[Prec. per data] [Succ. per data] [Prec. per argomento] [Succ. per argomento] [Indice per data] [Indice per argomento]
Stop the U.S. Military Escalation in Iraqi Cities
- Subject: Stop the U.S. Military Escalation in Iraqi Cities
- From: alerts at unitedforpeace.org
- Date: Fri, 9 Apr 2004 23:41:36 +0200
=========================================== ACTION ALERT * UNITED FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE http://www.unitedforpeace.org | 212-868-5545 To subscribe, visit http://www.unitedforpeace.org/email =========================================== ** Please read this urgent call to halt the U.S. military escalation in Iraqi cities. A call for international solidarity from the Baghdad-based International Occupation Watch Center follows. ** Calls for peace and an end to the occupation of Iraq are rising even as murderous violence escalates across Iraq. Hundreds of Iraqis and dozens of U.S. and international occupation troops are dying in what the Bush administration calls "liberated" Iraq. The U.S. military is now using massive 500-pound bombs against civilians - including on a Fallujah mosque compound killing at least 62 Iraqis. Sending in more troops is not the answer. Military occupation is not bringing peace, democracy or sovereignty to the people of Iraq who have already suffered for so long. It is clear that a huge portion of the Iraqi people want the U.S. out. The so-called "transfer of power" to Iraqis on June 30th will be meaningless as long as the U.S. military occupation continues. The escalation of violence in recent days, and the Pentagon's even more violent response -- including collective punishment, killings of civilians and other violations of international law and the Geneva Conventions -- make a new approach to the crisis even more urgent. The entire world has a fundamental interest in ending this war and averting another life lost. We must bring the troops home now. TAKE ACTION 1) Call the Capitol switchboard at 202-224-3121 and ask to speak with your Congresspersons. Press them to: * act immediately to lift the siege of civilian areas. Both military operations and the cutting off of electricity, water, supplies, and ambulances should end * call for an immediate pull-back of occupation forces from Iraqi cities and towns to put both Iraqis and occupation troops out of immediate danger * reject any calls for the deployment of more U.S. troops to Iraq * support the calls for Congressional hearings to determine why—one year after the fall of Saddam Hussein—the Coalition Provisional Authority has failed to produce a genuine plan that would allow the Iraqis to determine their own political future. * immediately convene an emergency joint session of Congress to address the crisis in Iraq and to change the course of U.S. action 2) Organize a vigil at a federal government building or military recruitment center to mourn the continued loss of life in this unnecessary war. While Congress is in recess, organize vigils outside Congressional home district offices or meetings with your Congressperson. Demand that President Bush take action to halt the killing of the Iraqi people, U.S. soldiers, and international troops. Post your events at http://www.unitedforpeace.org/calendar_gxinput.php The U.S. military occupation must be ended - it is illegal, and it is a failure. A true international mobilization of support to assist the people of Iraq will not happen until the U.S. is out. We join with people and governments around the world, who recognize the necessity of reclaiming international support for Iraq and ending military occupation, in calling on the United Nations and the international organizations of parliaments, to meet immediately in emergency session to address the Iraq crisis at this urgent moment. ************************************************* EMERGENCY CALL FOR SOLIDARITY WITH THE IRAQI PEOPLE April 8 2004 Eman Ahmed Khammas Director, International Occupation Watch Center Occupied 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 Falluja 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 Falluja, 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. Falluja 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 Falluja, 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 at occupationwatch.org =========================================== ACTION ALERT * UNITED FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE http://www.unitedforpeace.org | 212-868-5545 To subscribe, visit http://www.unitedforpeace.org/email =========================================== -- To unsubscribe from this list visit http://www.unitedforpeace.org/email4.php?p=unsubscribe&uid=1391321449 To update your preferences visit http://www.unitedforpeace.org/email4.php?p=preferences&uid=1391321449 -- Powered by PHPlist, www.phplist.com --
- Prev by Date: comunicato stampa
- Next by Date: lunedi di Pasqua per la Pace
- Previous by thread: Comunicato Stampa
- Next by thread: lunedi di Pasqua per la Pace
- Indice: