Please join us at StopWar’s AGM Saturday, June 2. Following that, StopWar’s next general meeting is Wednesday, June 6, 2012 5:30pm. Email stopwar@resist.ca for location details.
Please join us at StopWar’s AGM Saturday, June 2. Following that, StopWar’s next general meeting is Wednesday, June 6, 2012 5:30pm. Email stopwar@resist.ca for location details.
Join us for StopWar’s Annual General Meeting
Saturday, June 2, 11am to 4pm
65 W. Cordova (at Abbott)
Registration starts at 11am
You’re invited to join StopWar, the Lower Mainland’s broad-based anti-war coalition, for a day of reflection, discussion and strategizing.
In this time of Budget cuts to public services, StopWar is looking to reach out to labour and community groups to talk about how we can complement each other’s work and make connections between spending on wars abroad and cuts to services, environmental regulation and human needs at home.
The new Canadian Peace Alliance campaign, ‘Peace and Prosperity, Not War and Austerity’, will be one focus of our discussion. The day will start with a roundtable including social activists from different sectors, talking about what this campaign and this slogan means to them.
We hope to see you on Saturday, June 2!
Info: stopwar@resist.ca
Book launch and forum:
Lester Pearson’s Peacekeeping: The Truth May Hurt
with author Yves Engler
Thursday, March 29 7pm
at W2 Media Cafe (111 W. Hastings)
Admission by donation. Books will be available for sale.
Written in the form of a submission to an imagined “Truth and Reconciliation” commission about Canada’s foreign policy past, Lester Pearson’s Peacekeeping: The Truth May Hurt will change how you think about this country’s most famous statesman. This book challenges one of the most important (and useful) Canadian foreign policy myths.
Yves Engler has been dubbed “one of the most important voices on the Canadian Left today” (Briarpatch). In addition to six published books, many of Engler’s writings have appeared in the alternative press, as well as mainstream publications such as The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, Ottawa Citizen and Ecologist. His six books have been praised by Naomi Klein, Noam Chomsky, William Blum, Rick Salutin and many others.
Yves Engler’s is bound to provoke a lively discussion because Engler arrives at the startling conclusion that “Stephen Harper’s foreign policy resembles that of Pearson more than any Liberal would ever admit.”
Read a review here: http://rabble.ca/books/reviews/2012/02/lester-pearson’s-peacekeeping
Endorsed by Vancouver’s StopWar Coalition.
In recent weeks, Harper has stood out among world leaders in supporting Israeli threats of attack or war against Iran. He shows no signs of changing his tune. In an eerie echo of the “weapons of mass destruction” lead-up to the 2003 attack on Iraq which saw the largest global peace demonstrations in history, Prime Minister Harper recently stated he knows “beyond any doubt” that Iran is developing nuclear weapons and that he is “absolutely convinced” that Iran “would have no hesitation about using nuclear weapons.”
Join others in calling for No War On Iran!
“Threats of Western intervention will embolden support for the Ahmadinejad regime inside Iran. You can’t bomb people into liking you.” — Jian Ghomeshi
Help us spread the word on social media. The facebook page for the event is here: http://tinyurl.com/8y7obvx
Protest Against Netanyahu and Harper – March 2
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Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu will be in Ottawa on March 2 to meet with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. There will be a protest organized by the Ottawa Peace Coalition and they are calling on other Canadian cities to hold solidarity actions. The Harper government has m ade its support for the far right-wing Netanyahu very clear, boasting that “Canada stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Israel”. Under Harper, Canada is increasingly being called the “best friend” of the Israeli government and its occupation of Palestinian lands.Join us in protesting these partners in militarism and occupation: Friday, March 2, 12 Noon More info: stopwar@resist.ca Background links: -Canadian Peace Alliance statement – “Don’t attack Iran” http://www.acp-cpa.ca/en/IranMain.htm -’Stephen Harper’s rhetoric on Iran should frighten us all’ -”Harper inciting ‘hysteria’ with hard-line on Iran, says expert” -The real agenda of the Netanyahu government -The Guardian editorial, “Iran: stumbling into war” |
Film screening and discussion
Sunday, Feb. 19, 6pm at Rhizome Cafe (317 E. Broadway)
Join us for a screening of ‘Tour of Duty’, an Australian documentary about the role of Special Forces in the war on Afghanistan, followed by an update and discussion on Canada’s ongoing role. Although it now receives far less attention in our mainstream media, Canada still has nearly 1000 military personnel in Afghanistan, playing asignificant role in NATO’s unpopular occupation of the country.
Delicious food and drinks will be available for sale from our hosts at Rhizome. Event admission by donation. For more information, email: stopwar@resist.ca
December 15, 2011
The drumbeats of preparations for military intervention and war against Syria and Iran are becoming louder. StopWar, Vancouver’s broad-based anti-war coalition, which was founded in the movement to prevent the disastrous war against Iraq in 2003, appeals to all Canadians to help reverse this dangerous process. We call for the internal disputes in Syria and Iran to be left for their own populations to settle, without recourse to foreign military intervention.
The consequences of a new war in this region would be far reaching for the entire world. A NATO-led military aggression against Syria or Iran would result in massive human casualties, and enormous economic damage on a local and global scale. The impact would not be confined to the immediate military targets of the NATO powers and their allies; such a war could spread across borders, inflicting new suffering and chaos throughout the region.
There is no justification for such a reckless and potentially catastrophic course of action. In our view, military intervention by NATO in the Middle East and Central Asia is being driven by the interests of transnational energy and resource corporations. NATO is acting to defend and advance these interests, not to “protect human rights”.
To those who argue that the so-called “Responsibility to Protect” doctrine obliges Canada to intervene in the name of human rights and wage yet another war, we point out that many of the leaders who are escalating tensions against Syria and Iran are themselves accused of widespread violations of human rights, or even of committing serious breaches of international law.
The United States, for example, stands accused by world public opinion and many legal experts and scholars of practicing systematic torture. In 2003, it committed the supreme war crime of unprovoked military aggression against Iraq – a crime which has resulted in millions of deaths and displacements, and enormous damage to economic and social infrastructures. Israel, one of the most vocal critics of Syria and Iran, has for decades illegally occupied Palestinian territories, imposing a deadly apartheid-style oppression against the Palestinian people.
The NATO countries killed thousands of people recently in Libya in an attack that was a blatantly aggressive intervention aimed at ‘regime change’, despite the fact that it was initially presented as a limited mission to provide a ‘No Fly Zone’. Libya risks becoming a precedent that NATO countries cite in order to justify new aggressive wars and interventions.
Far from advancing the cause of human rights, imperialist military threats and interventions often simply give excuses to authoritarian rulers to suppress struggles for freedom. We stand in solidarity with Iranians and Syrians, while we oppose any kind of sanctions and military interventions.
What right do the United States and Israel – or their faithful ally the Harper government of Canada – have to intervene in the internal problems of Syria and Iran? Why should Canada and the United States, which have led the destructive military occupation of Afghanistan for over a decade, have any right to choose where their military forces will intervene next to topple local governments and impose western-friendly regimes?
Genuine social justice and peace are not created by crippling economic sanctions or endless wars and militarism. Instead, military spending and the arms trade must be dramatically reduced, and all weapons of mass destruction must be eliminated, including the creation of a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East.
The peoples of the world must mobilize to change our planet’s priorities and tackle the urgent needs of those who are today the most oppressed and poverty-stricken.
This is the view of StopWar. We urge all our supporters and friends to join with us in demanding that the Harper government end its vocal support for the war drive against Syria and Iran. Canada must instead begin to support steps which will de-escalate tensions in the region, including the immediate removal of all Canadian military forces from Afghanistan, and a complete end to Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories.
www.stopwar.ca
Please read this article that vividly illustrates the continued policy of colonization of the Canadian Government towards the Indigenous people of the Attawapiskat First Nation .
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/charlie-angus/attawapiskat-emergency_b_1104370.html?ref=fb&src=sp&comm_ref=false#s487212
George Walker Bush, born July 6, 1945 is likely to try to cross the border into Canada on or about October 18 to 20th 2011 to attend an event in Surrey British Columbia. Mr. Bush has admitted to authorizing and approving the widespread use of torture by the U.S. Armed Forces and the CIA. There are reasonable grounds to believe that George W. Bush, as the President of the United States of America and Commander in Chief of the U.S. Armed Forces between 2001 and 2009, counselled, aided and abetted the commission of torture and other war crimes and crimes against humanity in Iraq, Afghanistan and other locations. Experts estimate that in Iraq alone, over a million innocent men, women and children have died as a consequence of the illegal U.S.-led war on Iraq authorized and directed by George W. Bush.
N.B. the website indicates that CBSA has discretion to provide a reward for information.
http://www.cbsa-asfc.gc.ca/security-securite/bwl-lsf-eng.html
Lawyers Against the War has more information.
2 » Sign the Online petition to arrest George Bush:
3 » Attend or publicize our Rally to Protest George W Bush’s Surrey Visit
Use the tags #ArrestBush and #OccupySurrey
Email: stopwar@resist.ca for more information.
4 » Attend a Public Forum Thursday night 7:30pm at the Unitarian Church (Oak St & 49th Ave) to Follow Up on the protest:
Torture Victims to Initiate Private Prosecution against George W. Bush on His Arrival in Canada
Canadian Government Has Legal Obligation under UN Convention Against Torture to Prosecute Alleged Perpetrators of Torture, Rights Groups Say
Prominent Individuals and Organizations Sign on in Support
October 19, 2011, Surrey, BC—Tomorrow, four individuals who allege they were tortured during George W. Bush’s tenure as president of the United States will lodge a private prosecution in Provincial Court in Surrey, British Columbia against the former president, who is due to visit Canada for a paid speaking engagement at the Surrey Regional Economic Summit on October 20. The four men will take this step after repeated calls to the Canadian Attorney General to open a torture investigation of George Bush went unanswered. Human rights groups and prominent individuals will sign on in support of the effort.
The four men, Hassan bin Attash, Sami el-Hajj, Muhammed Khan Tumani and Murat Kurnaz, each endured years of inhumane treatment including beatings, chaining to cell walls, being hung from walls or ceilings while handcuffed, lack of access to toilets, sleep, food and water-deprivation, exposure to extreme temperatures, sensory overload and deprivation, and other horrific and illegal treatment while in U.S. custody at military bases in Afghanistan and/or at the detention facility at Guantánamo Bay. While three of the plaintiffs have since been released without ever facing charges, Hassan Bin Attash still remains in detention at Guantánamo Bay, though he too has not been formally charged with any wrongdoing.
“I lost my family, my father, my health, my education because of George Bush. Although I was completely innocent, I lost nearly 10 years of my life,” said former Guantánamo detainee and torture survivor Muhammed Khan Tumani. “I suffered greatly while detained at Guantánamo, and continue to suffer. I have restrictions on my travel and cannot travel to see my father who is ill. George Bush must face justice and be held accountable for his actions, which continue to cause me and so many harm.”
On September 29, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and the Canadian Centre for International Justice (CCIJ) submitted a 69-page page draft indictment to Attorney General Robert Nicholson, along with more than 4,000 pages of supporting material, setting forth the case against Bush for torture. The indictment, incorporated into the criminal information lodged today, contends that by Bush’s own admission he sanctioned and authorized acts that constitute torture under the Canadian criminal code and the Convention Against Torture (CAT).
Katherine Gallagher, a senior staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) who is assisting the plaintiffs, said, “George Bush’s brazen admission to authorizing torture techniques and unlawful detentions, including enforced disappearances, must not be met with indifference. His years of impunity must come to an end. Even if the United States has failed to meet its obligations to hold torturers accountable, Canada has an opportunity and a legal obligation to position itself on the right side of history and the law.”
Matt Eisenbrandt, legal director of the Canadian Centre for International Justice (CCIJ), who will submit the filing on men’s behalf, added, “Canadian law could not be clearer. If an alleged torturer is present in Canada, the government has the power to prosecute. As a signatory of the Convention Against Torture, Canada has an obligation to initiate an investigation when Mr. Bush sets foot in this country.”
More than 50 human rights organizations from around the world and prominent individuals signed on to support the call for George W. Bush’s prosecution, including former UN Special Rapporteurs on Torture, Theo van Boven and Manfred Nowak, the International Federation for Human Rights, and the Canadian-based International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group. A number of the human rights organizations which signed on are facing the on-going harms of the “counterterrorism” policies advanced under the Bush administration and then adopted or employed in their own countries.
Former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Manfred Nowak, said: “The main aim of the UN Convention Against Torture was to eradicate safe havens for persons who commit, order, or participate in acts of torture worldwide. States parties to the Convention, including Canada, have a legal obligation to arrest all persons suspected of torture with the aim of bringing them to justice. There is plenty of evidence that President Bush authorized enhanced interrogation methods against suspected terrorists, some of which clearly amount to torture, such as waterboarding.”
Last February, the Center for Constitutional Rights, along with other human rights organizations, attempted to initiate criminal proceedings against Bush during a private speaking engagement in Geneva, but he canceled after news of the planned prosecution came to light. Following the cancellation, CCR and the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights released the “Bush Torture Indictment,” which can serve as the basis for country-specific indictments against Bush in any of the 147 countries that have ratified the UN Convention Against Torture or have universal jurisdiction laws for torture.
Prior to the filing of this case, CCR and the CCIJ twice (on Sept. 29, 2011 and Oct. 14, 2011) petitioned Canadian Minister of Justice and Attorney General Robert Nicholson by letter to launch a criminal investigation against Bush during his October 20 visit to Canada, but received no response. George Bush and former U.S. vice president Dick Cheney both recently made trips to Canada, without any legal consequence.
A copy of the filing can be viewed in full here. The Letter of Support is available in English and French.
The Canadian Centre for International Justice works with survivors of genocide, torture and other atrocities to seek redress and bring perpetrators to justice. The CCIJ seeks to ensure that individuals present in Canada who are accused of responsibility for serious human rights violations are held accountable and their victims recognized, supported and compensated. For more information visit www.ccij.ca
The Center for Constitutional Rights, in addition to filing the first cases representing men detained at Guantánamo, has filed universal jurisdiction cases seeking accountability for torture by Bush administration officials in Germany, France and submitted expert opinions and other documentation to ongoing cases in Spain in collaboration with ECCHR. The Center for Constitutional Rights is dedicated to advancing and protecting the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Founded in 1966 by attorneys who represented civil rights movements in the South, CCR is a non-profit legal and educational organization committed to the creative use of law as a positive force for social change. Further details regarding the Center for Constitutional Rights’ Bush Torture Indictment can be viewed at: http://ccrjustice.org/ourcases/current-cases/bush-torture-indictment.Visit www.ccrjustice.org. Follow @theCCR.
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PEACEFUL RALLY TO PROTEST GEORGE W. BUSH’s SURREY VISIT
Thursday, October 20, 11:00 am
Join at the parking lot outside the Bay, Guildford Mall, SW corner of 152 St. & 104 Ave.
For info on this rally, please email stopwar@resist.ca
For background on the legal campaign to prosecute G.W. Bush, visit: Lawyers against the War at www.lawyersagainstthewar.org; Amnesty
International/Canada at http://www.amnesty.ca/media2010.php?DocID=1006
(click on “related documents” to view/download the brief) and the Center for Constitutional Rights, www.ccrjustice.org
Please be there to give him the welcome he deserves.