Manchester, 29 September 2013

Manchester, 29 September 2013

Search This Blog

Monday, January 24, 2011

Inhumane Treatment of WikiLeaks Soldier Bradley Manning - TAKE ACTION


Join Amnesty International in calling for an end to the punitive detention of Bradley Manning - SEE http://blog.amnestyusa.org/waronterror/inhumane-treatment-of-wikileaks-soldier-bradley-manning/

Rochdale and Littleborough Peace Group welcomes the fact that Amnesty International has written an open letter to the US Secretary of Defense, expressing concern about the conditions under which Private First Class Bradley Manning is detained at the Quantico Marine Corps Base in Virginia (see http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AMR51/006/2011/en/df463159-5ba2-416a-8b98-d52df0dc817a/amr510062011en.pdf ). This follows a resolution proposed by the Peace Group and unanimously passed at the AGM of Greater Manchester and District CND, last week which declared our support for the imprisoned US soldier and called for Amnesty to adopt him as a ‘prisoner of conscience’.

Bradley Manning was detained in May 2010 by US authorities in Iraq and charged in July 2010 "transferring classified data onto his personal computer and adding unauthorized software to a classified computer system in connection with the leaking of a video of a helicopter attack in Iraq in 2007". He was moved on 29 July 2010 to the military jail in Quantico, Virginia, where he is classified as a "Maximum Custody Detainee". He his held in solitary confinement 23 hours a day; not allowed to exercise in his cell; has been denied a pillow and sheets; is under constant surveillance; and allowed no contact, even indirectly, with the media. He faces a potential jail sentence of 52 years.

Meanwhile, if Wikileaks had not published the video of the helicopter attack in Iraq in 2007, we would never have seen the evidence of the indiscriminate slaying by the US military of over a dozen people in the Iraqi suburb of New Baghdad. The dead included two Reuters news staff and Reuters has been trying to obtain the video through the Freedom of Information Act, without success since the time of the attack. The video, shot from an Apache helicopter gun-sight, clearly shows the unprovoked slaying of a wounded Reuters employee and his rescuers. Two young children involved in the rescue were also seriously wounded. The very distressing video is available on youtube (search for 'Collateral Murder - Wikileaks - Iraq').

We need to declare our support for whistleblowers like Bradley Manning and demand his release. We also need to demand the whole truth about the war in Iraq. In our own country, the government pretends to support the Chilcot Inquiry, but will not allow it to tell us the contents of notes and conversations between Blair and Bush when they were planning their illegal and immoral invasion. The then attorney general expresses his 'discomfort' at Blair's behaviour, but it seems that we shall always be reliant on people like Bradley Manning to know the facts.

Palestine campaigners call on Rochdale to boycott Israeli goods


Members and supporters of the Rochdale branch of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) gathered on Yorkshire Street on Saturday 22 January 2011 to commemorate the deaths of 1500 Palestinian civilians killed two years ago during Israel's attacks on Gaza. They urged people in Rochdale to join them in pressing for an end to Israel's ongoing siege of Gaza and for shoppers to boycott all Israeli produced goods, until Israel respects human rights and international law.

Rochdale PSC coordinator, Jenny Turner said,

“Many hundreds of children were killed in the Israeli onslaught on there homes in Gaza in early 2009. We recall these unnecessary deaths with deep sadness and a sense of shame that governments, including our own, did so little to stop them. Two years later Israel continues to besiege the people of Gaza and to perpetrate crimes such as building illegal settlements and demolishing Palestinian homes throughout the Occupied Territories. Six decades of resolutions passed at the United Nations have not resulted in any progress for Palestinian refugees or for people living under occupation. Governments are doing too little to help Palestinians. It is time for ordinary people to act and to stand up for justice for and against oppression. We can all do this every time we go shopping. We urge people to join the boycott campaign. Check the label; don't buy goods labelled 'Israel' or 'West Bank'. Complain to and challenge shops and supermarkets and supermarkets that try to sell you oranges, avocados and dates grown by illegal settlers on stolen Palestinian land. Ask them for genuine Palestinian products. Together we can make a difference.”