of Kitchenuhmaykoosib Inninuwug, known as the KI Six, were also thrown in jail for peacefully opposing mineral exploration on their lands in the Boreal Forest (located 600km north of Thunder Bay). This isolated community has been completely devastated by the jailing of most of their leaders.

In an interview from jail with Indian Country Today Bob Lovelace said: "You know, the longer I sit in here, and the longer I think about these things, it irks me that really great minds of this generation have been wasted and just squandered on a relationship where colonialism runs the show."

While jailing of Indigenous activists is nothing new, this is the first time that a Chief In Council, Donny Morris of KI, the official leader of the community as recognized by the Indian Act, has been jailed for following the laws protecting Indigenous rights.

The excuse given by the Ontario government is the archaic Mining Act that places industrial development over everything. Mining companies are given automatic license to explore wherever they want without First Nations approval, without an environmental assessment, without even the permission of the owners of private property. Premier Dalton McGuinty under pressure from growing public support for Bob Lovelace and the KI Six has said he will amend the Mining Act. But requests for a moratorium on drilling so that the leaders can be released from jail have gone unheeded. In a sign of the pressure that the mining company Platinex is feeling they agreed to stop drilling until the appeal so that the KI 6 could come out of jail until their appeal on May 28th. The KI 6 will attend the rally.

In an interview from jail Chief Donny Morris said, "When you think of when the settlers first came, they tried to slaughter us. Why? For the mineral riches on our land like gold and now it is happening again. I have been thinking about what it means that non-Indians are organizing all this support for us. I am thinking about that a lot here. I haven't seen this kind of thing in the past. It's like all of you are becoming Indians. The Canadian government tried to assimilate us for generations and now it is the opposite that is happening. You are all starting to think like us about the earth."

Grassy Narrows, who have been waging a decades long battle to protect their land from clear cutting and their water from mercury poisoning, are joining the other two communities in sponsoring the Gathering. Twenty-two young people from Grassy Narrows will arrive in Toronto on Monday at the end of an 1800 km walk from Kenora they are calling the Protecting the Earth Walk.

The four days of activities will start with a welcome rally late Monday afternoon at Queen's Park and culminate in a march to recognize the Aboriginal Day of Action called by the Assembly of First Nations.


Judy Rebick and Judy Finlay are both professors at Ryerson University with a long history supporting social justice and equality for women and children.Recommend this Post


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Wednesday, May 14, 2008

National Day of Mourning, April 28, 2008

Recommended by George Richards at Kootenay Region Branch of the UNAC (KRUNA)

[A week late, but always relevant. -jlt]

From the Canadian Labour Congress website

The CLC first marked the event in 1984 and since then has grown into a worldwide event observed by unions, central labour bodies, labour councils, municipalities and national governments. The Day of Mourning or Workers Memorial Day, as it is called in Europe, is observed in over a hundred countries worldwide. It has been formerly endorsed by the International Trade Union Congress. Several countries are in the process of formally recognizing the Day, following Canada's example in 1991.

Read the CLC statment for 2008 =>



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Friday, May 02, 2008

Bridge of Return

[For those in or near Montréal. -jlt]

Featuring Ilan Pappe, Ali Abunimah, Roland Chrisjohn and more...

May 2nd - May 4th: Bridge of Return
Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights (SPHR) 10th Anniversary Conference during the 60th year of ethnic cleansing in Palestine

FRI: "Zionist Apartheid and the One Country Solution"
SAT: "Native Solidarity from Here to Palestine"
SUN: "Boycott, Direct Action and Movement Building"

Full Schedule: http://www.sphr.org

*This Friday, May 2nd* Prof. Ilan Pappe and Ali Abunimah
7pm - Keynote Presentation: "Zionist Apartheid and the One Country
Solution" Opening Address by Rezeq Faraj
(McGill U. Leacock Building Room 132. 855 Sherbrooke Street W.)

Prof. Ilan Pappe was born in Haifa to German-Jewish parents who had fled Nazi persecution in the 1930s. He graduated from the Hebrew University in 1978, and obtained his D.Phil. from the University of
Oxford in 1984. He was the Academic Director of the Research Institute for Peace at Givat Haviva from 1993 to 2000, and is currently teaching at the University of Exeter in Britain. His early books dealt with Israeli policy in 1948, a subject he has returned to in his latest book, "The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine".

Ali Abunimah, a writer and commentator on Middle East affairs is the co-founder of Electronic Intifada. Abunimah makes the radical argument that what is needed is one state shared by Palestinians and Israelis in his book, One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse. His articles have appeared in The New
York Times, The Financial Times, The Jordan Times, Lebanon's Daily Star and Ha'aretz, among others. He was born in the United States and grew up in Europe. Both of his parents are originally from Palestine and he currently lives in Chicago.

Rezeq Faraj was born in Palestine before the 1948 Nakba and creation of the State of Israel. He grew up in the Dehiesha refugee camp near Bethlehem where family members still live. In 1966, after a stay in Europe, Rezeq Faraj arrived in Canada. After 28 years in teaching, he retired in March 2003. Rezeq Faraj is the author of the book, Palestine: le refus de disparaître. He is the co-founder of Palestinian and Jewish Unity (PAJU) in Montreal.

*Saturday, May 3rd* Dr. Roland Chrisjohn, Laith Marouf and Jamila Ghadar
7pm - Plenary: "Native Solidarity from Here to Palestine"
(Concordia U., Room H-937, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W.)

Dr. Roland Chrisjohn is a member of the Oneida Nation of the Confederacy of the Haudenausaunee (Iroquois). He received his Ph. D. in 1981 from the University of Western Ontario in Personality and Psychometrics, and obtained certification as a Clinical Psychologist in 1986. He has been involved in indigenous affairs in Canada for over 30 years, participating in a variety of ways in different aspects of
the struggle. He has worked with Aboriginal young offenders, women's organization, prisoner's associations, family and children services, and suicide intervention programs. He has written more than 50 articles on a variety of subjects, and is author of The Circle Game: Shadows and Substance in the Indian Residential School Experience in Canada (Theytus Press, 1997). Dr. Chrisjohn is currently working on one book on Racism in Canada and another on Suicide.

Laith Marouf majored in Political Science at Concordia University in Montreal where he held the office of VP Internal at the Concordia Student Union (2001). He is currently the Chapter Coordinator at SPHR-National and also is the Executive Producer of CKUT's "Under the Olive Tree" - eastern Canada's only Palestinian community radio show. Since visiting the Grassy Narrow Blockade on Ojibway land in the winter of 2003, he has traveled as a media activist to Native communities across Canada.

Jamila Ghadar is a founding member of
SPHR at McMaster University. She has been a vocal member of her Arab community in London, Ontario. She also was among members of SPHR who mobilized in support of Six Nations struggles.

*Saturday, May 4th* Prof. Margaret Aziza Pappano, Prof. Salem Valley,
Dana Olwan, and Adam Hanieh
5pm - Closing plenary: "Boycott, Direct Action and Movement Building"
(Concordia U., Room H-110 , 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. W.)

Prof. Margaret Aziza Pappano is an Associate Professor of English at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario; her specialty is medieval literature. In 2006 she visited the West Bank as part of the institute, "Connecting Dearborn and Jerusalem," sponsored by the Center for Arab American Studies at the University of Michigan-Dearborn.

Prof. Salem Valley is a South African activist and a former regional executive member of the high school South African Student's Movement (SASM). He is the chairperson of the Palestine Solidarity Committee and the Anti-War Coalition in South Africa. Vally is currently a visiting scholar at the School of Social Sciences at York University in Toronto.

Dana Olwan (PhD '09 ) is national chair of Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights and is an active member of the SPHR chapter on her campus. She is currently teaching in the English Department at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. She is a 5th year PhD student in the English Department

Adam Hanieh is a graduate student at York University, Toronto, and co-author of Stolen Youth: The Politics of Israel's Detention of Palestinian Children (Pluto Press, 2004). His research interests include the political economy of neo-liberalism, and Middle East politics. He is currently active with the Coalition Against Israeli
Apartheid.

Full Schedule: http://www.sphr.org
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Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Event: Luis Arce, "Bolivia's Economy: Challenges and Successes in the post-IMF era"

In the past two years, Bolivia has engaged in the re-nationalization of its natural resources, let its IMF agreement expire, and has now completed negotiations on a new Constitution. At the same time, a vocal minority of wealthy elites have objected to many of these changes - particularly to the attempted re-distribution of natural gas and oil revenues among various departments - and have made various secessionist demands upon on the federal government. Because of its status as poorest country in South America, its powerful social movements, and unique political scenario, the future of economic development and stability in Bolivia have larger implications for the region.

The Center for Economic and Policy Research is sponsoring an event featuring Bolivia's Minister of Finance, Luis Arce on

Bolivia's Economy: Challenges and Successes in the post-IMF era

with Mark Weisbrot, economist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research

Monday, April 14, 2008
11:00 am - 12:00 pm

at the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Conference Center
1800 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036

If you are going to be in the Washington, DC area and would like to attend, the event is free and open to the public. Please RSVP here.
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Friday, February 08, 2008

The largest discussion on homelessness and poverty in Canada marks 6 years, CKUT (Montreal)

poster

This year's Homelessness Marathon will broadcast live from the streets of Montreal on Wednesday, February 20th, starting at sunset and running all night long until sunrise on Thursday, February 21st.

What is the Homelessness Marathon?

The sixth annual Homelessness Marathon will once again serve up 14-hours of people-powered radio, broadcasting from outside of the Native Friendship Center of Montreal (St. Laurent & Ontario) beginning at sunset. With the goal of being a consciousness-raising event, the Marathon will provide an opportunity for homeless people & their supporters to take to the airwaves, and allow a nationwide discussion on homelessness issues and possible solutions. The Homelessness Marathon is annually carried by more than 30 radio stations. Listeners are invited to call-in with their questions or comments toll-free at 1.866.763.4136.

2008 Topics

Set to broadcast WED February 20th, 5pm (EST)

:: HOUR/HEURE 1, 5pm / 17h - Homelessness by Numbers / L'itinérance en chiffres

:: HOUR/HEURE 2, 6pm / 18h - Disabilities in the streets / Être sans-abri avec un handicap physique

:: HOUR/HEURE 3, 7pm / 19h - Indigenous Hour / L'Heure autochtone

:: HOUR/HEURE 4, 8pm / 20h - Les réfugiéEs dans la rue / Refugees and homelessness

:: HOUR/HEURE 5, 9pm / 21h - A critical look at services / Un regard critiques sur les services communautaires

:: HOUR/HEURE 6, 10pm / 22h - Poverty on the move - from downtown to the suburbs / La chasse aux pauvres, du centre-ville aux quartiers aux banlieues

:: HOUR/HEURE 7, 11pm / 23h - theater in the streets / Théâtre dans la rue

:: HOUR/HEURE 8, Midnight / Minuit - OPEN MIC Rants, Poetry, and Music on the Streets / MICRO OUVERT Declamations, chialage, poésie et musique sur la rue avec/with CKUTs Off the Hook

:: HOUR/HEURE 9, 1am / 01h - Policing poverty / Judiciarisation de la pauvreté

:: HOUR/HEURE 10, 2am / 02h - racisme et pauvreté dans la rue / racism and poverty in the street

:: HOUR/HEURE 11, 3am / 03h - literacy and education in the streets / analphabétisme et éducation dans la rue

:: HOUR/HEURE 12, 4am / 04h - Homelessness and working / Travailler et vivre dans la rue

:: HOUR/HEURE 13, 5am / 05h - Physical and Mental Health on the Street / La santé mentale et physique dans la rue

:: HOUR/HEURE 14, 6am / 06h - homeless nation hour of power / L'heure du pouvoir

For more information, contact

(Français) Sophie Vaillancourt, 514.448.4041 x6788
(English) Gretchen King, 514.448.4041 x6788
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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Pakistan to host anti-nuclear conference on December 8-9, 2007, South Asians Against Nukes

A consultative meeting of civil society, academia and trade union representatives has decided to hold an international anti-nuclear conference on Dec 8-9, 2007, in Pakistan as part of the anti-weapons movement.
o o o o

The venue of the conference will be announced later. The conference will have speakers and participants mainly from South Asia but a number of participants from Europe and other parts of the world would also be invited.

The main objective of the conference is to seek an understanding on a "nuclear free South Asia".

This decision was taken in a consultative meeting held here at PILER Centre on Sunday under the aegis of Pakistan Peace Coalition (PPC). The meeting was attended by PPC president Dr A.H. Nayyar, B.M. Kutty, M.B. Naqvi, Dr Jaffar Ahmed, Dr Tipu Sultan, Karamat Ali, Rahat Saeed, Ms Sheen Farukh, Aftab Nabi, Mohammad Tahseen, Gafar Malik,
Ramzan Memon and others.

The meeting noted that the recent Indo-US nuclear deal has renewed the arms race between India and Pakistan, two nuclear rivals, which poses a great threat to the entire South Asian region.

It was also noted that the two countries are spending a huge chunk of their budget on arms leaving very little allocation for social development. As a result, a large number of the population in both India and Pakistan is deprived of basic facilities such as clear drinking water, education and sanitation.

The meeting was told that India and Pakistan spent 20 and four billion US dollars respectively on defence expenditures in the year 2005.

The meeting decided that it was high time that civil society organisations take serious note of this 'madness' and resist attempts of further nuclearisation in the region. There is a need to mobilise people against nuclear as well as conventional arms, the meeting resolved.

Dr A.H. Nayyar, president of the PPC, while addressing the conference, gave a briefing about a recently-held conference in Delhi and said that there is very strong anti-arms movement in India, which is opposing the Indo-US nuclear deal. "There is a need to have such an initiative in Pakistan and to build networks with other peace movements in the region," he added.

He said that Pakistan has increased its capacity to prepare up to 40 nuclear weapons a year and huge resources are being diverted to weapons building. "This is nothing but madness," he added.

Karamat Ali, Executive Director PILER and a peace activist said that every second day we read a small news item that Pakistan has tested a new missile which has the capacity to carry nuclear weapons. "This is a very dangerous trend and poses a great threat to the people of Pakistan and the region," he added.

He said both India and Pakistan have gone 'crazy' building nuclear and conventional weapons. Karamat said that India has already announced that it will spent US$10 billion on buying and building conventional arms this year and that amount will go up to US$50 billion in the next five years.

Dr Tipu Sultan, a representative of Pakistan Medical Association (PMA) and Doctors for Peace and Development, explained the dangers of a possible nuclear blast and said that the threat is un-imaginable. "We don't have the infrastructure to treat victims of smaller incidents leave alone a catastrophe such as a nuclear blast," he added.

The meeting also decided that before holding the conference in December, smaller forums will be held on the topic and the first such forum will take place on Sept 21 in Hyderabad.

The meeting also noted that that there is a lack of awareness among the masses on the subject and people have been given false information, such as notions that nuclear weapons are a form of deterrence. It was decided that an anti-nuclearisation awareness campaign would be launched.

A majority of the participants also suggested consulting political parties on the issue and making anti-nuclearisation an agenda item of civil society during the elections.

The meeting also endorsed the joint resolution passed at the "Indo-US Nuclear Deal Conference" held on August 31 and September 1 in New Delhi.

The resolution said that the India-US deal would aggravate the nuclear arms race in South Asia and in the Asian continent as whole, and would further weaken the already feeble momentum towards regional and global disarmament.

It further said that there are serious misgivings about the deal in other South Asian countries including Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal. As a result of the deal, Pakistan is also accelerating its fissile material production efforts.

A seven-member committee was formed for the preparation of the conference to be held in December 2007.

____________

SOUTH ASIANS AGAINST NUKES (SAAN):
An informal information platform for activists and scholars concerned about the dangers of Nuclearisation in South Asia

SAAN Website:
http://s-asians-against-nukes.org/
or
http://perso.orange.fr/sacw/saan/

SAAN Mailing List:
To subscribe send a blank message to: saan_-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
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Tuesday, October 09, 2007

A summary of the Vancouver 9/11 Truth Conference


Rising Dawn Pictures
Crow Healing Network
And the
911/ Truth Movement, Nelson Chapter
Presents:
A summary of the Vancouver 9/11 Truth Conference

On Saturday October 13th from 7:00-10:00 pm, at the United Church upstairs - 602 Silca St. in Nelson, the 9/11 Truth Movement, Rising dawn Pictures, and Crow Healing Network will present an overview of the 9/11 Truth Conference that took place in Vancouver June 24th -26th 2007.

This event hosted international speakers that included University professors, renowned scientists, structural engineers, doctors, lawyers, journalists, historians and authors that brought their research on the 9/11 event to the public in what is widely regarded as the most significant news story of all time.

The evening will include a DVD summary of the Vancouver conference, with selections from some of the keynote speakers, notably, Alfred Webre (Lawyer and Judge), Loren Moret (Nuclear Scientist), Webster Tarplay (Historian and Author), Barrie Zwicker (Television Producer, Media Critic and Author), David Ray Griffin (Theologian and Author), Steven Jones (Physicist and University Professor), and Connie Fogal (Leader of the Canadian Action Party, Lawyer).

This upcoming summary is to inform communities of the very important information
debunking the "official story" of the 9/11 event and the use of Depleted Uranium, illegally supplied by Canada, being used by the US military in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Also, a panel of speakers will be present for Q and A following the DVD presentation.
DVD copies of the entire Vancouver 9/11 Truth Conference will be made available at the event as well as other related materials.

Sponsored by The Canadian Action Party, The Uranium Free Kootenay Boundary, and BC Southern Interior Green Party of Canada

Doors open at 7:00 PM, Presentation begins at 7:15.

$8 - $12 sliding scale

For more information contact: Daryl Verville at risingdawnpictures@yahoo.ca
or Guy Lapointe at guy@crowhealingnetwork.net
or Stephen at 825-2012
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