report
& pictures from Emergency Demo on Easter Sunday 2004 opposite
Downing St
contact your MP and others in Government - don't let
them deny what is happening
EDM 990
call
for action
press release
background information and articles
new briefing Fallujah
and beyond (5 May 2004)
Emergency
Demo on Easter Sunday 2004 opposite Downing St
 |
 |
Peggie
Preston holds a photo of boys in Fallujah, taken by members
of a Voices delegation in
May 2002. At her feet is a photo of an injured child taken
in April 2004. Gareth Evans from
Voices spoke of how they had been welcomed by the people
they met in
Fallujah market, including this group of boys, despite
the fact that in 1991
the market was hit by a RAF bomb and
up to 200 people were killed and many more were injured.
How are these boys now? Are they still alive?
In April 2003,
17 people were
killed in Fallujah in 2
separate incidents when demonstrators
outside a school were shot down by US soldiers. |
Despite the short notice,
over 100 people turned up to demonstrate against the continuing
killing of Iraqis and the 'mass punishment' being meted out to
the Iraqi people by the Coalition forces.
Speakers
included Dr Salih Ibrahim, Iraqi pathologist with relatives
in Baghdad and Basra who has spent the last 20 years here in the
UK; Brian
Haw, long-time Parliament Square peace protestor; Haifa Zangana,
Iraqi novelist, painter and campaigner; Liz Davies, Haldane Society
of Socialist
Lawyers; Justin Alexander, Jubilee Iraq.
CONTACT DETAILS OF PARLIAMENTARIANS & EDM 990
The
deafening silence (from the Voices May/June 2004 newsletter)
In the House of Commons, protest was noticeable largely
by its absence. Parliament was not recalled from its Easter
break, only a tiny number of MPs spoke out against the carnage
in Iraq and so far only a pitiful 38 MPs have signed Early
Day Motion 990 (19 April) condemning the ‘killing of
an estimated 600 people, many of them women, children and innocent
civilians fleeing the conflict, by US forces in Fallujah during
the first weeks of April’ as an ‘atrocity.’
In an impassioned piece in the Guardian novelist Ronan Bennett
noted the ‘shameful
and deafening silence’ from MPs, including such formerly ‘progressive’ MPs
as Peter Hain, Chris Mullin, Joan Ruddock and Ann Clwyd (now Blair’s “human
rights envoy to Iraq”). ‘What does it take to get a New Labour politician
to speak out on Iraq?’ he writes, though the question applies equally to
the Tories and the Liberal Democrats. To this day the question remains unanswered.
[PLEASE
NOTE: if you can only contact one person, make it your MP. This will
then get passed up the food chain and have the biggest impact.
One imagines that 'e-mails to Tony Blair' probably disappear
(more or less) into the void.]
** You can
find an alphabetical list of MPs, including (where they have
them) their web-sites, e-mails etc... on-line at: http://www.parliament.uk/directories/hciolists/alms.cfm
** If you
know your postcode you can also fax your MP on-line using http://www.faxyourmp.org
** If you
want to leave a message for Jack Straw, the main switchboard
# at the Foreign Office for general enquiries is 020 7008 1500.
** You can
fax the Prime Minister on 020 7925 0918 or send him an e-mail
via http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page821.asp.
Alternatively you can write to him at 10 Downing Street, London,
SW1A 2AA
** You can
phone the Defence Attache's Office at the US embassy by calling
(0207) 894 0745, fax it on 020 7894-0726 or e-mail WereszczynskaAM@state.gov.
According to the Embassy's web-site (http://www.usembassy.org.uk/dao/index.html)
the DAO 'performs representational functions on behalf of the
Secretary of Defense, the Secretaries of the Military Services,
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Chiefs of the U.S. Military
Services and the Commander of European Command. The Defense & Naval
Attaché at the American Embassy, London is Captain David
L. Wirt, USN.'
** Contact
the MoD: a list of contacts is available on-line at http://www.mod.uk/contacts/index.html.
You can write to them at Ministerial Correspondence Unit, Ministry
of Defence, Room 220, Old War Office, Whitehall, London SW1A
2EU or e-mail them at public@ministers.mod.uk (including
your postal address).
Call for Action
Dear friends and fellow anti-war activists,
In response to the current wave of US/UK repression and killings in Iraq
- which have claimed the lives of hundreds of people over the last week -
Voices UK has called an EMERGENCY DEMONSTRATION OUTSIDE DOWNING STREET
TOMORROW,
Easter Sunday (11th April) between 12 NOON and 1.30 PM (see press
release below).
Please come if
you can. If you can't make tomorrow's demo. please WRITE,
PHONE, FAX AND EMAIL YOUR PROTEST, using the links below.
Among the speakers will be activists who have visited Fallujah, Sadr City
and Amara over the last seven years as well as Iraqis living in the UK with
relatives in Iraq. Many of the Voices UK sanctions-breaking delegations to
Iraq visited Fallujah during the period 1998 - 2002, visiting the market
place (which was hit by an RAF bomb in 1991) as well as the general hospital
(where doctors are now estimating that the death-toll in Fallujah alone has
topped 400).
Over 50
similar protests are taking place across the US and solidarity
activists in Iraq are also planning to hold a demo. at a US checkpoint
tomorrow (see the call for action from Ewa Jasiewicz below).
Please see also the call
for international solidarity from the International
Occupation Watch centre.
Yours in solidarity,
Gabriel
Voices in the Wilderness
uk
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL:
Nationwide protests against Iraq war
WASHINGTON, April 8 (UPI) -- Opponents of the war in Iraq are gathering
in cities across the United States over the Easter weekend in response to
a call to action to protest the war.
The anti-war ANSWER Coalition
has issued a call for "emergency local
demonstrations" nationwide to protest the war in Iraq, call for the
return of U.S. troops from Iraq, and a call for money for healthcare and
education, not the war. ANSWER is an acronym for "Act Now to Stop War
and Racism."
As of Thursday demonstrations were planned for Friday through Monday in
17 towns and cities [now more than 50], including New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles and Washington at the White House.
"The revolt sweeping Iraq in opposition to foreign occupation has resulted
in the White House and Pentagon ordering a reign of terror against all those
who defy U.S. dictates," the organization said in a statement announcing
the protests.
"Hundreds of Iraqis have been killed. A large number of U.S. troops
have also died. And there is no let up in sight. ... The current crisis in
Iraq is again stimulating protests around the country and around the world," the
statement said.
* * * * *
Cities holding demonstrations include:
Albuquerque, NM
Atlanta, GA
Augusta, ME
Baltimore, MD
Binghamton, NY
Birmingham, AL
Boston, MA
Buffalo, NY
Carlsbad, CA
Cedar Falls, IA
Charlotte, NC
Chicago, IL
Detroit, MI
Fayetteville, AR
Ferndale, MI
Gettysburg, PA
Grand Rapids, MI
Kingston, NY
Long Island, NY
Los Angeles, CA
Massachusetts, MA
Middletown, NY
Mill Valley, CA
Milwaukee, WI
Minneapolis, MN
Mountain View, CA
New Haven, CT
New York, NY
Portland, OR
Providence, RI
San Diego, CA
San Francisco, CA
San Jose, CA
Sarasota Springs, NY
Seattle, WA
Springfield, MA
St. Petersburg, FL
Washington, DC
& more!
See http://www.internationalanswer.org/campaigns/a10/a10events.html for
more information.
APPEAL FROM EWA JASIEWICZ
Iraq Solidarity Action
Resist the Massacre in Falluga
Urgent information and appeal from Ewa Jasiewicz, who worked with Voices
in the Wilderness and Occupation Watch in Iraq, lived there for 8 months
(Basra and Baghdad) and in Palestine, mainly Jenin camp for 6 months, speaks
Arabic, and who got back from Iraq 2 months ago. She is in regular contact
with her friends in Basra and Baghdad.
I just spoke to friends in Baghdad - Paola Gaspiroli, Italian, from Occupation
watch and Bridges to Baghdad, Journalist Leigh Gordon, England, (NUJ, Tribune,
Mail on Sunday) and a Palestinian friend with family in Falluja and friends
in the Iraqi Islamic Party. Both he and Leigh have been ferrying out the
injured from Falluja to Baghdad for the past three days. Ambulances have
been barred from entry into the blood-drenched city.
Here is their news, which they told me over the telephone tonight (Friday)
PAOLA:
There has been a massacre
in Falluga. Falluga is under siege. 470 people have been killed, and 1700
injured.
There has been no ceasefire. They (Americans)
told people to leave, said they have 8 hours to leave and people began
to leave but they're trapped in the Desert. The Americans have been
bombing with B52s (Confirmed also by Leigh in an email three days ago).
Bridges
to
Baghdad are pulling out. We have flights booked out of Amman. Tomorow
a team will go to Sadr City to deliver medicines. 50 people have
been killed there.
?? (Forgotten name) the 'elastic' shiekh in Sadr City (I've met him,
young, brilliant guy, describes himself as 'elastic' because he is
so flexible when
it comes to his interpretations of Islam and moral conduct definitions
etc, he's pretty liberal) he has told me I should leave. He says
that even he
can't control his people. Foreigners are going to be targeted. 6 new
foreigners have been taken hostage. Four of them are Italian security
firm employees
- they were kidnapped from their car, which was found to be full of
weapons, and there were black uniforms. Baghdad was quiet today except
for Abu Ghraib
(West Baghdad, where a vast prison is located and is bursting at the
seams with 12,000 prisoners) an American convoy was attacked there
and 9 soldiers
were injured and 27 were kidnapped. That’s right 27. None of the newswires
are reporting it though. And I heard this from (*name best not to supply
without permission). Its really really bad. They (Americans) have been
firing on Ambulances, snipers are following the ambulances, they cannot
get in.
Falluga, there are people
in the Desert, they've left Falluga but they're not being allowed into
Baghdad,
they're trapped in the Dessert, they're like
refugees, its terrible but the people, Iraqi people are giving all
they can; they’re bringing supplies, everybody is giving all their
help and support to Falluga.
I want to stay but I
have to go, if I want to come back and be useful, you know I think its
best to leave,
Bridges to Baghdad has decided this. It’s
getting really dangerous for Italians. We feel like we’re being targeted
now. (Italy has a 2500+ force including Carabinieri occupying Nassiriyah
which has been subject to a number of resistance attacks including
the devastating attack on the Police station which claimed the lives
of 4 soldiers, one civilian,
one documentary film maker, 12 Carabinieri police and 8 Iraqis).
… and Leigh have been great. They’ve been driving into Falluga
and bringing out people, going back and forth. They know what’s going
on, really they have been great. They want more people to help them but we
couldn’t from here. It’s getting much much worse.
EWA: My friend who’s
been in Falluga today and for the past few days:
We’ve been seeing it with our own eyes. People were told to leave
Falluga and now there are thousands trapped in the Desert. There is a 13
km long convoy of people trying to reach Baghdad. The Americans are firing
bombs, everything, everything they have on them. They are firing on Families!
They are all children, old men and women in the dessert. Other Iraqi people
are trying to help them. In Falluga they (Americans) have been bombing hospitals.
Children are being evacuated to Baghdad. There is a child now, a baby, he
had 25 members of his family killed, he’s in the hospital and someone
needs to be with him, why isn’t anyone there to stay with him, he just
lost 25 from his family!??? The Americans are dropping cluster bombs and
new mortars, which jump 3-4 metres. They are bombing from the air. There
are people lying dead in the streets. They said there d be a ceasefire and
then they flew in, I saw them, and they began to bomb. They are fighting
back and they are fighting well in Falluga. But we are expecting the big
attack in 24-48 hours. It will be the main attack. They will be taking the
town street by street and searching and attacking. They did this already
in a village near-by, I forget the name, but they will be doing this in Falluja.
Please get help, get people to protest, get them to go to the Embassies,
get them out, get them to do something. There is a massacre. And we need
foreigners, the foreigners can do something. We are having a protest, Jo
(Jo Wilding www.wildfirejo.org.uk) and the others from her group are coming
to the American checkpoint tomorrow. We haven’t slept in 3 or 4 days.
We need attention. I have photos, film, we ve given it to Al jazeera,
Al Arabiya but get it out too. Do everything you can. We are going
back in tomorrow.
LEIGH GORDON: It s kicking
off. Come by all means but me and (..) probably won t be around. I mean
they
re going to crazy. (…) is saying for foreigners
to come but its not safe. Sheikh . from Falluga said he couldn’t guarantee
my safety. I mean its going to go crazy, I think foreigners will start getting
killed soon … I mean people are going to start getting desperate, when
they’ve seen their mother father, house, cat, dog, everything bombed
they’re going to start to attack. They (Americans) have said this operations
only going to last 5 days it’s drawing to an end. They need to free
up troops on other fronts breaking out all over the country. They’re
going to go in for the kill. There’s no way of guaranteeing anybody’s
safety. I think you can be useful but its not like you can just not tell
your mum and think you ll be back in a week. We’re probably going to
get killed tomorrow. Come, but we might not be here.
EWA:
What to Do
This is an appeal to
the anti-war movement, to the peace movement, eco-action movement, animal
rights movement,
anti-fascists, everybody active, everybody
who can respond, can call a demo, can organise a protest, an office
occupation, an embassy storming, a road blockade, mass civil disobedience,
industrial
shut-down, work-place occupation, solidarity work stoppage, blockade
the US Embassy, Fairford Military Base action campaign … what’s taking
off at Fairford? Are B52s being deployed? Shannon Peace Camp protestors … are
there new movements at Shannon? We need to address this, we need to
resist this. We become the solidarity resistance in Iraq by taking
action in our
neighbourhoods and in our cities. Print up a leaflet. Paint up a banner.
Take to the streets. Only a small group can make a change. Show people
in Iraq that we are standing by them. 700 more British troops have
been flown in to quell the uprising in the South. No Pasaran. Take to the
embassies,
the bases, the US interests, the streets.
http://www.usembassy.org.uk/ukaddres.html - addresses of US Embassies in
London, Belfast, Edinburgh and Cardiff
http://cndyorks.gn.apc.org/caab/ - Campaign for the Accountability of American
Bases this site has a list of the locations of all the main US air bases
used in the UK
http://www.caat.org.uk/links/companies.php - full list of arms companies.
BAE Systems, and Lockheed Martin have been principal supplies of weapons
of mass destruction for the war on Iraq
http://www.caat.org.uk/support/confronting-companies.php - tips on confronting
arms companies by Campaign Against the Arms Trade
EMERGENCY CALL FOR SOLIDARITY WITH THE IRAQI PEOPLE
by Eman Ahmed Khammas, Director of International Occupation Watch Center,
International Occupation Watch CenterApril 8th, 2004
Eman Ahmed Khammas, Director, International Occupation Watch CenterOccupied
Baghdad
To the peoples of the world and their representatives at the United Nations:
The Iraqi people call for international solidarity as they resist attacks
by US-led Occupation Forces. It is clear that these attacks are designed
to terrorize entire populations of Iraqi towns and neighborhoods.
According to reports,
in Fallujah alone, over three hundred Iraqis have been killed and hundreds
more injured
since attacks began on Sunday, April
4. There is fighting in Baghdad, particularly in the neighborhoods
of Sadr, Adaamiya, Shula, Yarmok, and the cities and towns of Fallujah,
Ramadi, Basrah,
Nasiriya, Kerbala, Amarah, Kut, Kufa, Najaf, Diwaniya, Balad, and Baquba.
Residences, hospitals, mosques and ambulances trying to transport the
injured are being bombed and fired at by Occupation Forces’ guns
and tanks.
Fallujah and Adaamiya are currently under siege, surrounded by Occupation
Forces, in contravention of the Geneva Convention that prohibits holding
civilian communities under siege. Hospitals do not have access to sufficient
medical aid, essential medicine and equipment or blood supplies. In Fallujah,
the hospitals have been surrounded by soldiers forcing doctors to establish
field hospitals in private homes. Blood donors are not allowed to enter;
consequently, mosques in both Baghdad and Falluja are collecting blood for
the injured. Water and electricity have been cut off for the past several
days.
In Sadr City US helicopters have fired rockets into residential areas destroying
homes. Although no curfew has officially been imposed, US soldiers have made
a practice of aiming tank fire on cars they find moving through the streets
after dark. On Tuesday night alone, at least 6 people were killed in this
way. US forces continue to occupy and surround all the police stations and
the Sadr municipal offices.
While these attacks have
escalated sharply over the past week, they are in no way a new phenomenon
in occupied
Iraq. The indiscriminate killing of
civilians and the refusal to provide people with security, electricity
and decent medical infrastructure have characterized the ‘freedom’ that
Occupation Authorities have brought to Iraq.
We call on the international community, civil society and the anti-war/anti-occupation
movements to respond to this US-led war of terror with tangible displays
of solidarity and support for Iraqi people facing this gruesome manifestation
of the occupation.
Please take to the streets to demand an end to the US-led aggression. Organize
protests in front of US consulates and embassies around the world and demand:
an immediate end to this massacre; an immediate end to the siege of Iraqi
cities and neighborhoods; immediate access to humanitarian and medical aid
organizations seeking to provide assistance to Iraqi people who are living
under attack; and an end to the occupation of our nation.
Cities in which demonstrations have already been organized include Milan,
Montreal, Tokyo, Istanbul, Boston, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Washington
D.C. and New York City.
To contact the International Occupation Watch Center in Baghdad, please
call 001 914 360-9079 or 001 914 360-9080. You can also email eman@occupationwatch.org
BACKGROUND INFORMATION AND ARTICLES
By the end of 11 April, reports say that over 700 people have died
in Fallujah alone.
Fallujah, Amara …
At least 280 Iraqis have been killed – and a further 400 wounded – over
the past week (written on 10 April) as a result of the US assault
on the Iraqi city of Fallujah. Among the dead were 16 children and up to eight
women
killed when warplanes
struck four houses late Tuesday, and as many as forty people killed
when the US dropped two 500-pound bombs on a mosque compound on Wednesday.
Meanwhile
British troops have killed at least a dozen Iraqis in the southern
city of Amara, as fighting rages around the country and the US prepares for
a major
assault on Najaf in the next few days.
Unacceptable, illegal and counter-productive.
Yesterday Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon refused to make even the mildest
criticisism of US tactics in Fallujah and Jack Straw has stated that
if British forces ‘faced a similar sized insurgency’ they would ‘have
to take similar kinds of action.’
Straw has even had the audacity to claim that it ‘was not the Americans
who cast the first stone … in Fallujah.’ Yet it was precisely the
US shooting of 15 unarmed demonstrators there last April that sparked the ongoing
campaign of resistance. Not only is the current policy – in the words
of the pro-US member of the Iraqi Governing Council, Adnan Pachachi – ‘unacceptable
and illegal’ but it is also making matters much, much worse. The killings
and repression must stop.
new
briefing Fallujah and beyond (5 May 2004)
See the Voices May/June newsletter for more information
See the press
release for more information.
Read Kathy Kelly (from Voices US) on Fallujah - Pacification: worth
the price?