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Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

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Human Rights in Ireland
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.

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Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

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Voltaire Network
Voltaire, international edition

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Mairead Corrigan Maguire's speech at the Sixth World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates

category international | anti-war / imperialism | press release author Saturday November 26, 2005 03:10author by Peace People Report this post to the editors

Equal rights for a non-violent world

An exploration of the links between unethical globalisation, coporate power, runaway capitalism, war and poverty.

ROME 24.11.2005
Dear friends,

Corporate power, runaway capitalism, and unethical globalization, are destroying the lives of many people, particularly in Africa, Asia, South America, and other developing countries. So-called Fair Trade, with its unwilling attendants of Debt and dire Poverty, are among the symptoms of this modern Power. A plethora of world bodies have been duped into believing that they hold the reins of this rampant monster. Among them are the G8, the expanded G8, the Security Council of the United Nations and the United Nations Body itself with all its subsidiaries. But in our modern World, Money is power. The World Bank is the most powerful monetary power of the present day. The International Monetary Fund is a member of the World Bank group whose purpose it is to control the World’s finances, at the same time responding to requests for financial help. In spite of having 178 member countries, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are in effect controlled by the US Treasury which is answerable to the US President George W. Bush.

So the World Bank, whose President is Paul Wolfowitz, has the power to run other people's lives. It is this power which needs to be unmasked and challenged and to be made accountable to the International Community for its misuse and abuse. We must campaign against the US control of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the United Nations, and insist that there be set up binding global laws of justice and fair trade for all. Fair trade, not this so called Free Trade, is what African countries, and the poor of the world need. Justice must be put at the top of the Agenda, but Justice for the poor cannot be achieved without confronting the rich and the powerful, by demanding equality, and insisting that they, as responsible world citizens, must uphold all International treaties and Laws.

The G8 leaders have failed to seize the moment offered by millions of people when they demanded ‘make poverty history’. These leaders either refused to make, or reneged on, promises of serious debt cancellation and reduction, aid, fairer trading and environmental action. Instead they have seized the moment to argue that Multinational corporations are not the cause of Africa’s problems, but the solution. They have already allowed these plunderers to cream off the wealth of the nations, they were purporting to help, as has also happened most recently in Argentina, Iraq, and other countries.

Of course Africa and many developing countries need investment, but many of the multi-nationals have not enriched Africa’s people, but have a history of forced labour, collusion with dictators, abuse of rights of all kinds. Having campaigned for the late Ken Saro-Wiwa and the rights of the Ogoni people, we cannot forget what Shell has been doing in Nigeria A state-sponsored rebranding of these TNCs with no mandatory constraints on them, will increase poverty rather than ‘make poverty history’.

One of the most important ways to support our brothers and sisters in Africa and developing countries is to stop the arms trade from the USA and European countries. On a visit to Burundi some years ago, we heard peace activists appeal that no arms be sent to their country, and that there be no military intervention, as they wanted through nonviolent means, dialogue and negotiations, to solve their own problems without outside intervention. This for me is the great hope not only for Africa, but for the human family. People know how to solve their problems and create practices and political institutions best suited to their own cultures and traditions. Democracy must be built from the bottom up by the people, and with citizens’ involvement, elected National government allowed to shape their own destinies by formulating their own policies, not imposed from the outside by powers who wish to dominate and control them.

On September 11th, 2001, horrific bombings in America brought home to us all in the privileged countries of wealth and sufficiency, how very vulnerable we are as human beings. This tragedy also brought forth different responses. Many people realized the need to increase and multiply our actions to build peace and to solve our problems through nonviolent means, and insure all our security and safety through international co-operation and upholding human rights and international laws.

However, the USA and UK, out of fear, or worse, used the politics of revenge and the old ways of militarism, war, invasion and occupation of Iraq. They trashed human rights and international laws, in their illusion that their ‘war on terrorism’ would make the world a safer place. The use of white phosphorus chemical weapons on civilians during the Fallujah Raids, torture of prisoners in Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay, the murder of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis as a result of economic trade sanctions, war, and the invasion and occupation of their country: these are war crimes against human beings, mostly Iraqi civilians. Such actions bring forth counter-violence, and has for the foreseeable future made the world a more dangerous place for us all. The occupation of Iraq should end, and there should be an enquiry into those responsible in the UK and USA Administrations, who illegally took the world to war. But war must be abolished as it is immoral and illegal. The weapons we now have, and the money spent to produce them, are criminal, in the face of poverty and environmental crisis. There are alternatives to war, we can use the nonviolent civilian defence alternatives and use the nonviolent politics available to us. But even when this war ends we must deal with the deeper problem of our own thinking. People cannot use napalm and chemical weapons, or torture and kill other human beings, unless their mind has been trained to forget their humanity, and trained to dehumanize and demonize others. Military training, no matter which countries undertake it, teaches how to kill, how to put on the mind of cruelty and violence. The anti-nuclear whistleblower, Mordechai Vanunu, at present under arrest in a virtual prison of Israel, which he is forbidden to leave, said recently “We should be pioneers in this new world of peace. A world without wars. It can succeed only if we also have States without armies. My name for it is ‘towards a world without armies’”

This, I believe, is where we start the journey of nonviolence and it is a cultural transformation of cultivating nonkilling mindsets, and nonkilling societies. We join with our African brothers and sisters in building a world of equality,justice,and nonviolence for the human family.
(www.peacepeople.com)

Related Link: http://www.peacepeople.com
author by Seán Ryanpublication date Sun Nov 27, 2005 08:34author address author phone Report this post to the editors

A very moving piece.

Since I am very anti-war minded I am loathe to disagree with it.

The first issue is the World Bank. And I must admit the general tactics encouraged by the piece. Nobody in the history of the capitalist movement has just given up their wealth because sombody told them they were acting immoral. From the article I get the impression that the fact that the World Bank is a parasitic front for American "big business & politics," is some big secret. Paul Wolfowitz has known for years that he is a dirtbag and that he works with and on the behalf of other dirtbags. And just about anyone who scores well in basic comprehension knows that the World bank facilitates the plundering of nations, developing or otherwise.

Remember South Africa? Remember the end of Apartheid? Remember the world bank stepping in to lend a hand. First thing these dirtbags did, was to demand the privatisation of water and electricity. The poor of South Africa had what little Apartheid had given them, taken away.

So like I said it's been common knowledge forever that the World Bank and its minions are scum. They knew it and we knew it. But they still exist. The intervention method has again shown to be without merit.

The only way to fix the World Bank is to ignore it. To make it go away. Countries should stop paying money to them. We, the free of the world should call for this to happen for two reasons. The first, to express solidarity. The second, to spread the responsibility for the action.

The second and final criticism is about what was said about 911 and what followed it. To tame what I have to say I'd like to suggest that what was said was ambiguous. I'm very surprised at this because I know that Peace People are very current in what is happening globally and for how long it's been happening. The piece seemed to suggest that America only started to behave badly after 911. And that 911 was the excuse to use inhumane methods in their exterminations.

America has never once in its entire history, behaved in a civilised fashion.

To believe otherwise is to be a big fan of Hollywood.

They were one of the last nations on Earth to sign Raphael Lemkin's treaty on Genocide, more than half a century from its conception. It was then only signed late into Clinton's reign when things were blowing up in his face and Yugoslavia turning into a nightmare, because of his incompetence. The signing was done as a pressure relief and nothing more. In fact, the Americans before signing it added stipulations to it, rendering it both useless and unenforceable. Basically, before signing it they amended it so that they could only be prosecuted under its terms if they agreed to be prosecuted.

So to sum up my argument. Telling somebody that they are being scum, only insults them, rather than giving them incentive to give up their vices, it gives them incentive to cling tighter.

Well that's all I got to say. Sorry for playing devils advocate, considering that I agree mostly with what was said. I hope nobody wants to step outside.

Peace,
Sláinte,
Seán Ryan

 
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