Pax Christi Victoria

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Irish Peace Laureate Shot By Israeli Troops at Non-Violent Protest - Why Isn’t This News?

Robert Naiman

If you listened to Democracy Now on Monday, you already know the following:
Irish Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire was among a number of people shot Friday by Israeli troops at a nonviolent protest of the “apartheid wall” in the Palestinian village of Bil’in, near Ramallah.

But if you didn’t listen to Democracy Now Monday, you probably didn’t know that.

Maguire was shot with what the Israeli military - and some press reports - misleading refer to as a “rubber bullet” - that is, a rubber-coated steel bullet. Why isn’t this “news” in the United States? There’s nothing on the web sites of the New York Times, the Washington Post, or the Los Angeles Times, not even a wire story.

To read the full article from Common Dreams, click on:
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/04/25/739/

Monday, April 23, 2007

The world must unite to eliminate the growing nuclear threat

Christopher Weeramantry

As the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists declared this year: "We stand at the brink of a second nuclear age. Not since the first atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki has the world faced such perilous choices." The significant threats caused by North Korea and Iran's increasing nuclear ambitions are among a long and terrifying list of reasons driving us closer to disaster. They include unsecured nuclear materials in Russia and elsewhere, the continuing launch-ready status of thousands of American and Russian weapons, escalating terrorism, increasing availability of the materials with which to make a bomb, and a dangerous lowering of the threshold for use in several nuclear weapons states.

To read the full article in The Age, click on:
http://www.theage.com.au/news/opinion/world-must-unite-to-eliminate-nuclear-threat/2007/04/22/1177180476368.html

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Coming Events

Thursday 19 April, 9 am – 4 pm: The Centre for International Mental Health (CIMH), University of Melbourne, is hosting a one day workshop that will present peacebuilding approaches on our doorstep and bring together local and international participants working across the broad areas of peacebuilding and development in our region. Speakers include Steve Darvill, the Humanitarian / Peace-Conflict Adviser for the Australian Government Agency for International Development (AusAID); Soth Plai Ngarm, the Director of the Alliance for Conflict Transformation (ACT) in Cambodia; Emma Leslie, the Secretariat of ACTION Asia in Cambodia; Yayah Khisbiyah, a lecturer at Universitas Muhammadiyah Surakart; Diane Bretherton, Associate Professor with La Trobe University. Yasuko Hiraoka Myer Room, Level 1, Sidney Myer Asia Centre, Cnr Swanston St & Monash Road, University of Melbourne. Price*: $20.00 (full) $10.00 (student/ concession) *Light lunch/ morning tea provided. Further info: tmiletic@unimelb.edu.au

Friday – Sunday 20 -22 April: The 3rd Melbourne Social Forum will be held at Ceres Environment Park, corner of Roberts and Stewart Streets, Brunswick East. This year's theme is "CHANGE THE POLITICAL CLIMATE: TURN UP THE HEAT!" The MSF provides an open space for the community to discuss issues that are important to our future. For further information see: http://melbournesocialforum.org

Saturday 21 April, 1pm: Rally for David Hicks. State Library lawn, Melbourne. Speakers Bob Brown and Terry Hicks, who will have just returned from Guantanamo Bay. For more info, call 0407 856 628 or visit http://www.civilrightsdefence.org/

Sunday 22 April, 2 pm: A Hard Rain: a new David Bradbury Film shown at ACMI, Federation Square. Traversing five countries -- China, France, UK, Japan and Australia, A Hard Rain takes a closer look at the global nuclear industry in its entirety -- from the mining of uranium through to the nuclear power plant to the radioactive waste and weapons manufacturing. It exposes the hidden agendas behind this latest push for Australia to go nuclear. $10 waged/$8 concession. Inquiries: kisshoten12@hotmail.com

Tuesday 24 April, 7 pm: Jodie Martire will speak about her experiences in Columbia where she has just spent 15 months as a volunteer with Peace Brigades International as a human rights observer. She provided protective accompaniment (unarmed) and political support to Columbian human rights defenders. Venue: Twofatindians restaurant, 166 Wellington Parade, East Melbourne, $25 (drinks at the bar). Both meat and vegetarian menus available. RSVP to Sarah Benson 9416 1880 or email sarah.benson@aph.gov.au by 20 April.

Thursday 26 April, 5.30 pm – 7 pm: End Game in Iraq: scenarios for peace with Prof. Imad Moosa (Monash University) and Dr Scott Burchill (Deakin University) and will be held at the Mercy Theatre (17 Young St, off Victoria Pde. Fitzroy) at ACU National, 115 Victoria Pde. Fitzroy.

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Protesting Priests Escape Jail Before Torture Trial

by Bill Quigley

Despite calls by federal prosecutors to jail two priests protesting against torture training at Ft. Huachuca, Arizona, a federal judge has allowed them to remain free until their trial, which is set for June 4, 2007. Fr. Louis Vitale, a 74 year old Franciscan priest, and Fr. Steve Kelly, a 58 year old Jesuit priest, were arraigned in federal court in Tucson on federal and state charges of trespass and refusal to follow police orders at an anti-torture protest at Ft. Huachuca.

The federal prosecutor asked the judge to put the two priests in jail before their trial saying they had a substantial history of arrests and were likely to be involved in similar protests and commit other protest crimes unless jailed. After the prosecutor admitted that the actions charged were nonviolent, the court released the priests on their own recognizance.

The priests were arrested on November 19, 2006 at Ft. Huachuca, in Sierra Vista Arizona after the knelt to pray on the road approaching the gate to the fort. They were part of a crowd of 120 people peacefully protesting against military intelligence training at Ft. Huachuca that fosters torture. The protestors objected to the teaching of torture interrogation tactics at Ft. Huachuca by U.S. military intelligence - tactics used at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. Documents detailing Department of Defense spying on protestors outside the Fort in 2004 have been made public. The DOD described the protest as a “credible threat” to national security.

The Army Field Manual on interrogation (Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual) was written at Fort Huachuca. A number of the officers and soldiers responsible for human rights abuses at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and at Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison have worked at or were trained at the Headquarters for Army Intelligence Training at Ft. Huachuca.

The two priests tried to speak to enlisted soldiers and deliver a letter to Major General Barbara Fast, commissioner of the post, denouncing torture and the Military Commissions Act of 2006.

General Fast is the highest ranking intelligence officer tied to the torture at Abu Ghraib. Two other soldiers with ties to Fort Huachuca are among the 28 implicated in the beating deaths of two prisoners in Afghanistan in 2002.

Counter-protestors waved flags and accused those protesting against torture of being supporters of Islamic terrorists.

Fr. Vitale is a member of Pace e Bene, whose mission is “to develop the spirituality and practice of active nonviolence as a way of living and being and as a process for cultural transformation.” Fr. Vitale is also a co-founder of the Nevada Desert Experience, a faith-based organization that has opposed nuclear weapons testing for a quarter of a century. He recently served six months in jail following his arrest at the Ft. Benning vigil in November, 2005, and was ejected from congressional hearings in September after speaking out against the Military Commissions Act.

Fr. Steve Kelly is a member of the Redwood City Catholic Worker community and has served time in federal prison for the nonviolent direct disarmament of nuclear weapon delivery systems. In December, 2005, Kelly served as chaplain for Witness to Torture, a delegation of over two dozen U.S. anti-torture activists who defied the U.S. embargo of Cuba with a peaceful march through that nation to the gates of the Guantanamo Bay naval base and prison camp.

The text of the letter the priests tried to deliver to the base commander reads:
To: Maj. Gen. Barbara Fast -

We are here today as concerned U.S. people, veterans and clergy, to speak with enlisted personnel about the illegality and immorality of torture according to international humanitarian law, including the Geneva Conventions.

We condemn torture as a dehumanization of both prisoners and interrogators, resulting in humiliation, disability and even death. In addition to the hundreds of detainees who have died, we are also concerned about U.S. military personnel. Alyssa Peterson committed suicide after participating in the torture of Iraqi prisoners. Lynndie England and others have been imprisoned for their illegal activities.

We are here today at Ft. Huachuca in solidarity with tens of thousands of people at the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation at Ft. Benning, Georgia (formerly known as the School of the Americas) to say that the training of torturers must immediately stop. Nothing justifies the inhumane treatment of our fellow brothers and sisters. Torture by U.S. military personnel has reached alarming proportions and has horrified people around the world.

We are convinced that the Military Commissions Act of 2006 is unconstitutional. We totally reject its conclusions. Torture is a useless and unreliable tool that leads to an accepted practice of terrorization and the rationalization of wrongdoing.

We are here today to repent and clearly state that because of our sense of moral and human decency we condemn torture. NOT IN OUR NAME. 19th day of November, 2006 - Louis Vitale,OFM / Steve Kelly, SJ

###


Bill Quigley is a law professor and human rights lawyer at Loyola University New Orleans and represents one of the protesting priests. You can find out more about the protest and the jailed priests on the website for Jonah House http://www.jonahhouse.org/ For other information about the protest and the priests, contact Jack or Felice Cohen-Joppa 520-323-8697. You can reach Bill at Quigley@loyno.edu

The original article from Common Dreams can be read by clicking on:
Common Dreams