GPJA Newsletter #280, April ,2009
Global Peace And Justice Auckland
Newsletter #280, April ,2009
Website: http://www.gpja.org.nz/
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Forums - John Minto, Work: (09) 845 2132,
Home 09 846 3173 jbminto@xtra.co.nz
Newsletter
Editor & Website - Mike Treen 0295254744 mike@unite.org.nz
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WHAT'S ON IN AUCKLAND
Open Daily 10am - 7pm, until
April 14, Gallery 3, AUT, cnr Symonds & Mount Sts
Bad
at maths? Get annoyed or angry for no good reason? Don’t
get on with your sister, brother, aunty, budgie? Can’t
wait to get your next coffee fix? Perhaps the interactive
documentary-style Exhibition on Human Rights & Mental Health
can put you straight about some of this…. Exhibition on
Human Rights and Psychiatry. Hosted by: Citizens Commission
on Human Rights withsupport of AUT St Pauls St Galleries.
Thursday, April 16, 6pm, Engineering Main Lecture
Theatre 401-439, 20 Symonds Street, University of
Auckland
FREE PUBLIC LECTURE: Judge C.G. Weeramantry
"Rights and Responsibilities: A Global Cultural
Perspective". Judge Weeramantry will be introduced by Hon
Peter Salmon QC. Judge Christopher Weeramantry is a former
Judge of the International Court of Justice and was its
Vice-President from 1997-2000. He is internationally
renowned for his landmark opinions on the illegality of
nuclear weaponsand the recognition of sustainable
development as a part of international law. Among many other
honours, he is a recipient of the Right Livelihood Award
(alos known as the Alternative Nobel Prize) and the UNESCO
Prize for Peace Education (2006). This is the opening
lecture of the New Zealand Centre for Environmental Law
Conference 2009: Property Rights and Sustainability - The
Evolution ofProperty Rights to Meet Ecological Challenges,
16 – 18 April, 2009, University of Auckland. Tensions
between individual entitlements to natural resources and
collective needs and responsibilities are increasingly felt
in New Zealand and globally. This conference will bring
together leading academics, judges, policy analysts and
practitioners to question our current concepts of
propertyrights and ways in which they can be re-conceived to
meet current challenges. Special students registration fees
available. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION AND REGISTRATION DETAILS:
www.nzcel-conf.auckland.ac.nz OR EMAIL:
Conference Organiser, Jane Kilgour at k.j.kilgour@paradise.net.nz
Thursday,
April 23, 8pm, Tom Forde's Bar, 122 Anzac Avenue, Auckland
COME TO REGGAE FOR BLAIR PEACH - organised by
Socialist Aotearoa. from the British Socialist Worker paper-
"As the police rushed past him, one of them hit him on the
head with the stick. I was in my garden and saw this quite
clearly. He was left sitting against the wall. He tried to
get up, but he was shivering and looked very strange. He
couldn't stand. Then the police came back and told
him,'Move! Come on, move!' They were very rough with him and
I was shocked because it was clear he was seriously hurt."
This was the shocking testimony of Southall resident
Parminder Atwal, one of the witnesses to the murder of Blair
Peach at the hands of the Metropolitan Police on 23 April
1979.
Friday, May 8, 7pm, St Colomba Centre, Vermont
St, Ponsonby.(Doors open at 7pm and we start at
7:30pm)
YOUTH HUMAN RIGHTS AWARD: Hello, It is time
for the exciting annual Youth for Human Rights Youth Awards.
Please nominate any youth you know who you would like to
receive an acknowledgement for their help & contributions.
Open to all people under 24 yrs of age. Anyone who has been
helping in the area of human rights or community related
activities like Amnesty, Human Rights Film
festival,community, school or university projects, United
Nations Youth Association, church groups or related actions.
Please email me their details before May 1st. Youth Awards
will be 7pm Friday night May 8th 2009 at the St Colomba
Centre, Vermont St, Ponsonby.(Doors open at 7pm and we start
at 7:30pm). This is a fun night so enter as many youth as
you can. Free parking on site, music, awards
andentertainment with a light supper. This is our third
annual youth awards and promises to be another excellent
night. Kind regards, Dr Helen Smith, Director, Youth for
Human Rights NZ
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
ANNOUNCEMENTS
NEW HORIZONS FOR WOMEN TRUST
The New Horizons for Women Trust administers a variety of awards that help women return to education and training and promote research on women’s issues. The Awards are sponsored by a number of supporting organisations and range in value. The Trust has two general award categories under which a number of awards are given:
* Second-chance Education Awards for women without qualifications currently studying at the tertiary level (at least $2,000). Download application form now. http://www.newhorizonsforwomen.org.nz/assets/2009-2nd-chance-application.pdf
* Research Awards for individual women or groups undertaking research into issues of interest to women (up to the value of $5,000). Download application form now. http://www.newhorizonsforwomen.org.nz/assets/09-Research-Application.pdf
Two specialised awards are also available from the Trust:
* The Ria McBride Public Service Management Award, provided by the State Services Commission and available to women in the Public Service (up to the value of $15,000).
* The Sonja Davies Peace Award, to honour the work and achievements of Sonja Davies, and to promote women’s initiatives to advance the cause of peace ($2,500) Download application form now. http://www.newhorizonsforwomen.org.nz/assets/Sonja-Davies-application-form-Jan-09.pdf
The closing date for the available awards is 31 May 2009. http://www.newhorizonsforwomen.org.nz/
PEOPLES
MOVEMENT ON CLIMATE CHANGE - PARIHAKA APRIL 24-27
A
call out to individuals from communities all across Aotearoa
to join in organising an ongoing project which aims to start
a Peoples Movement actively addressing the Root Causes of
Climate Change. Join us at Parihaka April 24th through the
27th for a weekend of tasting and devouring, information,
discussions and workshops on climate chaos and climate
justice. The bases of the gathering is toshare skills, up
skill and take action. Some of the workshops are on topics
such as permaculture, collective organising and direct
action strategies. For more information please contact: climatecampnz@riseup.net http://www.climatecamp.org.nz/HOME.html
To Register go to:
http://www.climatecamp.org.nz/THE%20GATHERING.html
What is a Climate Camp?
Climate Camps have been successfully held in several countries. Each camp has generally covered the following themes: direct action, education, direct democracy, sustainable living and building a movement to effectively tackle climate change by both resisting climate damaging activities and developing sustainable solutions. The camps are a place for anyone to take action on climate change; foranyone who’s fed up with empty government rhetoric and corporate spin; for anyone who’s worried that the small steps we’ve been encouraged to make in our personal lives aren’t enough to match the scale of the problem; and for anyone who’s worried about our future and wants to do something about it.
How is this organised?
Previous camps have been organised in a community based and collaborative way. Before and during camp regional groups [Auckland group / Whangarei group / nelson group / Christchurch group / new groups] work and organise by making decisions together and sending prooposals to one another. This is different from coming as a representative of an organisation, and is far more democratic,sustainable and conducive to building a peoples movement. There are already many regional and issue based working groups up and running that you can join, maybe there’s one in your area, if not feel free to get in touch and start one up yourself.
Hope to see you at Parihaka!
CALL OUT FOR ART WORKS - OCTOBER 15
SOLIDARITY
The October 15th Solidarity group is
seeking art works for an upcoming auction and exhibition.
The five day event, to be held in Wellington, will be timed
to coincide with the second anniversary of the raids
(October 15th 2009). Funds raised will go towards legal fees
and travel costs for those still facing charges as as a
result of the state terror raids in 2007. The group believes
in the powerof art as a voice of dissent, and calls for
submissions that draw from any of the following: -the
October 15th raids; -commentary on the 'war on terrorism';
-surveillance/police/prisons; -colonisation; -kaupapa Maori;
-resistance. All artists will be asked to set a reserve
price for their work. Please indicate your interest via
email or post asap. Contact: Rachel Fabish info@october15thsolidarity.info
October15th Solidarity, P O Box 9263, Te Aro, Wellington.
More info: october15thsolidarity.info
UN DECLARATION ON
THE RIGHTS OF INDIGINOUS PEOPLES
UN Declaration on
the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, petition update: the
petition calling on the government to support the UN
Declaration has now gone to the Foreign Affairs, Defence and
Trade Select Committee, and the Committee has requested a
written submission in support of it. The deadline for the
written submission is mid April, and the final batch of
signatures will be attached to it.Therefore the final
deadline for return of signatures is Thursday, 16 April - if
you have any signed petition forms, please make sure they
are posted to Peace Movement Aotearoa, PO Box 9314,
Wellington 6141 on Tuesday, 14 April at the latest. If you
have any opportunity to collect additional signatures
between now and then, that would be great - the form is
available on the UN Declaration webpage at
http://www.converge.org.nz/pma/decrips.htm or from email pma@xtra.co.nz - thank you.
UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, NZ government's position: was the subject of Q&A in parliament on 31 March, in advance of the Australian government's statement of support for the UN Declaration. The transcript of the Q&A, and subsequently the Australian government's statement, have been circulated through the HRN e-list, and are available on the UNDeclaration web page at http://www.converge.org.nz/pma/decrips.htm
WHITE
POPPIES APPEAL
White poppies peace scholarship
appeal: This ANZAC Day, wear a white poppy to remember all
of the casualties of war and to promote peace. Poppies are
available from Peace Movement Aotearoa, along with 'Lest we
forget: remembering peacemakers on ANZAC Day' bookmarks, for
a donation which will go to the new peace scholarships - if
you would like to order one or more, or if you can assist by
havingpoppies with a collection box at your work, school,
church or other community place during the week of the
collection, 17 to 24 April, or by organising a special or
one-off collection at your church, other place of worship or
at any community group meeting around the time of the
appeal, please email pma@xtra.co.nzas soon as possible, with
'White poppies' in thesubject line of your
message
FORESHORE AND SEABED MINISTERIAL
REVIEW:
Foreshore and Seabed Ministerial Review
Panel: the Review Panel has started meeting with 'nationally
significant interest groups' (which appears not to include
hapu and iwi, but does include a predominance of corporate
and recreational organisations), and the public submissions
process is currently being finalised in terms of venues and
so on. Peace Movement Aotearoa is currently putting
togethera web page with information about the submissions
process and other things, and will send out a message when
that is ready later in the week.
WORLD PEACE MARCH FOR
PEACE AND NONVIOLENCE
A meeting attended by 16
representatives of peace and human rights groups and
individuals was held on 31 March. There are two Auckland
co-ordinators for this event: Wende Jowsey and Audrey van
Ryn. They would love to have more hands-on people to assist
in the organization of the Auckland events and/or provide
the feedback needed to make certain decisions. Date of next
meeting re the World MarchAuckland Events is 28 April and
probably at 7pm, venue to be advised - interested? - Pse
contact Audrey or Wende - addresses below.... Audrey has
drafted up a route and sites for the Auckland Peace Walk,
which is one of the Auckland events, and is on Sunday 27
September from 9am, starting at the Viaduct Basin in the CBD
at the start of the Coast to Coast walk, and ends on
Maungawhau (Mt Eden).She is concerned to include in the walk
the significant peace landmarks in the central city and
would appreciate more input on the draft. Please ask her to
email it to you (audrey@writeaway.co.nz) It is hoped that
more youth groups will become involved in the March, so if
you have contacts with such groups, please get them to
contact Audrey or Wende (wende@jowsey.com) Around 70 people
are expected to travel the entire distance of the March,
which ends in Argentina. We hope to house them for their
first night in NZ on an Auckland marae. Peace, human rights
and other relevant groups are encouraged to endorse the
March (endorsement form attached) and to suggest or make
approaches to celebrities such asathletes, to be individual
endorsers.
LOCAL GOVT SELECT CTTEE REPORTS BACK ON
'PUBLISHING CONTRACTS' - OPPOSITION TO AK 'SUPERCITY'
GROWS!
Please pass on this urgent message to the CEO
of your Council for urgent distribution to the Mayor and
elected representatives. Also, please be advised that the
Local Government and Environment Select Committee on Friday
27 March 2009, reported back to the House on Petition
2008/002 requesting that the House urgently amend the local
Government Act 2002 to make it a mandatory requirement to
ensurecouncils and council-controlled organisations are open
to public scrutiny by using annual reports to record
contracts issued to the private sector for goods, services,
and people as a means of providing openness and
accountablility in council operations, and to help ensure
prudent stewardship of citizen and ratepayer resources.
"Conclusion: We are mindful that the increasing range of
servicesprovided by councils and the commensurate rises in
rates have provoked public interest in the way councils
spend ratepayers' money, especially in the current economic
climate. We note that there appears to be no consistency
across councils on the kind of information routinely
disclosed and the means for making information readily
available to the public. In our view, the petitioner raises
validquestions about the accountability and transparency of
local government operations.............." http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/SC/Reports/9/f/5/49DBSCH_SCR4282_1-Petition-2008-2-of-Penelope-Mary-Bright-and-189.ht
Penny Bright, Media Spokesperson, Water PressureGroup,
Judically recognised 'Public Watchdog' for Metrowater, water
and Auckland Regional Governance matters. Ph (09) 846 9825;
021 211 4 127
BEST ON THE WEB
NEW ZEALAND
Business interests trump democracy in super city http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/opinion/frontline/2301048/Business-interests-trump-democracy-in-super-city
watchblog - the online tool for the Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa http://www.watchblogaotearoa.blogspot.com/
Apocalypse: NZ Rearranges Deckchairs While Ice Shelf Collapses As the Wilkins ice Shelf draws closer to collapse in Antarctica, the New Zealand Government continues to contribute absolutely nothing towards progress on a climate deal in Bonn. http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0904/S00047.htm
Less than an hour: One of the oldest tactics in spin is releasing bad news late on a Friday afternoon, when the media is too keen on the weekend - and too far past its deadline - to pay attention. Unfortunately, our spin-obsessed, PR rather than policy government now seems to be applying this idea to legislation. Back in 2003, the then-Labour government passed the Parole (Extended Supervision)and Sentencing Amendment Bill, amending the Parole Act and Sentencing Act to allow extended supervision of high-risk child sex offenders. Under the law, those convicted of and who had already completed their sentence for a "relevant offence" prior to the bill coming into force could be subjected to residential restrictions equivalent to home detention for the first twelve months, and ongoingconditions such as reporting, treatment, and electronic monitoring for up to ten years after the completion of their sentence. The Attorney-General at the time rightly warned that this constituted double jeopardy and unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Bill of Rights Act. Parliament passed it anyway. Now the government - no doubt motivated by David Garrett - has decided thatthat does not go far enough. So today it introduced a Parole (Extended Supervision Orders) Amendment Bill, giving the parole Board the power to impose electronically monitored home detention for up to 24 hours a day for the full ten years of an ESO - which, remember, is imposed after the completion of any sentence. http://norightturn.blogspot.com/2009/04/less-than-hour.html
Gordon Campbell: The G20 Rescue Package And McCully’s Washington Trip Barack Obama came to London seeking a fresh spending package to revive the global economy and – despite European objections that tighter regulation and not more money was the way to go http://gordoncampbell.scoop.co.nz/2009/04/03/campbell-g20-package-mccully%e2%80%99s-washington-trip/
John Minto: West Papua, A Neighbour Needs Our Help Neles Tebay (pronounced Tibuy) is a charming man. His eyes sparkle mischievously as he speaks and his thick accent and dark Melanesian skin add resonance to his words. With his mobile face and lively eyes he reminds me of Desmond Tutu. http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0904/S00035.htm
Unions urged to oppose migrant 'scapegoating' http://pacificmediacentre.blogspot.com/2009/04/unions-urged-to-take-stand-against.html
ECONOMIC CRISIS
VIDEO:Marxist Geographer David Harvey on the G20, the Financial Crisis and Neoliberalism http://leftclickblog.blogspot.com/2009/04/videomarxist-geographer-david-harvey-on.html
European Workers Rebel as G-20 Looms - At companies, including Caterpillar in France and Visteon in Northern Ireland, workers have occupied offices and detained bosses. http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0401/p06s10-woeu.html
REVIEWS
Arrogant? Moi? He might be amused by The Wire's success in Britain but he isn't surprised by it. After all, David Simon isn't one for modesty. Oliver Burkeman meets him http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/mar/28/david-simon-the-wire-interview
CUBA
Fernando Martínez Heredia: Ideas don't have owners - “Dogmas conspire against the expansion and deepening of socialism,” states the winner of the 2006 National Social Sciences Award. http://www.walterlippmann.com/docs2353.html
Cuba urges artists to be critical in order to defend the utopia, Abel Prieto says - this analytical spirit is often in line with our efforts to eliminate the very bureaucracy we have created, holds the Minister of Culture. http://www.walterlippmann.com/docs2364.html
FRANCE
Another left is possible: The protests in France and the New Anti-Capitalist Party http://links.org.au/node/967
GREECE
Greeks Stage Walkout Tied to Summit http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/03/world/europe/03greece.html?_=1&ref=global-home
PACIFIC
Reporter For The "Voiceless" Wins Diversity Award http://pacificmediacentre.blogspot.com/2009/04/reporter-for-voiceless-wins-diversity.html
PALESTINE / ISRAEL
On the road to apartheid http://www.abc.net.au/unleashed/stories/s2533161.htm
Why American academics must join boycott of Israel http://www.icahd.org/eng/news.asp?menu=5&submenu=1&item=663
An unhelpful discourse on Israel - The following article is written by Israeli/American peace activist Jeff Halper for the Australian Jewish News [1] but the paper refuses to run the piece, despite spending weeks attacking Halper and his supporters in its pages: http://antonyloewenstein.com/blog/2009/03/31/an-unhelpful-discourse-on-israel/
ENDS