World Social Forum: Participants Declare Bush "Guilty" > International

본문 바로가기
영문뉴스 보기
2025년 10월 12일
남북공동선언 관철하여 조국통일 이룩하자!
사이트 내 전체검색
뉴스  

International

World Social Forum: Participants Declare Bush "Guilty"

페이지 정보

작성자 Humberto Marque… 작성일06-01-30 16:46 조회669회 댓글0건

본문

CARACAS - An informal International Women"s Tribunal, meeting at the sixth World Social Forum in the Venezuelan capital, found "imperialism" and U.S. President George W. Bush guilty of violating the human rights of people in countries like Iraq and Cuba. Another panel made up of 10 religious leaders, human rights lawyers and activists held a trial and condemned "state terrorism" committed by Washington in Iraq.

<##IMAGE##>Thousands of international activists have gathered in Caracas for the sixth World Social Forum, to protest against war, U.S. economic policies and debate on topics from fair trade to indigenous rights. REUTERS/Christian Veron

Meanwhile, the Parliamentary Forum, which brought together the legislators taking part in the annual WSF global civil society gathering, roundly criticised a U.S. bill that would tighten immigration laws.
Host President Hugo Ch?ez, addressing some 15,000 WSF participants, called the Bush administration "the most perverse, murderous, genocidal and immoral empire" in history.

The Venezuelan leader said Bush, who he calls "Mr. Danger", in reference to a character in a Venezuelan novel, is "the world"s biggest terrorist".

"Mr. Danger talks about human rights, but there are people in Guantanamo (Cuba) who are tortured, and people who disappear in the CIA jails in Europe and elsewhere in the world," Ch?ez told a cheering crowd.

In every street demonstration held at the Jan. 24-29 WSF in Caracas, signs can be seen proclaiming "No to Bush!" or "Get Out Bush!", while the protesters frequently chant anti-Bush slogans.

The International Women"s Tribunal heard testimony from Irma Gonz?ez, the daughter of one of the "Cuban Five" - the five Cuban men in prison in the United States on espionage charges - and from Ramia Masi, an activist with the Organisation of Women"s Freedom in Iraq.

Gonz?ez said her father had spent seven years in prison without being able to receive visits, "because among other things, it has gotten more and more complicated to obtain a visa to the United States, which is a routine human rights violation."

For her part, the Iraqi activist presented a documentary that contains personal accounts and testimony on atrocities committed in the U.S.-led war and occupation of Iraq.

"Fundamentalism is a new thing in Iraq," said Masi. "The occupation drew out the greatest enemy of my country, the fundamentalists, who have destroyed our identity." She called for the construction of a secular alternative, in which women can be free.

Among those sitting on the panel that tried and condemned state terrorism were Reverend Lucius Walker, the leader of the U.S. organisation Pastors for Peace, Mexican activists H?tor D?z and Guillermo L?ez, and Reverend Ra? Su?ez, a peace activist from Cuba.

The witnesses testifying against the Bush administration included Fernando Su?ez, a Mexican-American whose son was killed in Iraq; Javier Couso from Spain, whose brother Jos? a journalist, was killed when a U.S. tank fired a shell at the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad, which was being used as a base by many independent reporters; and Colombian parliamentary candidate Lilia Solano.

Couso recalled that 90 journalists have lost their lives during the war in Iraq, while Su?ez stressed that his son died as a victim of a cluster bomb, which "the United States is using on a daily basis in Iraq and which not only claim the lives of Iraqi civilians, but also the lives of their own soldiers. Bush is the number one terrorist," he declared.

Solano spoke out about Plan Colombia and its recently launched second stage, Plan Patriot - counterinsurgent and anti-drug initiatives that she described as "state terrorism financed by Washington."

The panel concluded by "firmly condemning" imperialism and the Bush administration.

In the meantime, a delegation of lawmakers from Mexico earned the backing of legislators from throughout the region in their opposition to a bill currently before the U.S. Congress aimed at extending the fences already blocking portions of the U.S.-Mexican border, among other measures.

Rafael Quintanar, a legislator from the centre-left Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD) in the Mexican state of Quintano Roo, told IPS: "We want to condemn the wall of death that the United States is erecting on the border, and the new immigration law," which could come to a vote next month, and would penalise both undocumented immigrants and their eventual employers.

Another PRD representative, Emiliano Ramos, said that the party is collecting declarations of support and solidarity for Mexico from two dozen Latin American lawmakers, which it plans to send to the International Court of Justice in The Hague.

Another initiative being discussed at the WSF, Ramos added, is the organisation of a march from Central America to a point on the Mexican border with the United States, where a forum on migration is to be held in March.

The fence that the United States wants to throw up along the border "is the wall of indignity, death, racism, impunity and legalised crime," he maintained.

In his speech, Ch?ez called on WSF participants to condemn the U.S. government, "but not the people of the United States, whose participation is essential to save the planet."

As for "U.S. imperialism," he pronounced that "we will surely bury it this century."


  • 페이스북으로 보내기
  • 트위터로 보내기
  • 구글플러스로 보내기

댓글목록

등록된 댓글이 없습니다.


회원로그인

[부고]노길남 박사
노길남 박사 추모관
조선문학예술
조선중앙TV
추천홈페이지
우리민족끼리
자주시보
사람일보
재미동포전국연합회
한겨레
경향신문
재도이췰란드동포협력회
재카나다동포연합
오마이뉴스
재중조선인총련합회
재오스트랄리아동포전국연합회
통일부


Copyright (c)1999-2025 MinJok-TongShin / E-mail : minjoktongshin@outlook.com