An Event of Note: Commemorating Freedom of Expression

October 27th, 2006

Many of you will know radio journalist and human rights activist Jenn Moore, Jenn has just recently produced a very successful radio segement for CBC’s Dispatches - which you can listen to as  Podcast. In this Jenn outlined how women coffee growers are asserting their independence and using the growing Fair Trade network to become more financially independent of male coffee growers.

Jenn does not let the grass grow under her feet. She has asked me to pass on the following announcement. This event looks promising. Perhaps many of you will be able to make it to view Hollman Morris’s and Ezequiel Vitonas latest contribution to the world wide effort to protect freedom of speech and expression.

Commemorating Free Expression

A Look at Independent Media and the Indigenous Movement in Colombia

With a talk & documentary screening by Hollman Morris, veteran Colombian journalist & Ezequiel Vitonas, Chief of Council for the Association of Indigenous Authorities of Northern Cauca (ACIN)

Friday November 3rd
2 to 4pm
Aboriginal Resource Centre
Room 102, 620 Gordon St (Federal Bldg, corner of South Ring Road and Gordon)
For a map see: www.uoguelph.ca/arc

Hollman Morris is this year’s recipient of the International Press Freedom Award
from the Canadian Journalists for Freedom of Expression. In a country where self-censorship is the norm, and where there have been 28 cases of journalists slain over the last decade, Hollman Morris is representative of the independent journalist under threat.
The Communications Network for Truth and Life of the Association of Indigenous Councils of Northern Cauca (ACIN) who nominated Morris for the Press Freedom award, describes him as a journalist who “drop by drop, image by image, word by word, allow the threads of resistance…to weave together with distant places, in the construction of another country that we all dream about and deserve.”

“Walking the Word” (Caminando la Palabra) is what the Communications Network for Truth and Life of the ACIN do, in their ongoing struggle to defend their right to justice, truth and life, and to contest the manipulations of ‘truth’ about Colombia’s conflict and internal responses to it. It is what ‘free expression’ means to the Nasa: that the indigenous people of Cauca, Colombia will continue fighting for territorial and cultural autonomy, for the protection of mother earth, in face of increased militarization and broken accords.

Organized by Pueblos en Camino www.en-camino.org

For more information please contact Jen at jenmoore0901@gmail.com

This event is sponsored by:

The Peak,

CUPE 3913,

OPIRG-Guelph,

CFRU 93.3 FM

University of Guelph’s Central Students Association.

“Two Countries–One World” - A time to Think Globally, Listen, Eat and Dance “Locally”

October 22nd, 2006

In 1981, a massacre happened in El Salvador. I remember this as a time when nuns were brutally raped and an Archbishop named Romero was assassinated by CIA sponsored death squads. Very few outside of groups such as Amnesty International and Catholic Activist groups did anything about this.

I also remember this as a time when my late friend Rajah Singh worked overtime to raise awareness of the atrocities that were committed in Central and South America by American backed death squads fighting, apparently, to save the world for “democracy”. Some salvation, some democracy.

For me, this time was made all poignant because Rajah, a student from Guyana who was earning his Masters in History at Guelph, died of brain cancer just a year later. He was his family’s hope for the future. They put all their money into his education and his future. At the same time, Rajah put all his energy into raising awareness of human and civil rights violations all over the world.

For me, Rajah’s influence was formative and even today, I am still in possession of all his academic papers. I think of Rajah often when I teach students who fled Central America - Guatemala, El Salvador, The Honduras literally minutes ahead of pursuing death squads.

I think too of the student I taught whose family walked 1,000 miles to flee El Salvador hoping to live in the United States - an opportunity they were denied as the US borders were as closed then as they are now - no wetbacks (literally) need apply. That student shared with me how the baby sister he was carrying on his back saved his life by giving hers when a bullet hit her as he her carried across a river between one country and another.

In Iraq, Afghanistan, Haiti, Iran, Venezuela, Nicaragua, we are seeing the same American government committing the same lies and atrocities again just 25 years later. This makes the invitation from Lucy Reid which appears below all the more important.

For those of us who “Think Globally” and want to “Act Locally” we have a chance to do both on November 3rd and 4th . Read Lucy’s invitation and put aside a couple of hours to listen to the story of one family in El Salvador. By doing this you will help to train one doctor for that still impoverished and torn country.

“The Road From El Mozote and Post Civil War El Salvador”.

This past March Break a group of United Church youth and leaders from Waterloo, Kitchener, Guelph and Cambridge travelled on a social justice tour to El Salvador. In preparation they examined social justice issues in our local community and then in El Salvador.

We called the trip “Two Countries–One World”. One of the people they met in El Salvador was Rufina Amaya who has an appalling story to tell.

She was the sole survivor of the El Mozote massacre of December 11, 1981, during the brutal Salvadoran civil war. Her husband and four small children were killed, along with over one thousand villagers. The participants on the trip were so moved by her story that they are bringing her here to relate it to Canadians.

It is something we all need to hear. If the issue of justice concerns you, you need to attend.

This your invitation to come to hear Rufina Amaya and Alvaro Carias (social activist and cultural educator in El Salvador) speak. Afterwards you will have the opportunity to meet them.

Salvadoran snacks will be available and then we’ll have some latin music and dancing.

To ensure that many people have the opportunity to attend, we will be holding the event twice–in Guelph on Friday, November 3 and in Waterloo on Saturday, November 4.

Please plan to attend and invite anyone else you think who would be interested.

Friday, November 3, 2006 7:00 pm – 11:00 pm (formal talks will be from 7:30-8:30 p.m.)

Three Willows United Church 577 Willow Rd West Guelph

Saturday, November 4, 2006 7:00 pm – 11:00 pm (formal talks will be from 7:30-8:30 p.m.) Emmanuel United Church 22 Bridgeport Rd. W. (uptown Waterloo) Waterloo, ON

Admission: Advance and reserved tickets $20 ($25 at the door), $15 for students.

For tickets call 519-837-4058 (Guelph) or 519-746-6282 (Waterloo).

Email: rufinabenefit@hotmail.com

This is a fundraising event.

Proceeds will go to the scholarship fund (through “Seeds of Learning”) for Maritza Amaya, Rufina’s daughter, who is attending medical school in San Salvador. Hope to see you there.

Only in Europe you say? Let’s hope its gone no further -Contaminated Chinese rice found in Europe

September 23rd, 2006

I am very concerned about Genetically Engineered Foods.  I am even more disturbed by the blatant corporate neglect that leads to these products being circulated and consumed without anyone knowing.

It is not just butterflies and insects that vulnerable to dangerouse GE plants. Greenpeace has found evidence of GE products being sold in Europe and consumed without any approvals.

Could this happen here? I hope not. However, Europe just might be our canary. For more information see below.

Contaminated Chinese rice found in Europe

London, United Kingdom, Sept. 6, 2006 — The genetic engineering industry sank to a new low when it was revealed recently that US company Bayer’s field trials of genetically engineered (GE) rice had contaminated rice exports. Japan moved fast and banned the US rice from coming into its ports. The EU quickly followed and placed import restrictions and testing regimes in place. Now, Greenpeace research has uncovered a new example of contamination of the world’s most important staple food.

We recently uncovered, and independently verified, that illegal GE rice from China has contaminated food products in France, Germany and the UK. We’ve notified authorities that the illegal GE rice poses serious health risks and we’re calling upon European governments to take immediate action to protect consumers.

Greenpeace offices and Friends of the Earth in the UK tested samples of rice products such as vermicelli, rice sticks and other processed foods. Five positive samples were found containing an illegal GE organism not approved anywhere in the world. However this may only be the tip of the iceberg. Rice products are included in everything from baby food to yoghurt.

“These findings are shocking and should trigger high-level responses”, said Jeremy Tager, GE rice campaigner at Greenpeace International. “Consumers should not be left swallowing experimental GE rice that is risky to their health.”

The illegal GE rice, genetically engineered to be resistant to insects, contains a protein or fused protein (Cry1Ac) that has reportedly induced allergic-like reactions in mice. Three independent scientists have issued a statement backing the health concerns we raised.

Greenpeace International is calling for immediate worldwide recall, measures to ensure no further contaminated rice enters the EU and the urgent implementation of a preventative screening system for countries with high contamination risks. Demanding GE-free certification for food from countries that grow and produce GE crops is reasonable, cost effective, and necessary to protect Europe’s consumers.

Like Bayer’s illegal GE rice in the US, this recent rice contamination in China began with field trials; the rice is not currently approved for commercial growing because of mounting concerns over its safety.

“Innocent consumers again become the victims,” says Tager. “Once illegal GE crops are in the food chain, removing them takes enormous effort and cost. It is easier to prevent contamination in the first place,” he concluded.

Greenpeace campaigns for GE-free crop and food production that is grounded in the principles of sustainability, protection of biodiversity and providing all people to have access to safe and nutritious food. Genetic engineering is an unnecessary and unwanted technology that contaminates the environment, threatens biodiversity and poses unacceptable risks to health.

site designed and maintained by Ravi Joshi