From: Bill Howard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: As bombs drop, Americans say: 'Not in our name'
[WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

Visit our website: HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------------------------

        CP USA, As bombs drop, Americans say: 'Not in our name'
------------------------------------------------------------------------

                         From: RedNet, 15/10/01
              http://www.cpusa.org , mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
========================================================
People's Weekly October 13, 2001 Edition.

            As bombs drop, Americans say: 'Not in our name'
                    Call for peaceful solution grows

By Judith Le Blanc

NEW YORK CITY - Thousands marched just a few miles from Ground Zero to
call for an end to war and terrorism. They rallied Oct. 7 while workers
continued the grueling job of removing the rubble of the World Trade
Center and the remains of the victims. The march, called by a coalition
of more than 100 organizations, New York Not in Our Name, was held to
honor those who died and to call for " the establishment of a fair and
independent international tribunal to apprehend and try those
responsible for the attack." The thousands of activists heard about the
Bush administration's bombing as they arrived. The crowd, estimated by
The New York Times at 10,000, marched to Times Square, while thousands
of shoppers waved or looked on in curiosity, most not yet aware of the
war being carried on in their name. "The demonstrators seem more
determined. Perhaps it's because bombs and missiles started hitting
Afghanistan earlier today, and after Sept. 11 we in New York feel the
suffering of other victims of mass violence more keenly," commented Bill
Davis, a member of AFSCME District Council 37 Retirees Committee and
leader of the New York Communist Party. The defense of civil liberties
and civil rights was high on the agenda. For those who taunted the
marchers along the route, Ron Daniels, executive director of the Center
for Constitutional Rights, responded, "We must not let the Constitution
be a casualty of the attack on the World Trade Center. No one can dare
question our patriotism, because we are here today defending the first
amendment ..." The marchers were penned in by police barricades during
the rally, but their emotions could not be contained when James Creedon,
a NYC emergency medical technician injured in the collapse of Tower 1,
called for "justice, not vengeance." The city has been focused on
honoring the working class heroes who died Sept. 11 and have since been
carrying on the recovery efforts at Ground Zero. Four members of
Creedon's unit were lost in the WTC collapse. Even now, every day there
are funerals and memorials, held to say goodbye to the over 300
firefighters, EMT's and police who perished. "Every time I have spoken
since Sept. 11, I have called for a moment of silence for rescue workers
and the innocent people who lost their lives," Creedon said. "Today ...
I call not for a moment of silence but a moment of resolve. Let us all
resolve today, here and now, together: We will talk to people in our
community, to anyone who will listen that we will build a movement for
justice, not vengeance; peace not war." The crowd erupted when two Nobel
Peace Laureates, from Argentina and Northern Ireland, arrived. They were
bringing a message to the UN on behalf of other Peace Prize winners,
seeking an international peaceful solution to the conflict. Aldopho
Perez Esquivel, 1980's winner, spoke of solidarity, especially with the
families of the victims. "It's not the people of the world who want this
war," he said. "The only ones who want this war are the military
industrial complex, which is controlling the world ... There are all
kinds of international agreements, conventions, treaties, and pacts that
we can work with. Those should be a guide to our actions, not illegal
acts of vengeance." Mairead Maguire, a 1976 Nobel Prize winner, said,
"In Northern Ireland, we have 30 years of violence and deep political
problems. We were helped into our peace process with the encouragement
of American government that we should solve our problems nonviolently.
What applies for the people of Northern Ireland applies for the American
government. The American and British government did not for one moment,
thank God, contemplate bombing Belfast, why should they bomb
Afghanistan?" Maguire told the World that if the Afghan people have
enough food and places to live and they begin to lead normal lives,
eventually they will no longer provide terrorism a base of support.
"Those who perpetrated these terrible things," Maguire said, "can be
brought to justice through international laws." Amy Goodman, host of
radio program "Democray Now," stirred the crowd by calling on the
corporate media to let the voices for peace be heard. "The media is
saying 90 percent of people are for war. I'd like to see the question
people are asked," Goodman said. "I doubt if they are asked, 'Would you
like to avenge the killing of innocent civilians, as we saw at the WTC,
by killing innocent civilians?' The majority would say no." The economic
needs of working families are closely linked to the fight for peace.
Michael Letwin, president of UAW Local 2325, Association of Legal Aid
Attorneys, marching with the banner of Metro New York Labor Against War,
spoke about the importance of a petition drive to galvanize labor's
voice. "We in labor," he said, want to send a message from Ground Zero,
that "we are against war. We've seen the effects of the acts of
terrorism." Letwin and others drafted the petition, which eight local
presidents and 200 labor activists have now signed onto. "Labor's
participation in this struggle should represent the social consciousness
for society." As the marchers went home to prepare supper for their
families or catch up on the Giants game, they vowed to reach out to
neighbors and co-workers with the rally's message. "We are for a policy
against terrorism," Daniels said. "We believe that at the center of that
policy is to apprehend the people responsible for the acts and bring
them before an appropriate court of international law. Assassination
must not be the policy of the government."


*End*


_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________

Reply via email to