URGENT: UN Debating Stopping the War. Please CALL and/or FAX them NOW!
Cheryl Guttman/Jessica Flagg | 26.03.2003 09:23
Debate on Stopping The War With Res. 377--Uniting For Peace--is happening Today (Wed). Please email and/or Fax UN member countries RIGHT AWAY and encourage them to invoke Res. 377 to stop the killing and humanitarian disaster of war so that Iraq can be disarmed peacefully.
The process for invoking Uniting For Peace is Finally Happening TODAY (Wed. 3/26)! SO PLEASE EMAIL AND/OR FAX RIGHT AWAY! Below is a list of all the email addresses that you can cut and paste, as well as a sample letter written by Jessica Flagg. If you want to send faxes easily, go to this website http://www.co- intelligence.org/CIPol_UNRes377.html, scroll down to #3 under "Here's How". There you can download the cvs file of fax numbers you can use to do a fax blaster at efax.com by going to this link http://www.efax.com/products/ broadcast/ and registering for efax broadcast, it costs $11 (since faxes make a more powerful impression and may be seen faster, however emails still count). Please forward widely. Thanks--Cheryl
Below are about 230 diplomatic (and press/activist) addresses, minus the US, Israel and Kuwait, and a sample letter. Just cut and paste.
An Emergency session of the Security Council has been called (press release
at the end) at the UN set for Wed, March 26th. They will hear testimony of
all 191 members and vote. Please write something in your own words, no matter
how brief, about the urgent need for invoking resolution 377 the Uniting for
Peace Resolution, and for a UN peacekeeping action in Iraq. If the Security
Council cannot maintain international peace where there is a 'threat to the
peace or act of aggression,' the General Assembly can then take a vote or as
the resolution states 'shall consider the matter immediately.' The General
Assembly can meet within 24 hours to consider such a matter, and can
recommend collective measures to U.N. members, including the use of armed
forces to 'maintain or restore international peace and security."
Cut and paste these addresses: (it may take several emails to do them all)
Subject bar: Please vote for Peace res 377 (a sample email is at the end)
sg@un.org, guinea@un.int, GAPresident@un.org, bundeskanzler@bundeskanzler.de,
gerhard.schroeder@spd.de, president@gov.ru, president@hrad.cz,
president@po.gov.za, press@uruklink.net, romano.prodi@cec.eu.int,
mail@primeminister.gr, presidencia@venezuela.gov.ve, pr@planalto.gov.br,
joschka.fischer@bundestag.de, ambassade@amb-allemagne.fr,
christian.jouret@consilium.eu.int, christopher.patten@cec.eu.int,
france@un.int, france-presse@un.int, francophonie@un.int,
info@botschaft-frankreich.de, oau-ews@telecom.net.et, oiccabinet@arab.net.sa,
paris@embassyiraq.com, poul.nielson@cec.eu.int, stm@stm.dk,
webmaster@foreign.gov.za, info@moveon.org, info@unmovic.org,
official.mail@iaea.org, afghanistan@un.int, albania@un.int, algeria@un.int,
andorra@un.int, angola@un.int, antigua@un.int, argentina@un.int,
armenia@un.int, australia@un.int, austria@un.int, azerbaijan@un.int,
bahamas@un.int, bahrain@un.int, bangladesh@un.int, barbados@un.int,
belarus@un.int, belgium@un.int, belize@un.int, benin@un.int, bhutan@un.int,
bolivia@un.int, bosnia@un.int, botswana@un.int, braun@delbrasonu.org,
brunei@un.int, bulgaria@un.int, burkinafaso@un.int, burundi@un.int,
caf@un.int, cambodia@un.int, cameroon@un.int, canada@un.int,
capeverde@un.int, chad@un.int, chile@un.int, china@un.int, colombia@un.int,
comoros@un.int, congo@un.int, costarica@un.int, croatia@un.int, cuba@un.int,
cyprus@un.int, czechrepublic@un.int, delun@mfa.no, denmark@un.int,
djibouti@nyct.net, dominica@un.int, dprk@un.int, dr@un.int, drcongo@un.int,
elsalvador@un.int, eqguinea@un.int, ecuador@un.int, egypt@un.int,
eritrea@un.int, estonia@un.int, ethiopia@un.int, fiji@un.int, finland@un.int,
france@un.int, gabon@un.int, gambia@un.int, georgia@un.int, germany@un.int,
ghana@un.int, greece@un.int, grenada@un.int, guatemala@un.int, guinea@un.int,
guyana@un.int, haiti@un.int, honduras@un.int, hungary@un.int, iceland@un.int,
india@un.int, indonesia@un.int, iran@un.int, iraq@un.int, ireland@un.int,
italy@un.int, ivorycoast@un.int, jamaica@un.int, japan@un.int, jordan@un.int,
kazakhstan@un.int, kenya@un.int, korea@un.int, kyrgyzstan@un.int,
laos@un.int, latvia@un.int, lebanon@un.int, lesotho@un.int, liberia@un.int,
libya@un.int, liechtenstein@un.int, lithuania@un.int, luxembourg@un.int,
macedonia@un.int, madagascar@un.int, malawi@un.int, malaysia@un.int,
maldives@un.int, mali@un.int, malta@un.int, marshallislands@un.int,
mauritania@un.int, mauritius@un.int, mexico@un.int, micronesia@un.int,
moldova@un.int, monaco@un.int, mongolia@un.int, morocco@un.int,
mozambique@un.int, myanmar@un.int, namibia@un.int, nepal@un.int,
netherlands@un.int, newzealand@un.int, nicaragua@un.int, niger@un.int,
nigeria@un.int, oman@un.int, pakistan@un.int, palau@un.int, panama@un.int,
paraguay@un.int, peru@un.int, philippines@un.int, png@un.int, poland@un.int,
portugal@un.int, qatar@un.int, romania@un.int, rusun@un.int, rwanda@un.int,
samoa@un.int, sanmarino@un.int, senegal@un.int, seychelles@un.int,
sierraleone@un.int, singapore@un.int, slovakia@un.int, slovenia@un.int,
solomonislands@un.int, somalia@un.int, southafrica@un.int, spain@un.int,
srilanka@un.int, stkn@un.int, stlucia@un.int, stp@un.int, stvg@un.int,
sudan@un.int, suriname@un.int, swaziland@un.int, sweden@un.int, syria@un.int,
tajikistan@un.int, thailand@un.int, togo@un.int, tto@un.int, tunisia@un.int,
turkey@un.int, turkmenistan@un.int, uganda@un.int, ukraine@un.int,
uae@un.int, uruguay@un.int, uzbekistan@un.int, vanuatu@un.int,
venezuela@un.int, vietnam@un.int, yemen@un.int, yugoslavia@un.int,
zambia@un.int, zimbabwe@un.int, mission@palestine-un.org,
Saudi-Mission@un.int, switzerland@un.int, cfads-dfvsr@wanadoo.fr,
Presse@df-brigade.de, info@occar-ea.org,
Cellule.Communication@defense.gouv.fr,
remote-printer.Kofi_Annan@12129637055.iddd.tpc.int, aalcc@un.int,
caribcomun@un.int, RedCrossCommittee@un.int, ec@un.int, francophonie@un.int,
holysee@un.int, ilo@un.int, isa@un.int, info@unitingforpeace.com,
seaun@un.int, las@un.int, oau@un.int, oic@un.int,
Chinamission_un@fmprc.gov.cn, contact@germany-un.org, france-presse@un.int,
info@cameroonmission.org
The letter:
Today, Wednesday, an emergency session of the Security Council has been
called to discuss the situation in Iraq.
I am American. I am ashamed of what my country is doing... We have a rogue
government, not elected, but appointed, which has determined to "rule" the
world. Its misuse of power is blatant and frankly very un-American. I urge
you... beseech you to please vote for peace and invoke resolution 377. This
rogue regime cannot survive in the stark light of truth. Please shine it!
Please stand for all the human souls who want to believe in the triumph of
good over evil...for surely this war being waged in Iraq is not "good".
Hussein can be removed by the force of truth if the weight of the United
Nations is applied to enforce the disarmament and exposes his crimes in the
International Criminal Court. I am ashamed that we too may be guilty of
Crimes Against Humanity. Please don't let it continue without your vote of
condemnation.
Thank you,
The Press Release:
UN Security Council Sets Emergency Debate on Iraq
Tue March 25, 2003 03:24 PM ET By Irwin Arieff
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council agreed on Tuesday to
hold an emergency debate on Iraq but Arab envoys were undecided whether to
push a resolution demanding an immediate end to the U.S.-led war.
The debate was set for Wednesday at 3 p.m. and council diplomats said all 191
U.N. members would be invited to speak rather than just the council's 15
member-nations.
Arab diplomats said they feared a resolution calling for an immediate
withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq could be defeated and thereby serve to
legitimize the U.S.-British invasion after the fact.
Syrian U.N. Ambassador Mikhail Wehbe, who on Monday said the Arab group at
the United Nations intended to seek adoption of a resolution demanding an end
to the U.S.-led invasion, said on Tuesday that no decision had yet been made
on a resolution.
"No, not yet," Wehbe said when asked whether Arab envoys had decided to press
for a resolution.
He said the emergency council debate would give U.N. members a chance "to
raise their voices."
"After that, we will see what we can do in the light of the discussions,"
Wehbe said.
Another Arab envoy, speaking on condition of anonymity, said, "We are holding
off on putting forward a draft resolution. We must first see what is
possible."
The Arab group of 22 countries formally requested an urgent Security Council
debate on Monday evening after Arab foreign ministers meeting in Cairo
adopted a declaration demanding an immediate end to the Iraq war and the
withdrawal of all foreign forces.
The group's request was delivered to the council by Iraqi U.N. ambassador
Mohammed Aldouri, this month's Arab group president.
The U.N. group of 166 non-aligned nations, currently led by Malaysia, also
backed an emergency session, and routine council approval of the request had
been widely expected.
But a resolution demanding an end to the U.S.-led attack on Iraq would appear
to have no chance of approval. Both the United States and Britain have veto
power in the council.
In addition, six of the council's 15 members refused to take sides earlier
this month when the United States and Britain pushed for a resolution giving
Iraq an ultimatum to quickly show its commitment to disarmament or face war.
***************************************************************************
If the vote doesn't pass in the Security Council the General Assembly will be
able to pass it by a very large majority, which is what happened in 1956 when
France and England had gone to "war" with Egypt over the Suez Canal. After
the General Assembly voted they pulled out within a matter of two weeks. The
Bush Admin does not want this vote to happen and has threatened countries
with various "punnishments".
Jessica Flagg
Director, ECAAR Business Council*
http://www.co-intelligence.org/CIPol_UNRes377.html
http://www.greenpeace.ca/e/feature/nowar/uniting.html
Below are about 230 diplomatic (and press/activist) addresses, minus the US, Israel and Kuwait, and a sample letter. Just cut and paste.
An Emergency session of the Security Council has been called (press release
at the end) at the UN set for Wed, March 26th. They will hear testimony of
all 191 members and vote. Please write something in your own words, no matter
how brief, about the urgent need for invoking resolution 377 the Uniting for
Peace Resolution, and for a UN peacekeeping action in Iraq. If the Security
Council cannot maintain international peace where there is a 'threat to the
peace or act of aggression,' the General Assembly can then take a vote or as
the resolution states 'shall consider the matter immediately.' The General
Assembly can meet within 24 hours to consider such a matter, and can
recommend collective measures to U.N. members, including the use of armed
forces to 'maintain or restore international peace and security."
Cut and paste these addresses: (it may take several emails to do them all)
Subject bar: Please vote for Peace res 377 (a sample email is at the end)
sg@un.org, guinea@un.int, GAPresident@un.org, bundeskanzler@bundeskanzler.de,
gerhard.schroeder@spd.de, president@gov.ru, president@hrad.cz,
president@po.gov.za, press@uruklink.net, romano.prodi@cec.eu.int,
mail@primeminister.gr, presidencia@venezuela.gov.ve, pr@planalto.gov.br,
joschka.fischer@bundestag.de, ambassade@amb-allemagne.fr,
christian.jouret@consilium.eu.int, christopher.patten@cec.eu.int,
france@un.int, france-presse@un.int, francophonie@un.int,
info@botschaft-frankreich.de, oau-ews@telecom.net.et, oiccabinet@arab.net.sa,
paris@embassyiraq.com, poul.nielson@cec.eu.int, stm@stm.dk,
webmaster@foreign.gov.za, info@moveon.org, info@unmovic.org,
official.mail@iaea.org, afghanistan@un.int, albania@un.int, algeria@un.int,
andorra@un.int, angola@un.int, antigua@un.int, argentina@un.int,
armenia@un.int, australia@un.int, austria@un.int, azerbaijan@un.int,
bahamas@un.int, bahrain@un.int, bangladesh@un.int, barbados@un.int,
belarus@un.int, belgium@un.int, belize@un.int, benin@un.int, bhutan@un.int,
bolivia@un.int, bosnia@un.int, botswana@un.int, braun@delbrasonu.org,
brunei@un.int, bulgaria@un.int, burkinafaso@un.int, burundi@un.int,
caf@un.int, cambodia@un.int, cameroon@un.int, canada@un.int,
capeverde@un.int, chad@un.int, chile@un.int, china@un.int, colombia@un.int,
comoros@un.int, congo@un.int, costarica@un.int, croatia@un.int, cuba@un.int,
cyprus@un.int, czechrepublic@un.int, delun@mfa.no, denmark@un.int,
djibouti@nyct.net, dominica@un.int, dprk@un.int, dr@un.int, drcongo@un.int,
elsalvador@un.int, eqguinea@un.int, ecuador@un.int, egypt@un.int,
eritrea@un.int, estonia@un.int, ethiopia@un.int, fiji@un.int, finland@un.int,
france@un.int, gabon@un.int, gambia@un.int, georgia@un.int, germany@un.int,
ghana@un.int, greece@un.int, grenada@un.int, guatemala@un.int, guinea@un.int,
guyana@un.int, haiti@un.int, honduras@un.int, hungary@un.int, iceland@un.int,
india@un.int, indonesia@un.int, iran@un.int, iraq@un.int, ireland@un.int,
italy@un.int, ivorycoast@un.int, jamaica@un.int, japan@un.int, jordan@un.int,
kazakhstan@un.int, kenya@un.int, korea@un.int, kyrgyzstan@un.int,
laos@un.int, latvia@un.int, lebanon@un.int, lesotho@un.int, liberia@un.int,
libya@un.int, liechtenstein@un.int, lithuania@un.int, luxembourg@un.int,
macedonia@un.int, madagascar@un.int, malawi@un.int, malaysia@un.int,
maldives@un.int, mali@un.int, malta@un.int, marshallislands@un.int,
mauritania@un.int, mauritius@un.int, mexico@un.int, micronesia@un.int,
moldova@un.int, monaco@un.int, mongolia@un.int, morocco@un.int,
mozambique@un.int, myanmar@un.int, namibia@un.int, nepal@un.int,
netherlands@un.int, newzealand@un.int, nicaragua@un.int, niger@un.int,
nigeria@un.int, oman@un.int, pakistan@un.int, palau@un.int, panama@un.int,
paraguay@un.int, peru@un.int, philippines@un.int, png@un.int, poland@un.int,
portugal@un.int, qatar@un.int, romania@un.int, rusun@un.int, rwanda@un.int,
samoa@un.int, sanmarino@un.int, senegal@un.int, seychelles@un.int,
sierraleone@un.int, singapore@un.int, slovakia@un.int, slovenia@un.int,
solomonislands@un.int, somalia@un.int, southafrica@un.int, spain@un.int,
srilanka@un.int, stkn@un.int, stlucia@un.int, stp@un.int, stvg@un.int,
sudan@un.int, suriname@un.int, swaziland@un.int, sweden@un.int, syria@un.int,
tajikistan@un.int, thailand@un.int, togo@un.int, tto@un.int, tunisia@un.int,
turkey@un.int, turkmenistan@un.int, uganda@un.int, ukraine@un.int,
uae@un.int, uruguay@un.int, uzbekistan@un.int, vanuatu@un.int,
venezuela@un.int, vietnam@un.int, yemen@un.int, yugoslavia@un.int,
zambia@un.int, zimbabwe@un.int, mission@palestine-un.org,
Saudi-Mission@un.int, switzerland@un.int, cfads-dfvsr@wanadoo.fr,
Presse@df-brigade.de, info@occar-ea.org,
Cellule.Communication@defense.gouv.fr,
remote-printer.Kofi_Annan@12129637055.iddd.tpc.int, aalcc@un.int,
caribcomun@un.int, RedCrossCommittee@un.int, ec@un.int, francophonie@un.int,
holysee@un.int, ilo@un.int, isa@un.int, info@unitingforpeace.com,
seaun@un.int, las@un.int, oau@un.int, oic@un.int,
Chinamission_un@fmprc.gov.cn, contact@germany-un.org, france-presse@un.int,
info@cameroonmission.org
The letter:
Today, Wednesday, an emergency session of the Security Council has been
called to discuss the situation in Iraq.
I am American. I am ashamed of what my country is doing... We have a rogue
government, not elected, but appointed, which has determined to "rule" the
world. Its misuse of power is blatant and frankly very un-American. I urge
you... beseech you to please vote for peace and invoke resolution 377. This
rogue regime cannot survive in the stark light of truth. Please shine it!
Please stand for all the human souls who want to believe in the triumph of
good over evil...for surely this war being waged in Iraq is not "good".
Hussein can be removed by the force of truth if the weight of the United
Nations is applied to enforce the disarmament and exposes his crimes in the
International Criminal Court. I am ashamed that we too may be guilty of
Crimes Against Humanity. Please don't let it continue without your vote of
condemnation.
Thank you,
The Press Release:
UN Security Council Sets Emergency Debate on Iraq
Tue March 25, 2003 03:24 PM ET By Irwin Arieff
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council agreed on Tuesday to
hold an emergency debate on Iraq but Arab envoys were undecided whether to
push a resolution demanding an immediate end to the U.S.-led war.
The debate was set for Wednesday at 3 p.m. and council diplomats said all 191
U.N. members would be invited to speak rather than just the council's 15
member-nations.
Arab diplomats said they feared a resolution calling for an immediate
withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq could be defeated and thereby serve to
legitimize the U.S.-British invasion after the fact.
Syrian U.N. Ambassador Mikhail Wehbe, who on Monday said the Arab group at
the United Nations intended to seek adoption of a resolution demanding an end
to the U.S.-led invasion, said on Tuesday that no decision had yet been made
on a resolution.
"No, not yet," Wehbe said when asked whether Arab envoys had decided to press
for a resolution.
He said the emergency council debate would give U.N. members a chance "to
raise their voices."
"After that, we will see what we can do in the light of the discussions,"
Wehbe said.
Another Arab envoy, speaking on condition of anonymity, said, "We are holding
off on putting forward a draft resolution. We must first see what is
possible."
The Arab group of 22 countries formally requested an urgent Security Council
debate on Monday evening after Arab foreign ministers meeting in Cairo
adopted a declaration demanding an immediate end to the Iraq war and the
withdrawal of all foreign forces.
The group's request was delivered to the council by Iraqi U.N. ambassador
Mohammed Aldouri, this month's Arab group president.
The U.N. group of 166 non-aligned nations, currently led by Malaysia, also
backed an emergency session, and routine council approval of the request had
been widely expected.
But a resolution demanding an end to the U.S.-led attack on Iraq would appear
to have no chance of approval. Both the United States and Britain have veto
power in the council.
In addition, six of the council's 15 members refused to take sides earlier
this month when the United States and Britain pushed for a resolution giving
Iraq an ultimatum to quickly show its commitment to disarmament or face war.
***************************************************************************
If the vote doesn't pass in the Security Council the General Assembly will be
able to pass it by a very large majority, which is what happened in 1956 when
France and England had gone to "war" with Egypt over the Suez Canal. After
the General Assembly voted they pulled out within a matter of two weeks. The
Bush Admin does not want this vote to happen and has threatened countries
with various "punnishments".
Jessica Flagg
Director, ECAAR Business Council*
http://www.co-intelligence.org/CIPol_UNRes377.html
http://www.greenpeace.ca/e/feature/nowar/uniting.html
Cheryl Guttman/Jessica Flagg
Comments
Hide the following 4 comments
article 377
26.03.2003 10:40
redkop
google search
26.03.2003 10:56
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,886090,00.html
Uniting for Peace provides that if, because of the lack of unanimity of the permanent members of the Security Council (France, China, Russia, Britain, United States), the Council cannot maintain international peace where there is a gthreat to the peace, breach of the peace or act of aggression,h the General Assembly gshall consider the matter immediatelyc.h The General Assembly can meet within 24 hours to consider such a matter, and can recommend collective measures to U.N. members including the use of armed forces to gmaintain or restore international peace and security.h
The Uniting for Peace resolution procedure has been used ten times since 1950.
http://www.lawyersagainstthewar.org/letters/opedletter.doc
hmmm, does seem to suggest that force can be used.
un
Article 377 and use of force.
26.03.2003 11:29
Redkop
It all makes a difference
26.03.2003 13:03
With UN resolutions of this kind, we might find that direct action in England to stop the war becomes legal.
You can't argue that isn't helpful.
hot head