Category Archives: Take Action

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.

NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT: Transform Now Plowshares trial begins next week

TNP

Next  week (May 6th) our friends from the Transform Now Plowshares community will begin trial before Federal District Judge Amul Thapar in Knoxville TN.

Since last year their disarmament action has kept the government and its contractors hopping as they have sought to downplay the significance of this witness and kept the focus off the dangerous criminality of the nuclear arsenal itself and the role of the Oak Ridge Y12 plant in that continuing threat to creation.  For their truthfulness on July 28th and subsequently, Greg Bortje-Obed, Megan Rice and Michael Walli are facing two felony charges, including a charge under the Sabotage Act, and risking 30 years in prison.

We are encouraging supporters who can join us in Knoxville the week of the trial to make plans as early as possible and to let our host activists in Tennessee know as soon as possible, so they can plan hospitality accordingly.  In addition to the trial there will be activities over the weekend leading up to and each day surrounding the trial. Click here for more information if you will be joining us in Knoxville.

On Sunday May 5, in preparation for trial, there will be a Vigil at Y-12 Nuclear Weapons Plant — 5 p.m. at Y12 in Oak Ridge, followed by a Potluck and Festival of Hope — 6:30 p.m. at Church of the Savior UCC, 934 Weisgarber Road, Knoxville.

For those of you who will not be able to come to Knoxville, please consider public witness in solidarity with the trial in your locality and please consider sending on financial support for the witness. The legal effort itself entails bringing several expert witnesses and other legal resource people to Knoxville and the additional support needed to stand with Greg, Megan and Michael and their peace witness during their trial will also be significant .  

If you can provide financial assistance, you can contribute via the website 
https://www.wepay.com/donations/transform-now-plowshares
 or mail your contribution to Catholic Worker, PO Box 29179, Washington DC 20017 and designate it for “Transform Now Plowshares”.

We look forward to embodying a community of peace and justice with you in Knoxville in May!

For the Transformation of our World,
The TNP Support Crew

For more information, visit transformnowplowshares.wordpress.com.

GUN VIOLENCE: Call your Senator today to prevent gun violence

Gun-ViolenceToday is the Interfaith Call-in Day to Prevent Gun Violence. Call your Senators and insist that they act to prevent gun violence. Ensure that the voices of faithful Americans ring throughout the halls of Congress.

Universal Background Checks are essential to gun violence prevention and viable as a bipartisan solution.

  • 2.1 million illegal gun buyers have been stopped by background checks – they work!
  • Under current federal law only licensed firearms dealers are required to conduct background checks – everyone else is free to sell guns to practically anyone without any type of check.
  • Universal background checks legislation cannot and will not lead to the creation of a national gun registry.

We know that there are differences in viewpoint and we ask you to convey whichever policies with which you are comfortable. The major components of legislation that Congress is considering are below.

  • Ban semi-automatic assault weapons and high-capacity magazines
  • Make gun trafficking a federal crime
  • Enhance of school and campus safety
  • Improve access to mental health services

When you call your Senators, let them know that you are calling as a member of the faith community, and emphasize those of the policies that you support. Tell them that gun violence prevention laws work.

Click here to get information for calling your Senator.

TAKE ACTION: Sign the petition to stop the prosecution of anti-nuclear activists

transform-now-three

In July 2012, three American peace activists (Greg Boertje-Obed, 57; Sr. Megan Rice, 82; and Michael Walli, 63), engaged in nonviolent, direct action by entering the high-security, Y-12 nuclear weapons materials factory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA.

Their intent was to draw international attention to the United States’ secret, ongoing development and production of newly redesigned H-bombs in direct violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the president’s 2009 promise of a national commitment to seek “a world without nuclear weapons.”

The U.S. government plans to build a total of three new nuclear weapons production factories in order to produce up to 80 new B-61 H-bombs per year.

For them, the secrecy, the deception, the illegality, and the immorality of these nuclear war preparations were too blatant to ignore.

Their violation was trespass at most — even though they knew they were putting themselves at serious risk which, if convicted, could result in many years in prison.

They acted out of a humanitarian responsibility to arouse the conscience of others to end the madness of continued nuclear preparations (“modernization!”) and the ever-haunting, unthinkable carnage of nuclear war itself.

Click here to sign the petition.

TAKE ACTION: Trial set for Kimberly Rivera, conscientious objector and Iraq war resister

Kimberly Rivera

NOTE: This is an update to an action alert we posted in October 2012.

Please remember in your prayers our friend Kimberly Rivera, conscientious objector and war resister. Following her Canadian Deportation Order, Kimberly fled from Canada on September 20, 2012 and surrendered promptly to U.S. immigration authorities at the border in New York State where she was arrested the same day.

Now, after 5 months in detention at Fort Carson Colorado, Kim has posted the following news on her facebook page about an hour ago tonight:

“Well my friends my date in Court is finally pronounced for the 29th of April.”

You can send Kim notes of encouragement and support at:

Mrs. Kimberly Rivera
c/o All Souls Unitarian Universalist Church
730 North Tejon Street
Colorado Springs, CO 80903 USA

FROM OUR PREVIOUS ACTION ALERT: Kimberly Rivera, a conscientious objector and Iraq War resister, is currently on base at Fort Carson, Colorado, awaiting information on her case and further orders from her commanding officers. Pax Christi USA has received a request to inform our members how we can support Kim over the next weeks and months.

Last month, Kim complied with the Canadian government’s deportation order and spent time in the Lewis County Jail in Lowville, N.Y. She was arrested after voluntarily crossing into the U.S. and detained at Ft. Drum, N.Y. She had been in Canada since 2007 with her family.

“Kim Rivera’s refusal to participate in an illegal war and her courageous decision to come to Canada was not only an act of peace, it was her duty,” Ken Marciniec, a spokesman for the War Resisters Support Campaign (WRSP), said in a statement. “On the same day that Veterans Affairs Minister Steven Blaney was promoting the International Day of Peace in Montreal, a conscientious objector was being transferred to a U.S. jail for speaking out against the Iraq War while in Canada because our government deserted international law.”

Click on the links below to read more about Kim’s case:

TAKE ACTION: Tell President Obama to encourage Japan to strengthen Article 9

from Nick Mele, Pax Christi USA National Council member

article 9Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party under the leadership of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has already, only two months after its return to to power in December 2012, increased tensions in Northeast Asia. China, North and South Korea, and Russia are all wary of Japanese rearmament in light of the past but the Abe government seeks to weaken or revoke altogether constitutional restrictions <
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article_9_of_the_Japanese_Constitution
> on expanding the Japanese military. On Friday, February 22, President Obama will meet with Prime Minister Abe for what the White House described as “in-depth discussions with Prime Minister Abe on a range of bilateral, regional and global issues, including the U.S,-Japan Security Alliance, economic and trade issues and deepening bilateral cooperation.”

The government of the United States has encouraged Japanese rearmament for over twenty years; the policy of support for an expanded role for Japan’s Self Defense Forces has been a consistent feature of Democratic and Republican administrations since the Reagan presidency. In view of the close security relationship between Japan and the United States, it is critically important that U.S. public opinion mobilize to oppose further militarization of Japan and especially to protect the Japanese Constitution’s Article 9, which renounces the right to wage war and relinquishes the use of military power as a tool of national policy.

Please contact the White House and urge President Obama to ask Prime Minister Abe to strengthen, not weaken, Article 9 of Japan’s Constitution. Submit comments online here <
http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/submit-questions-and-comments
> or call at 202-456-1111.

CARE FOR CREATION: Commemorating the life of Sr. Dorothy Stang, SNDdeN, d. Feb. 12, 2005

from Pax Christi USA’s Global Restoration Committee

A file photo of Missionary sister Dorothy Stang in Brazil's Amazon

“I don’t want to flee, nor do I want to abandon the battle of these farmers who live without any protection in the forest. They have the sacrosanct right to aspire to a better life on land where they can live and work with dignity while respecting the environment.” ~Sr. Dorothy Stang, SNDdeN

One of the dimensions of just peace-making is the attention to human rights and global restoration. This is one of the pillars espoused by Pax Christi USA.  In remembering and celebrating the life and death of Sr. Dorothy Stang, we become aware of her struggle against the disregard for the human rights of Indigenous people and for the preservation of the forest.

Sr. Dorothy was shot on February 12, 2005 near Anapú, a small Amazon jungle village where she was active for 23 years, helping local peasant farmers fight for their land and their rights in the face of encroachment by large landowners and logging companies.

The Independent/UK in 2005 published the following: “As with the death of Mr. Mendez, a rubber tapper, the murder of Sister Dorothy has triggered waves of outrage among environmental and human rights activists who say she dedicated her life to helping the area’s poor, landless peasants and confronting the businesses that see the rainforest only as a resource to be plundered and which have already destroyed 20 per cent of its 1.6 million square miles. The stakes could not have been higher. Greenpeace estimates that 90 per cent of the timber in Para is illegally logged. The danger of speaking out against such exploitation could barely have been greater. Campaigners say Para has the country’s highest rate of deaths related to land battles. Greenpeace said that more than 40 per cent of the murders between 1985 and 2001 were related to such disputes.” (Published on Tuesday, February 15, 2005 by the Independent/UK)

Her anniversary reminds us of the courage and audacity of a prophet to speak out in defense of those whose voices are smothered through fear and brutal force. Sister Dorothy Stang was one of those prophets who could not abandon the battle against big logging companies in favor of the poor peasant trying to eke out a living in and from the forest.  She often wore a t-shirt with the slogan, ‘A morte da floresta é fim da nossa vida’, the Death of the forest is the end of our life’.

Shockingly, the Brazilian Supreme Court released the farmer found guilty of ordering the 2005 murder.  This move has alarmed human rights defenders, saying other cases involving land disputes puts the rights of poor farmers in jeopardy. Galvao, the culpable man, had been arrested in 2008 and sentenced to 30 years in prison.

Sr. Dorothy was 73 at the time of her murder and had lived in the Amazon jungle for three decades.

Sr. Dorothy’s community here in the U.S. shared with us that this February 12th and 13th, the eve of Ash Wednesday and Ash Wednesday, as they have every year since her death, a crowd will gather at the site of Dorothy’s death.  People from all over the Anapu area and beyond, land reform activists, women and children as well as men from the sustainable development communities she helped establish, priests and perhaps the bishop, even a politician or two will stand in that sacred place and proclaim to one another, to the forest and the sky that Dorothy lives.  They will sing and pray and then share a simple meal and talk not so much about the past, but about the future and their hopes.  The crowd gathered round testifies to an unconquered spirit that still lives – and inspires and calls us to attend to the life of the forest and indeed to attend to all we love wherever we are.

Click here to read the Pray-Study-Act e-bulletin commemorating Sr. Dorothy’s life.