NEWS

Post date: Sun, 03/09/2014 - 18:39

As a new WILPF member, and participant at the practicum, I awoke excited to start the CSW weeks through the full day of Consultation activities through NGOCSW. The diversity of ages through out the room of women was inspiring to see, and I believe the presence of a few men was an encouraging addition. There was a little discussion about men’s role looking forward, and the awareness that their voices must be included in conversations about women encourages me.

The activities consisted of four speakers and three panel discussions that talked about a variety of topics from sustainable development to the participation and promotion of the younger women into the conversation. As a college-aged woman I can confidently say that there is a strong female voice that circulates through our generation outside of the media’s portrayal. I know many women who want to have their voices heard, are not afraid to speak out for women’s rights of all kinds, and I believe that if there was an easier avenue for them to get involved then there would be a strong presence at these conferences and those in the future. Our practicum population is a strong example of young women who have been given the chance to enter into the week’s conversations, and I hope that programs like these will only expand and multiply in the future.

Along this same theme, a highlight of the day for me was a young woman on the final panel of the day. As a seventeen year old from the New York, Bronx she shared her story of empowerment through education, and the role that schooling can have in the growth of a young female voice. Her eloquent and powerful speech called for the inclusion of the word, “girls” into the weeks’ discussion, and her presence really emphasized the perspective that young women’s can share.

I really look forward to what tomorrow and the rest of the week can bring, and I am excited to continue learning from the talks and participants that will cross my path.
~Elynn Kann

Post date: Fri, 03/07/2014 - 13:55

By Joan Ecklein, DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

WILPF has endorsed the CALL FOR SPRING DAYS OF ACTION in April and May, 2014, a coordinated campaign endorsed by many peace and justice organizations to end drone Killing, drone surveillance and global militarization.

The campaign will focus on drone bases, drone research facilities and test sites, and drone manufacturers.

Marge Van Cleef (mvc@igc.org)  and Joan Ecklein (joanecklein@comcast.net) will be coordinating WILPF anti drone activities during the two crucial months of April and May. It is very important to let us know what anti drone activities your branches have planned for these two months. We feel it is necessary to keep everyone informed of all the activities so that there can be some coordinated actions and we can gain strength from each other.

If you want to know what actions are being planned by all participants, a web site is being developed that will tell you just when, where and what events  are taking place. It will be up shortly and we can inform you of the address when we know it.

Also, there are weekly nationall bulletins being posted. If you want to subscribe to the weekly campaign bulletin contact Nickmottern@earthlink.net.  View a comprehensive list of things people can do to stop drone warfare and surveillance at KnowDrones.org.

In addition there is an open organizers conference call every Wednesday at 9 p.m. EST. Call 605-562-3060 and enter access code 484539#.

Photo: Protesters march toward Hancock Air Base drone control center in April 2013. Photo by Stephen D. Cannerelli Syracuse.com

 

Post date: Fri, 03/07/2014 - 13:33

By Melissa I. M. Torres

WILPF-US is participating in the Regional Americas Meeting April 23–27 in Colombia. The focus will be the Americas’ implementation of SCR1325, WILPF’s role in Human Rights, and the centennial. WILPF Colombia, U.S., Mexico, Bolivia, Costa Rica, and Canada are participating.

Delegates will comment on the various regionalization schemes in the International Ad Hoc Committee Report from their countries’ perspectives. Please send suggestions to dialogue@wilpfus.org no later than April 1. Meeting comments will be given to the Constitution Committee in preparing the revised draft for adoption at the 2015 International Congress.

In November, we asked WILPF members to weigh in on similar questions facing WILPF at the International level by reading and commenting on the WILPF International Ad Hoc Committee report. At this time, no substantive comments have been made by any members in the US section. In order to further discussion of these important matters, Catia Confortini—WILPF-US’s representative on the WILPF International Board—will be hosting a conference call at 3 p.m. ET/12 noon PT on Sunday, March 16. The dial in number is: 443-453-0034, access code:  848602. Please familiarize yourself with the report before joining the call.

WILPF-US delegates are Melissa I. M. Torres (pictured left) and Mary Sanderson (pictured right).

Mary, 65, active in WILPF Madison since 1979, served as president and has been working on rebuilding the branch after recent changes. Through her  WILPF branch, she has collaborated with the Colombia Support Network and served as their delegate to a Colombian Peace Community. She is a Spanish medical interpreter and, with her Colombian husband, has three sons.

Melissa, 33, has remained active in WILPF-US since her 2011 UN Practicum delegation. She serves on the Practicum Oversight Committee, presented at a WILPF-sponsored UN event, is co-faculty for 2014’s Practicum, and recently joined the Advancing Human Rights Issue Committee. A PhD candidate in social work at the University of Houston, she co-founded the Latin American Initiative and leads Spanish-speaking study abroad classes. Melissa is the content expert on the USDHHS initiative of President Obama’s Federal Strategic Action Plan on Services to Victims of Human Trafficking.

Post date: Fri, 03/07/2014 - 12:10
Post date: Fri, 03/07/2014 - 11:31

. . . And No More Hiroshima/Fukushima Blues

By Carol Reilly Urner, DISARM/End Wars Issue Committee

In March we commemorate the 3rd anniversary of the continuing Fukushima disaster and the 60th anniversary of the Castle Bravo test the US conducted on Bikini. Our focus continues on the hope WILPF helped generate in February. Read our February Program report and then join us in working for demilitarization and ending wars. Currently our priorities are nuclear weapons abolition including a BAN treaty as a real step on the way, dismantling the nuclear-military-industrial complex, negotiating a nuclear weapons of mass destruction (WMD) free zone in the Middle East, banning militarized drones, and ending and preventing wars everywhere.

We are hard at work for a WMD free zone in the Middle East and in the US new anti-nuclear legislation. There is also growing resistance to wars and militarized drones. However, much more effort is required of us and humankind if life on earth is to survive into the future. List your own concerns and save our updated 2014 Disarm/End Wars calendar to enable planning ahead.

In March we commemorate the 3rd anniversary of the continuing Fukushima disaster and the 60th anniversary of the Castle Bravo test the US conducted on Bikini. In 1954 our military exploded a hydrogen bomb over Bikini with 1000 times the power of the Hiroshima bomb. Thousands of people—some living hundreds of miles away—still suffer from the radiation damage. Read our February Program report to catch a glimpse of the growing light at the end of our nuclear tunnel: improved prospects for a nuclear weapons ban treaty, new anti-nuclear legislation, and growing resistance to wars and drones. However, much work is required of us and human kind if life on earth is to survive into the future.

March 1 was the 60th anniversary of US hydrogen nuclear bomb test on Bikini Atoll, Marshall Islands. Remember Bikini and the thousands subjected to radioactive fallout as the US tested its largest hydrogen bomb, 1000 times the force of the two dropped on Japan. Or find and read Don’t Ever Whisper, by Giff Johnson. This is the biography of one Marshall Island woman who became a champion for her fellow nuclear test survivors. It is a remarkable multi-levelled love story which reminds us that victims of US militarism are not just throw away people, but potential heroes and heroines that can teach us much about how to live our own lives for others.


Make local appointments now for Congressional constituent work weeks March 17-21, April 14-25 and May 12-16 or 23-27. Educate your own Senators and Representatives on new hopes for nuclear sanity and a world without war. Seek their co-sponsorship of the bills we support and educate them on WILPF work to end wars, abolish nuclear weapons, ban militarized drones and demilitarize our nation so that life may continue on earth.


March 4 -- 2015 budget introduced in US Congress by President Obama a month later than usual. Listen/watch/ and campaign for deeper military budget cuts. This will be a big part of our work for this year.

March 8 -- International Women's Day. Resources and speakers on ending wars

March 11 – third anniversary of the continuing Fukushima Disaster

March 14-16 -- Global Network Annual International Conference will be at Santa Maria House in Santa Barbara with a vigil at Vandenberg Air Force Base.  We will consider the dangers of the Pacific Pivot, space domination by one nation, robotic warfare, “missile defense,” nuclear weapons and drones.

And March is time to plan ahead for April and May, two months with the most opportunities for peace building, demilitarization and ending wars.

April 2014 – 

All month – Coalition days of action on militarized drones during month of April and into May. Contact Joan Ecklein at joanecklein@comcast.net for action resources.

Undetermined date—Ann Arbor conference on WMD Free Zone in the Middle East. Contact Odile Hugonot Haber at odilehh@gmail.com for details.

April 14Global Day of Action on Military Spending (GDAMS). Day coincides with release of military expenditure statistics by SIPRI. Our friends world-wide want to help us seek US military budget cuts.

April 15 – US Income Tax Day traditionally marked by creative WILPF demonstrations against wasting tax dollars on militarism. Combine with actions and resources of GDAMS.

April 22 -- Earth Day

April 22- May 1 – Check out the Green Cabinet Global Climate Convergence. This Earth Democracy Project advertises that it includes demilitarization as it promotes a green economyr. It is a coalition event led by the Green Shadow Cabinet. Contact Nancy Price at nancytprice39@gmail.com for details.

April 28 -- WILPF 99th birthday!

April 28-May 9 -- 2014 UN NPT Prep Com in New York City, preparing for the 2015 Review conference. Check the side event calendar for NGO presentations for delegates and each other. WILPFUS and Alliance for Nuclear Accountability are presenting an event on Thursday, May 1, on current status of rebuilding and modernizing the United States warheads and nuclear weapons complex. WILPFers Susi Snyder, Ray Acheson, Regina Hagen, Alice Slater and Jackie Cabasso are also presenting very relevant side events.

May 2014 

through May 9  -- UN NPT Prep Com continues and concludes

May 13-16 – 117 nations party to the  UN Convention on Conventional Weapons will begin discussion in Geneva on banning autonomous drones.

May 18-21 -- ANA D.C. Days. Register and start preparing now. Contact Carol Urner at carol.disarm@gmail.com for details.

May 21- 25 -- ANA spring retreat in D.C. Check info on ANA members (WILPF is last with a video on You Get What You Pay For.)

Photo: Image courtesy of Wikipedia. This photo came from the US government Department of Energy files and is in the public domain.

Post date: Fri, 03/07/2014 - 08:34

By Cindy Domingo, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee

The recent demonstrations in Venezuela require the US peace movement to be vigilant in upholding the Venezuelan peoples’ right to self determination. The Venezuelan people have democratically elected their president and their government officials since Hugo Chavez was first elected in 1998. In response to a question about the April, 2013 presidential elections, former US President Jimmy Carter said, “Venezuela probably has the most excellent voting system that I have ever known.”  These elections reflect the ongoing support for the Bolivarian revolution by the Venezuelan people. 

However, the media outlets both in the US and throughout the world would lead us to believe that the vast majority of Venezuelans are calling for the ouster of their President Nicolas Maduro.  Nothing could be further from the truth.

During the past decade, under President Chavez and now Maduro, Venezuela has been completely transformed economically, socially and politically. Poverty has been reduced by over 50% and healthcare and education through graduate school is free and accessible to all. The state provides subsidies for food, housing and job training. These are just a few of the reforms that have addressed the long term needs of the Venezuelan people.

President Maduro has called for a national peace conference to bring peace to Venezuela.  We call on President Obama and Congress to respect the democratic process in Venezuela and to allow the Venezuelan people to determine their own future.  We call on our elected officials to investigate the funding of counterrevolutionary activities in Venezuela and US ties to the leaders of the 'opposition.'

For an excellent historical analysis on Venezuela (article by Golinger)

For more information on Venezuela, please go to www.venezuelanalysis.com

Photo: Courtesy of www.venezuelanalysis.com. Venezuela Remembers Chavez - The one year anniversary of former Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez's death was commemorated across Venezuela on 5 March.

Pages