GPJA 285: Forum on John Minto's South Africa trip
GLOBAL PEACE AND JUSTICE AUCKLAND
NEWSLETTER #285, May 18, 2009
Website: http://www.gpja.org.nz/
SPECIAL GPJA FORUM ON JOHN MINTO'S TRIP TO SOUTH AFRICA 26 MAY
7.30pm Tuesday 26th May, at Trades Hall, 147 Great North Road, Grey Lynn. How has South Africa changed in the 15 years since the first ANC government was elected in euphoria after decades of race-based oppression under apartheid? Former anti-apartheid activist and GPJA spokesperson John Minto spent two weeks in South Africa last month at the time of the 4th post-apartheid election and met with political activists, community-based organisations and trade unionists. He will talk about his impressions of South Africa today with photos and video to illustrate.
GPJA JUNE 1 FORUM: What does
the super-city mean for Aucklanders? Who is driving
the change and why? What does it mean for Maori
representation?
7.30pm Monday, June 1, at Trades
Hall, 147 Great North Road, Grey Lynn. Invited speakers will
form a panel to discuss this issues. More details
later.
PRISON PROVATISATION: Submissions close on 22 May (this Friday) on the government bill to allow for the privatisation of prisons. Every submission counts so send one in even if it’s only a sentence. Send your submission to: Submissions to the Law & Order Select Committee on the Bill to privatise NZ jails close in only one month's time - on Friday May 22: http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/SC/SubmCalled/f/5/b/49SCLOcorrectionscontractm200905221-Corrections-Contract-Management.htm
Corrections (Contract Management of Prisons) Amendment Bill 20-1 (2009) Government Bill, Hon Judith Collins: http://www.legislation.govt.nz/bill/government/2009/0020-1/latest/DLM1888310.html
See also: Prison Privatisation Report International No. 61, http://www.psiru.org/justice/ppri61.htm
March 2004 Public Services International Research Unit (PSIRU) University of Greenwich, London, England. http://www.psiru.org/ppri.asp
April 2009 Australian action against jail privatising: Justice Action website, much useful material on privatisation + Stateline ABCTV presentation 'Mr Privatisation'. http://www.justiceaction.org.au
Transcript, from p.40, of presentation of the prisoner defence against privatisation before the NSW Upper House Inquiry, on the first day of hearing behind the government, and the prison officers: http://www.justiceaction.org.au/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=248&Itemid=1
Submissions to NSW State Parliament's Public Hearing Inquiry on prison privatisation - proposed for 2 more jails in NSW: Of 451 submissions, only 11 support privatisation - including Corrections and the corporations who are tenderers... http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/PARLMENT/committee.nsf/0/16B4F843319D2EBCCA257522001B35C
National debate on prisoner health run by the Public Health Association of Australia. Brett partnered the Executive Director of Australian National Council On Drugs, against the head of the prison officers (commonwealth) and the Director of Justice Health. We won: http://www.phaa.net.au/JusticeHealthConference.php
some NZ criticism: Drivers of Crime - Metiria Turei MP http://www.greens.org.nz/node/20881
Maori justice system solution proposed - Metiria Turei, MP http://www.greens.org.nz/node/20880
John Minto: Maori Party stooges for prison privatisation http://johnminto.org.nz/
Bomber Bradbury: Earth to Pita Sharples - you’re being taken for a ride! http://tumeke.blogspot.com/2009/04/earth-to-pita-sharples-youre-being.html
Tapu Misa: Is privatising jails really worth the risk? http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10561829&pnum=0
HIKOI:
NO SUPERCITY WITHOUT US!
E Nga Iwi, Nga Waka, Nga
Hau e Wha! Nau mai tautoko mai! The people of Auckland and
Aotearoa from all waka and all cultures are invited to hokoi
- stand by us Auckland we're making a stand for you. The
hikoi will converge at the bottom of Queen Street by 12 noon
on May 25 before peacefully walking together to the Town
Hall and Aotea Square. Start from your part of Auckland or
at Queen Street:
* South Auckland - 8.30am at Manukau
City Council, 9.20am leave by car convoy. Parking in the
Auckland Domain, leave Domain by foot by 10.30am for Queen
Street via Symonds Street and Anzac Ave.* East/Central
Auckland - 8.30am at Bastion Point-Orakei Marae, 9.30am
leave by walking along Tamaki Drive to the bottom of Queen
Street.
* North Auckland - 10am at Awataha Marae, 58
Akoranga Drive, leave by car convoy; 11am re-group at
Victoria Park then walk to bottom of Queen Street. CBD
parking details to be announced.
* West Auckland - 9am at
Te Piringatahi o Te Maungarongo Marae, 19 Luckens Road, West
Harbour; 11am re-group at Victoria Park then walk to bottom
of Queen Street. CBD parking details to be
announced.
Updates, and contact details for area hikoi
coordinator/s if you'd like to get involved, are at
http://ihiaotearoa.wordpress.com
SUBMISSIONS DUE:
FORESHORE AND SEABED ACT REVIEW
Kia ora, this
message is to remind you that the deadline for written
submissions to the Foreshore and Seabed Act Ministerial
Review is 5pm tomorrow, Tuesday 19 May. Submissions should
be sent to email foreshorereview_submit@justice.govt.nz
Please also consider sending a copy of your submission (or
the link to it if it is on yourweb site) to Peace Movement
Aotearoa, email pma@xtra.co.nz to be uploaded to the
'Foreshore and Seabed Act Ministerial Review' page at
http://www.converge.org.nz/pma/fsarev.htm That page
currently has resources to assist with writing a submission,
including Peace Movement Aotearoa's Foreshore and
SeabedReview Action Alert, Moana Jackson's Primer on the
Review, and a link to the Ngai Tahu Review Background
Paper.
WHAT'S ON IN AUCKLAND
Thursday, May 21,
5-6pm, WE240, Art and Design Building, Gate 3, AUT
PACER - the latest tool for recolonising the
Pacific. In her 2001 reports for the Pacific Network on
Globalisation, Big Brothers Behaving Badly and A People's
Guide to PACER, Jane Kelsey outlined what the Pacific
Agreement on Closer Economic Relations (PACER) between
Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands Countries
might mean for Pacific peoples. Australia and NZ are now
pushingfor Pacific leaders at the Forum Leaders' meeting in
Cairns in August to agree to negotiations for a free trade
agreement known as PACER-plus. Jane Kelsey's talk will
examine the geopolitical, social and economic implications
of a 'trade' treaty that is the latest tool for recolonising
the Pacific. Prof. Jane Kelsey is one of New Zealand's
best-known critical commentators on issues ofglobalisation,
structural adjustment and decolonisation. She is an active
member of a number of international coalitions of academics,
trade unionists, NGOs and social movements working for
social justice. She has written numerous books and articles
on the neoliberal restructuring of New Zealand since 1984,
including the best-selling 'The New Zealand Experiment. A
World Model for StructuralAdjustment?'. Her latest book on
globalisation, 'Serving Whose Interests? The Political
Economy of Trade in Services Agreements', was published in
2008. WE240, Art and Design Building, Gate 3, Thursday, May
21, 5-6pm, co-hosted by School of Art and Design, Pacific
Media Centre, and School of Communication.
Saturday,
May 23, 4pm, Auckland Normal Intermediate School, Porouni
Street, Mt. Eden
SEMINAR – STOP GENOCIDE: A study
by a team headed by Madeline Albright, former US Secretary
of State has enlisted 33 States as practising Genocide at
present. Among them 8 have been identified and placed on Red
Alert. The civilized world cannot play ostrich and keep
aloof any more. The world order, is sadly trekking on a path
that is unmindful of democracy, democratic values
anddemocratic infrastructures. This has to be stopped. It is
time the Int’l role players focus on preventing the
re-appearance of barbarism. Please therefore make it a point
to be present at the Seminar and make your contribution..
Would you like to make a 10 minute presentation? Please
inform if you need a copy of the report by Madeline Albright
team, and if so, please inform us your postmail address.
Yours Sincerely, A.Theva Rajan, Secretary. TAMILS AGAINST
GENOCIDE NZ, 8-115 Blockhouse Bay Road, Avondale, Auckland
1026, New Zealand Phone: 64-9-820-2113, Email:
rajatheva@xtra.co.nz
Sunday, May 24, 9am, Grassy area
on the City side by the bridge
"Walk/Cycle over the
Auckland Harbour bridge - 1959 and 2009 chance to get
across". Host: getacross.org.nz. Meeting in the Curran
Street park next to the bridge. This date is 50 years after
the original opening to the public to walk across and allows
us time to coordinate the Demonstration March with the
Police and the NZ Transport Agency.
Monday, May 25,
7.30pm, The Peace Place, Four Seasons building, 2F 22 Emily
Place, Auckland
TAMIL GENOCIDE - Can we believe the
media stories? • Evidence shows Government still
massacring civilians • Sri Lanka's Government bans
independent journalistsRecent Film from Refugee Camps in Sri
Lanka. Comment and History from those involved. Phone
3089384 pmopnz@yahoo.com.au (Presented by Pax Christi
Aotearoa New Zealand)
Tuesday, May 26, 7.30pm, Trades
Hall, 147 Great North Road, Grey Lynn
SPECIAL GPJA
FORUM ON JOHN MINTO'S TRIP TO SOUTH AFRICA
Tuesday, May
26, 5pm, Pacific Media Centre, WE240, Art and Design
Building, Gate 3, AUT
Burma's citizen journalists
and the exiled media. Violet Cho, PMC's Asian Journalism
Fellow. Film: BurmaVJ, a combined documentary and seminar
about independent news media in Burma under the military
junta presented by the Pacific Media Centre's Asian
Journalism Fellow, Violet Cho. This 84min film won top prize
at the 2008 Amsterdam Documentary Festival last December. It
is the story of how agroup of citizen journalists filmed and
got their images out of the repression by the military junta
to the world's media during the so-called "Safron
Revolution" in September 2007. Exiled independent journalist
Violet Cho, who writes for Irrawaddy magazine, will present
her seminar on Burma and also introduce the
film.
Tuesday, May 26, 6.30pm, Room 039, ClockTower
Building No. 105, 22 Princes Street
Photojournalism:
Telling Stories of Trauma with Jim MacMillan. 1 session,
Tuesday 26 May, 6.30 - 9pm. Fee: $35 $10 (student/ unwaged).
Award winning Photojournalist Jim MacMillan will discuss the
special challenges and responsibilities of covering
traumatic events in the news, from urban violence to
terrorist attacks and foreign wars. Primary concerns will
include the ethical treatment of victimsand survivors, the
impact of trauma coverage on news consumers and communities.
Issues of accurate and complete reporting under stress, and
the psychological hazards of covering traumatic events for
the news professionals involved will be addressed. Jim
MacMillan is an independent multimedia journalist,
university educator and news media consultant based in
Philadelphia. He will present his ownwork from the crime
beat in Philadelphia, terrorist attacks in the United States
and the war in Iraq. To enrol: Continuing Education, phone
09 373 7599 ext 87831/87832, or email conted@auckland.ac.nz
Website: www.cce.auckland.ac.nz
Wednesday, May 27,
8.30am - 5pm, AUT Conference Centre (WA224), Auckland
University of Technology, City Campus,55 Wellesley Street
East, Auckland
Working Women’s Charter Seminar -
For a celebration, a history and action plan - It is now 30
years since the Working Women’s Charter was adopted by the
Federation of Labour Conference as policy. It had an
immediate effect on conditions of work for women and on
women’s participation in unions. Join the Auckland Labour
History Group on Wednesday 27 May at a seminar which
willestablish an historical record of the Working Women’s
Charter 1980s campaign Celebrate that achievement. Take
unfinished business from the Charter forward into the
economic challenges we are facing. Globally, women are
likely to be hard hit by the changes. Anyone is welcome to
attend. We are hoping that it will also be a union occasion
so that any action plan can be taken forward into thewhole
union movement.
Friday, May 29, 7.30am, School of
Population Health, University of Auckland, Tamaki Campus
Budget 09: Child Poverty – For Better or Worse? Child
Poverty Action Group is organising the 9th annual Post –
Budget Breakfast. SPEAKERS: Prof Manukau Henare, Dr Steve
Poletti, John Minto. MC Prof Innes Asher, Comments A/Prof
Susan St John
Monday, June 1, 7.30PM, Trades Hall, 147
Great North Road, Grey Lynn
GPJA Forum: What does
the super-city mean for Aucklanders? Who is driving the
change and why? What does it mean for Maorirepresentation?
Invited speakers will form a panel to discuss this issues.
More details later.
Wendesday, June 3, 7pm, The Peace
Place, 22 Emily Place, Auckland.
THE WORLD MARCH FOR
PEACE AND DISARMAMENT: Kia Ora, We all know what happens
when violence breaks out- people get hurt. But what happens
when peace breaks out? The answer is that lives are healed.
You may be thinking that there's no war or violence where
you are, that you already gave at the office, in the 60's
etc. That people making a global statement asserting the
desire to live in peace won'tchange anything. The World
March for Peace and Non-violence isn't wishful thinking.
I'ts real. It begins here in New Zealand and will travel
around the planet. Getting involved can be as simple as
going to the New Zealand Website: www.worldmarch.co.nz to
see the events and learn about the possibilities for
celebrating with us. The attached one page briefexplains
what's happening, where and why, and who to contact. We also
need volunteers to help in ways that you can even make
happen while you're sitting in a chair. Better yet-- Why not
join us at our next meeting: Wendesday, June the 3rd @ The
Peace Place, 22 Emily Place, Auckland. 7- 8:30 pm. For more
information about the meeting, please contact one of the
Auckland event coordinators: Audreyvan Ryn: 021 035 4431/09
368 1516 audrey@writeaway.co.nz or Wende Jowsey:
wende@jowsey.com 072563010 Thanks for your support, The New
Zealand World March Team
Thursday, June 4, 6:30pm -
8:45pm, Cityside hall, 8A Mount Eden Road
The first
Thursday of every month is Indymedia night and on June 4th
we will be screening Lucio, an almost unbelievable but true
tale of a revolutionary who resisted the Franco regime,
captured hiding Nazi's and brought the largest bank on the
planet to its knees. The film will be preceded by a short
presentation from a local community group. $5 waged, or koha
if low/unwaged. Please read the filmblurb below and watch
the trailer here;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PBVjEUmmrGs&feature=channel
Meet Lucio Uturbia — anarchist, bank robber, forger,
fugitive, and above all, a bricklayer. Lucio’s life is the
stuff of legend. As an activist in 1950’s Paris, he
counted André Breton and Albert Camusamongst his friends,
worked with anarchist guerrilla Francisco Sabate to bring
down Franco’s fascist regime and carried out numerous bank
robberies to fund the struggle to free Spain. In 1977, he
successfully forged US$ 20 million dollars of Citibank
travellers cheques to fund guerrilla groups in Latin
America, bringing the bank to its knees in the process. His
motivation was not his owngain, but to dent confidence in
this powerful financial institution. Lucio was arrested for
this and ended up in prison, but soon got back on his feet.
He also helped organise the kidnapping of Nazi war criminal
Klaus Barbie from his hideout in Bolivia, aided the escape
of Black Panthers from the US and not surprisingly was
targeted by the CIA. The story of how this bricklayer with a
skill forforgery brought down powerful institutions without
resorting to violence is riveting. His sensibility is pure
and enchanting: fight power altruistically without ever
aspiring to hold power. Testimony from Lucio and his cohorts
intermingle with a mesmerizing procession of archival
evidence and tasteful re-enactments. Co-directors Arregi and
Goenaga create tension and excitement without
sacrificinggravitas and the film’s stunning cinematic
style matches the rapid and almost unimaginable trajectory
of Lucio’s tale.
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
"The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy.": Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968), US civil rights leader
"I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have: three meals a day for their bodies, - education and culture for their minds - and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits" Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
HIKOI: NO
SUPERCITY WITHOUT US!
E Nga Iwi, Nga Waka, Nga Hau e
Wha! Nau mai tautoko mai! The people of Auckland and
Aotearoa from all waka and all cultures are invited to hokoi
- stand by us Auckland we're making a stand for you. The
hikoi will converge at the bottom of Queen Street by 12 noon
on May 25 before peacefully walking together to the Town
Hall and Aotea Square. Start from your part of Auckland or
at Queen Street:
* South Auckland - 8.30am at Manukau City Council, 9.20am leave by car convoy. Parking in the Auckland Domain, leave Domain by foot by 10.30am for Queen Street via Symonds Street and Anzac Ave.
* East/Central Auckland - 8.30am at Bastion Point-Orakei Marae, 9.30am leave by walking along Tamaki Drive to the bottom of Queen Street.
* North Auckland - 10am at Awataha Marae, 58 Akoranga Drive, leave by car convoy; 11am re-group at Victoria Park then walk to bottom of Queen Street. CBD parking details to be announced.
* West Auckland - 9am at Te Piringatahi o Te Maungarongo Marae, 19 Luckens Road, West Harbour; 11am re-group at Victoria Park then walk to bottom of Queen Street. CBD parking details to be announced.
Updates, and contact details for area hikoi coordinator/s if you'd like to get involved, are at http://ihiaotearoa.wordpress.com
Background information
Tamaki Herenga Waka – ‘Tamaki, the place many waka are tied to’. The Tangata Whenua, the traditional tribes of Tamaki Herenga Waka – the wider Auckland Region, have lived here for over a thousand years fishing in its harbours, the Manukau, Waitemataa and Kaipara and gardening across its once fertile land. The volcanic cones created by Mataoho, the god of volcanoes,served as thriving pa and villages and are the repositories of tribal histories. The Treaty of Waitangi was signed by Auckland tribes on the Manukau Harbour and Tamaki River. It was the intention of chiefs that their people and their descendants would always have a central role to play in the development of their towns and city and in the management of ancestral resources in their tribaldistrict.
All tribes gifted land or made land available for settlement. Some tribes had land confiscated and some taken under the Public Works Act and other legislation leading to great land-loss and its associated devastating social effects. Auckland and NZ has profited greatly from the lands taken or given by the tribes of Auckland. Tribal leaders have always sought a voice in Council. “Let usbe admitted to your councils”, said Paora Tuhaere in the 1860s. Auckland also now hosts many other Maori from different tribal regions making Auckland the largest centre of Maori population in the country. Over 25% of the total Maori population lives in Auckland with approximately 140,000 Maori residents.
The Royal Commission Recommendation on Maori Representation
The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Auckland Governance spent over 18 months consulting with the public before recommending establishing 3 Reserved Maori seats on a proposed 23 seat Auckland ‘Supercity’ Council. The Royal Commission's report is available at http://www.royalcommission.govt.nz/rccms.nsf/CONTENTPAGES/$first?open
Why should there be Maori Seats?
Today there are many issues Tangata Whenua needs a direct say in. How our once pristine harbours and waterways are managed. How our sacred sites are protected and respected. How the history of this land should be part of the proud identity of every Aucklander no matter their origin. How our communities can pay fair water and other rates. How our culture and cultural values can contribute totourism and the major climate change issues facing our City. How Maori can contribute a more diverse view at the top table that includes a manaakitanga and kaitiakitanga perspective honed by living here for 1,000 years.
Maori have struggled to achieve representation in Councils. Less than 5% of councillors in NZ are of Maori descent. First Past the Post is still the voting system of choice at local level and that has always failed Maori. No wonder the majority are locking in their control for another 50 years as the face of Auckland is rapidly changing to a brown one. Maori vote proportionately higher thanany other ethnic group however Maori are still unable to get voted on to Councils. Some call this failure, the ‘tyranny of the majority’. Just as there are guaranteed seats in parliament, so too should there be Maori seats in local government to ensure there is a Maori voice and view being put forward on all matters.
What has the Crown decided?
The Crown ignored the Commission’s recommendation saying there will not be guaranteed Maori seats and that the issue of Maori seats is already provided for in the Local Government Act that allows for a public poll to be undertaken in 2010 on the issue. Maori are only 11% of the population in Auckland. It is unlikely that the wider public would vote for Maori seats and the Crown know thiswell. The Crown has further said that 3 votes out of 23 is a not a voice – but a proposed Maori Advisory Board somehow is. This defies all logic and sense and is simply a lie.
What are Maori Planning to do?
Maori firstly are planning to Hikoi, to march from the 4 corners of Auckland converging at the bottom of Queen Street to then walk in unison up to the Town Hall and Aotea Square. But this is not the end. There will be ongoing activities to keep the pressure on the Crown to reverse their short-sighted decision to exclude Maori from the Super City. Submissions will be made to the selectcommittee and negotiations will continue between iwi leaders and the PM.
You can express yourself too by joining the Hikoi on May 25. If you live outside of the Auckland area you too should be concerned as this model of corporate – rather than democratic governance is coming to a City near you.
I’m not Maori – Can I Hikoi?
Tribal leaders have invited all people no matter what culture to join the Hikoi. The Hikoi’s intent is to show the beauty, diversity and soul of today’s, and tomorrow’s Auckland. To show the Crown that Auckland and NZ have moved past gutter race politics towards an Aotearoa-NZ envisaged by those chiefs that started our City in 1840.
Nau mai haere mai koutou katoa!
FOREIGN CONTROL WATCHDOG 120 - MAY
2009
http://www.converge.org.nz/watchdog/20/index20.htm
Here
We Go Again: Cargo Cult Mentality Behind Drive To Liberalise
Foreign Investment Law, by Murray Horton
Financial
Crises, Trilemmas, And A Time To Rethink, by Bill Rosenberg
Tobacco Merchant Of Death Wins 2008 Roger Award, by
Murray Horton
New Zealand’s Overseas Debt, The Banks,
And The Crisis, by Geoff Bertram
Hold The Front Page!
Major TNC Takeover Vetoed, by Quentin Findlay
SIS Spied
On CAFCA For Quarter Of A Century, by Murray
Horton
Russians Take Over Nutritek: First NZ Dairy
Products Company To Be Foreign-Owned, by Jeremy
Agar
Reviews, by Jeremy Agar: “The Great Crash,
1929”, by John Kenneth Galbraith; “Bad Samaritans: The
Myth Of Free Trade And The Secret History Of Capitalism”,
by Ha-Joon Chang; “Corporate Complicity & Legal
Accountability”, International Commission of Jurists;
“Samuel Parnell: A Legacy”, by Paul Corliss;
Obituaries by Murray Horton: Martin de Wolff; Death In
The Family: Connie Summers;
Cultural Exchange The
Japanese Travel Company Way, by Ken Horlor
_TREATY
CONFERENCE3 - 4 July 2009 Manukau City
A Tangata
Tiriti initiative open to all. We invite you and members of
your community to Treaty in the 21st Century. This
conference is for people with an interest in applying the
Treaty of Waitangi in the not for profit, public and private
sectors, in local communities and in their own lives. The
focus is on past, present and future work: looking at what's
been going on, what's happeningnow and what the future
possibilities might be for the Treaty. The conference will
include keynote presentations, over 30 workshops, and
informal networking time. It will provide an opportunity to
reflect, share learning, and support action on strengthening
the role of the Treaty in our society. Go to
http://www.trc.org.nz/conference09 for moreinformation. Go
to http://www.trc.org.nz/onlineregistration for a
registration form. Go to o
http://www.trc.org.nz/workshopproposal for a workshop
proposal form. A pre-conference event is planned for 2 July,
7 - 9pm: details to be confirmed. If you cannot access the
website please contactthe conference administrator Traci
Mangu, Email: admin@awea.org.nz Phone: 09 274 4270 If you
would like to talk about an idea for a workshop contact the
conference organiser Jen Margaret Email: jen@awea.org.nz
Organised by the Treaty Resource Centre and Tamaki Treaty
Workers. Please pass this invitation on to
yournetworks.
AUCKLAND HERITAGE PEACE
WALK
9.00am Sunday 27 September, QEII Square - New
Zealand is the starting place for a World March for Peace
and Nonviolence which will travel around the globe with
stops in 90 countries, beginning with an event in Auckland,
to be followed by the official launch in Wellington on 2
October. The World March was initiated by the organisation
World Without Wars. The objectives of the World Marchare:
•To give a voice to the majority of world citizens who
want peace by having them send out a unified signal
•To
create global awareness of the urgent need to condemn of all
forms of violence and bring about real peace
•By
highlighting the work of individuals and organizations
around the world to end violence and promote peace, citizens
who are moved to support this work will be empowered to do
so.
Aotearoa-New Zealand was chosen in recognition of:
•The nonviolence traditions of Moriori and
Parihaka
•Being the first country to grant women the
vote
•Being the only country to have a Minister for
Disarmament
•Our inclusion of peace studies in the
school curriculum and the establishment of Peace
Cities
•Our moves towards peaceful resolution of past
injustices to Tangata Whenua and other ethnic
communities
•Our nuclear-free status
•Our
government’s support for the UN.
The Auckland Heritage Peace Walk Launch is Auckland’s welcome to the international participants in the World March. The walk will visit various peace landmarks around the central city, ending at St Matthew-in-the-City with performances, exhibits, music and speakers. Sites on the walk include:
• Rainbow Warrior mural, Marsden Wharf
•
The Peace Place, Emily Place
• Memorial - Tiananmen
Square Massacre
Maclaurin Chapel, Princes St
•
Albert Park - the band rotunda
• Gateway sculpture,
Victoria St
• Suffragette mural, Khartoum Place
Local individuals and groups have endorsed the World March including: Helen Clark, Jim Anderton, Jacinda Ardern, Phil Goff, Phil Twyford, Sir Paul Reeves, Kerry Prendergast, Dr Kate Dewes, Marion Hancock, Kevin Clements, Pauline Tangiora, Moana Manipoto, Yulia, Amnesty International, Greenpeace, Disarmament and Security Centre, The Peace Foundation, Oxfam, United Nations Association of NZ. Weare seeking further endorsements as well as participation in the Auckland Heritage Peace Wal. Auckland co-ordinators for the volunteer team organising the Auckland events: Audrey van Ryn: 368 1516 audrey@writeaway.co.nz and Wende Jowsey: wende@jowsey.com www.worldmarch.co.nz www.theworldmarch.org
BEST ON THE WEB
NEW ZEALAND
SIS Spied On CAFCA For A Quarter Of A Century http://www.converge.org.nz/watchdog/20/06.htm
Return to Form: Nats Nix Pay Equity http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0905/S00163.htm
Homage To Aotearoa’s Anti-Fascists In 1996 the Spanish Cortez offered citizenship to any of the surviving volunteers who in the 1930s had travelled to Spain, from more than 50 countries, to fight against fascism. It was a touching and concrete tribute to the sacrifices made by these idealists from around the globe - including, as a new book, Kiwi Compañeros reveals, New Zealand. http://books.scoop.co.nz/2009/05/09/homage-to-aotearoas-anti-fascists/
AFGHANISTAN
U.S. Attack Killed 140 Villagers - Afghan Probe By Hamid Shalizi and Peter Graff: A copy of the government's list of the names, ages and father's names of each of the 140 dead was obtained by Reuters earlier this week. It shows that 93 of those killed were children -- the youngest eight days old -- and only 22 were adult males. http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22635.htm
In Afghanistan, New General, Same War http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/139971/in_afghanistan%2C_new_general%2C_same_war_/
BOLIVIA
Interview with Bolivia's foreign minister: `Communitarian socialism will refound Bolivia’ http://links.org.au/node/1048
GERMANY
Oscar Lafintain: "We want to overthrow capitalism" http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,624880,00.html
IRAQ
New 'Prisoner Abuse' Photographs Emerge Despite US Bid to Block Publication By Alex Spillius in Washington: Graphic photographs of alleged prisoner abuse, thought to be among up to 2,000 images Barack Obama is trying to prevent from being released, emerged yesterday. http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22624.htm
PACIFIC
PAKISTAN
U.S. Stirs a Hornet's Nest in Pakistan By ERIC MARGOLIS: If this continues, at some point patriotic Pakistani soldiers may rebel and shoot the corrupt generals and politicians on Washington's payroll. Equally ominous, a poor people's uprising spreading across Pakistan -- also mislabelled "Taliban" -- threatens a radical national rebellion reminiscent of India's Naxalite rebels. http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22633.htm
PALESTINE
Palestinians Recall 61 Years of Exile - Nakba remembered amid Gaza suffering - Video: Perhaps nowhere are the events of the "Nakba" more pertinent today than in the Gaza Strip, where Palestinians are still feeling the devastating effects of the latest Israeli attacks. http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22628.htm
Boycott Israel campaign starts to bite: Motorola, Caterpillar, Veolia, the Tesco supermarket chain, and other companies across the world that do business with Israel are suffering losses due to a global boycott in support of Palestinian rights. http://www.greenleft.org.au/2009/794/40892
SRI
LANKA
Why Don't We Care About Sri Lanka? Western
governments and societies are always quick to condemn
atrocities in the Middle East and Africa. But there's been a
lack of comparable outrage over the events in Sri Lanka.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22614.htm
JOHN PILGER: The Tamils of Sri Lanka - Distant Voices, Desperate Lives - The great moral citadels in London and Washington offer merely silent approval of the violence and tragedy. No appeals are heard in the United Nations from them. http://informationclearinghouse.info/article22610.htm
ENDS