Category Archives: Afghanistan

GUANTANAMO: Sign the petition to close Gitmo

from Morris Davis, former Chief Prosecutor at Guantanamo Bay

gitmo

I served 25 years in the US Air Force, I was the Chief Prosecutor for the Terrorism Trials at Guantanamo Bay for more than two years, and now I need your help.

I personally charged Osama Bin Laden’s driver Salim Hamdan, Australian anathema David Hicks, and Canadian teen Omar Khadr.  All three were convicted … and then they were released from Guantanamo.  More than 160 men who have never been charged with any offense, much less convicted of a war crime, remain at Guantanamo with no end in sight.  There is something fundamentally wrong with a system where not being charged with a war crime keeps you locked away indefinitely and a war crime conviction is your ticket home.

As of April 29, 2013 – 100 of the 166 men who remain in Guantanamo are engaged in a hunger strike in protest of their indefinite detention.  Twenty-one of them are being force-fed and five are hospitalized.  Some of the men have been in prison for more than eleven years without charge or trial.  The United States has cleared a majority of the detainees for transfer out of Guantanamo, yet they remain in custody year after year because of their citizenship and ongoing political gamesmanship in the U.S.

That is why I am calling on Secretary of Defense Charles Hagel to use his authority to effect cleared transfers from Guantanamo and on President Obama to appoint an individual within the Administration to lead the effort to close Guantanamo. Obama announced on April 30 that he plans to do his part to close Guantanamo, but he has made this promise before.  Now is the time to hold him to his promise and urge him to take the steps necessary to dismantle Guantanamo Bay Prison.

If any other country were treating prisoners the way we are treating those in Guantanamo we would roundly and rightly criticize that country.  We can never retake the legal and moral high ground when we claim the right to do unto others that which we would vehemently condemn if done to one of us.

It is probably no surprise that human rights and activist groups like the Center For Constitutional Rights, Witness Against Torture and Amnesty International have been outspoken critics of Guantanamo.  It may surprise you that a former military prosecutor and many other retired senior military officers and members of the intelligence community agree with them.

The Patriotic thing, the American thing, the Human thing to do here is to Close Guantanamo.  

Please join us in the fight by signing this petition.

REGIONAL EVENT: CIA headquarters mobilization against drones, February 9 in DC

from Pax Christi Metro DC-Baltimore

Predator Drone

PROTEST U.S. KILLER DRONES!

Saturday, February 9, 2013 at 10am at CIA Headquarters, 900 block of Dolley Madison Blvd., Langley, Virginia

As of January 2013, the United Nations has launched a special investigation into the U.S. killer drone program. Leading the UN investigation is Ben Emmerson, the UN rapporteur on counterterrorism and human rights. He said, “The exponential rise in the use of drone technology in a variety of military and non-military contexts represents a real challenge to the framework of established international law.”

The U.S. Military & Central Intelligence Agency drones have maimed & killed thousands, including innocent people in Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, & Pakistan, without charge, trial or conviction of crime. This year alone there have been over 362+ strikes in Pakistan. The Bureau of Investigative Journalism reports on estimates up to 3461 people killed and 891 injured in Pakistan, in Yemen 1112 killed and 178 injured, in these two countries alone by CIA drone strikes.

Stand with us opposing CIA & U.S. Military drones used in extrajudicial killings. U.S. killer drone strikes are illegal, immoral, and must stop now!

Supported by Pax Christi Metro DC, Northern Virginians for Peace & Justice, Episcopal Peace Fellowship, Dorothy Day Catholic Worker of DC, Code Pink, Nova Catholic Community, Peace & International Outreach Committee of Langley Hill Friends, Washington Peace Center, Peace Action Montgomery County, MD, Little Friends for Peace, Maryland United for Peace & Justice

For more information contact Jack McHale: 703-772-0635

AFGHANISTAN: “Who will hear our voice?” the plea of Afghan women

Rev. John Dear, S.J.

by Fr. John Dear, S.J.
Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

This week, as our war president was inaugurated on the holiday of Martin Luther King Jr., I thought how King would be speaking out boldly against our war in Afghanistan, our use of drones, our use of torture, our use of execution and our use of bombs and call us once again to end the killings, become people of nonviolence and side with the victims of our war that we might create the “beloved community.”

So my thoughts turn again to the many impoverished women and children I met last month in Kabul. Reflecting on my journey to Afghanistan, I hear the question that was asked over and over again: “Who will hear our voice?”

“No one listens to our voices,” one woman told us. “We can’t imagine a better future for our children. There is little hope for them. Some countries say they send aid, but where is it? We have never seen it. It all goes into the hands of the government leaders who buy homes in Dubai. Who will hear the voice of the people? We have so much pain in our hearts because no one will listen to us.”…

Click here to read this entire article.

TORTURE: Witness Against Torture events happening through this weekend

from Witness Against Torture

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For the rest of this week through Sunday, Witness Against Torture is holding events in Washington, D.C. and throughout the country.

Click here to see the calendar of events.

Click here for more information from the week of action, including updates, blog posts, action ideas, and more.

REGIONAL EVENT: CIA headquarters mobilization against drones and torture, January 12

from Pax Christi Metro DC-Baltimore

STOP CIA KILLER DRONES AND TORTURE!

This Saturday, January 12, 2013 at 10am at CIA Headquarters, 900 block of Dolly Madison Blvd, Langley Virginia!

The CIA has been found guilty by the European Court of torture, abuse, & secret imprisonment. U.S. military & CIA drones have maimed & killed thousands of people in Yemen, Somalia, Pakistan, Iraq, Libya, & Afghanistan. This year alone there have been over 333 strikes in Afghanistan. Almost 60 Guantanamo prisoners have been cleared for release but still remain captives of the U.S. indefinitely. Stand with us opposing CIA & U.S. military drones used in extrajudicial killings and U.S./CIA secret rendition, indefinite detention, all torture, to oppose & close the Guantanamo prison camp.

Torture & U.S. killer drone strikes are illegal, immoral, and must stop now!

JOIN US JANUARY 12: WITNESS AGAINST TORTURE

Download a flyer about the event by clicking here.

Supported by Pax Christi Metro D.C.-Baltimore, Northern Virginians for Peace & Justice, Episcopal Peace Fellowship, Dorothy Day Catholic Worker of DC, Code Pink, Nova Catholic Community, Peace & International Outreach Committee of Langley Hill Friends, Washington Peace Center, & Peace Action Montgomery County, MD, Little Friends for Peace, Maryland United for Peace & Justice

For more information contact Jack McHale: 703-772-0635

AFGHANISTAN: Bearing witness to peacemaking in a war-torn country

Rev. John Dear, S.J.by Fr. John Dear, SJ
Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

This is part two of my diary from Afghanistan. It’s very long, but I offer it to those who are interested in my experience in Afghanistan, where we have waged the longest war in U.S. history. To learn more about the Afghan Peace Volunteers, visit 2millionfriends.orgourjourneytosmile.com and vcnv.org. Merry Christmas to one and all!

Dec. 6

This afternoon, we drove across Kabul, one of the most polluted, impoverished cities on earth, with its sea of speeding cars, to one of the many refugee camps, where we sat in a U.N. tent listening to camp leaders share their suffering and beg for peace. About 55 families fill this crowded camp, and some of the families have as many as 25 members.

“We are tired of war,” the elder began. “We have nothing to live on. We have no work. We do not want our children killed. Who would want this? Finish this war. We don’t want anyone else killed. No one in this camp wants the war to continue. We are sick of war.

“One of the main problems,” he said, “is that we are not willing to talk to one another. The powers that be must talk. Everyone in Afghanistan is Muslim; there should be no fighting between Muslims. We all know war has no benefit for the people. They want it to end. The war only benefits those in power. There are many widows, orphans, maimed people, hungry, sick and unemployed people. They are sick of this war. The same fighting has been going on for decades and we fear we will never see peace. It’s just been a matter of changing those who sit in the chairs of power. The killings just continue. The powers that be have turned Afghanistan into a killing field, their personal playground of war….

To read the rest of this article, click here.

AFGHANISTAN: Youth of Afghanistan call for peace

Rev. John Dear, S.J.by Fr. John Dear, SJ
Pax Christi USA Ambassador of Peace

“We call upon the United Nations to negotiate an immediate cease-fire to the war in Afghanistan, and to start talks aimed at ending the war and beginning the long road to healing and recovery.” That’s what the Afghan youth said on Tuesday afternoon in Kabul, along with Nobel Peace Prize winner Mairead Maguire of Ireland, as they launched their “Two Million Friends for Afghanistan” campaign and presented their petition to a senior United Nations official.

For me, it was the climax of a heart-breaking, astonishing eight days in one of the poorest, most violent, most war-torn, most corrupt, and most polluted places on the planet — and because of the amazing “Afghan Peace Volunteers,” the 25 Afghan youth who live and work together in a community of peace and nonviolence — one of the most hopeful.

All these Afghan youth have suffered from war and poverty, but as they point out, two million people have been killed in war in Afghanistan over the past four decades. After ten years of Soviet war and occupation in the 1980s, then the Civil War in the early 1990s led by the corrupt warlords, then the years of oppression under the Taliban, and now 11 years of American war and occupation, they are sick of war. Their message is the same message we heard everywhere — from a woman’s cooperative, a children’s school, a refugee camp, and even in Parliament — “Stop the Killings. End the war. We want peace.”…

To read the rest of this article, click here.