*hola a todas, buen día de huelga, nos vemos en la calle *
*Os informamos que hemos organizado una *
*Charla coloquio*
*sobre los Gastos Militares en los presupuestos generales del estado para
2013.*
*Tendrá lugar en el CSOA la Morada, Casarrubuelos 5 (metro Quevedo L2). *
*Sábado 17 de noviembre 19,00 h.*
* ¡Os invitamos a participar!*
el 14N política internacional estará repartiendo folletos sobre la charla
del 17 de noviembre
h 17,00 en frente a Casa America
h 18,00 en plaza beata
h 19,30 en Neptuno
Sì a los recortes al gasto militar
gasto militar para necesidades sociales
http://madrid.tomalaplaza.net/2012/11/14/si-a-los-recortes-del-gasto-...
==============
como sabeis hemos consensuado organizar una charla debate sobre Siria el
dia 10 de diciembre, dias de los derechos humanos y pedimos ayuda para
organizarla (contacto: politicainternacional...@gmail.com)
Lo que queremos es intentar contestar a las preguntas que han salido desde
el taller de Agora99 http://titanpad.com/A99Disarment
- ¿Cómo mostrar solidaridad y apoyar a un pueblo para que resista de
forma no violenta? (propuesta de reflexión y de trabajo para el movimiento)
- Campañas de Información y contra-información para visibilizar los
conflictos existentes y uso de las armas en el mundo.
- Cuestionar la identidad perdida de la ONU.
- Campaña para que el rechazo a la guerra como medio de solución de
conflictos sea en la Carta Constitucional de cada país.
- Cambio en las relaciones internacionales promoviendo el dialogo
político entre los pueblos del mundo.
- Justicia y respeto absoluto a la soberanía de los pueblos en
solidaridad con todos aquellos pueblos que luchan por su liberta
y queremos también alguna ponencias desde personas que puedan traer
testimonios y análisis bien profundizadas
Estamos en la espera de propuestas y invitamos la plataforma de apoyo al
pueblo sirio a ayudarnos en la organización de este evento
añadimos el documento que ha salido desde el forum de Florencia sobre Siria
*Assembly on Syria at Firenze 10+10*
*10**th** of November 2012*
*The Syrian conflict and its challenges for peace movements:*
*promoting a ceasefire, pursuing just peace, empowering reconciliation*
In 2002 at the European Social Forum in Florence we discussed how to
mobilize against the invasion of Iraq. We wanted to prevent a war based on
lies that would not bring the Iraqi people democracy but only death and a
new authoritarian government. Ten years later, we wish world powers had
listened to our cry.
Today Syria ought to be of comparable importance for the anti-war movement,
but this time the forces opposing peace are diversified. There is a regime
whose soldiers have bombed cities and shot people calling for democracy, there
are rebels who believe armed struggle is now necessary to bring change,
there are external powers who have used this violence to escalate the
conflict into a war in Syria and are arming the internal opposition, there
are factions among armed rebels who promote fundamentalism and
sectarianism, commit terrorist attacks and human rights violations.
In this difficult situation, we tried to understand what European social
movements can do to support the Syrian people, refugees and civil society
who dare to imagine a nonviolent path towards democracy, and a real
perspective for reconciliation. We all agree that an immediate ceasefire is
needed to prevent further bloodshed and de-escalate the civil war. The
great majority of the population wants peace and a truly democratic state,
so a process of State reform should be built by all components of the
Syrian people. Freedom of expression and information must be guaranteed and
any manipulation has to be pointed out and condemned. All religious and
ethnic groups must be protected, with special attention to refugees and
minorities, in partnership with the civil society of neighboring countries,
where conflict risks to spread. Collective actions must be taken to push
European institutions and governments to advocate for a just peace, instead
of external armed interventions or support for armed factions.
We acknowledge that we are divided on the priorities we assign to each of
the above-mentioned issues and goals, but we will act through diversified
coalitions with the following objectives:
1.
advocating for a ceasefire and for the end of external provision of
weapons to both parts, regime and rebel groups. We will support
reconciliation initiatives, providing a safe space for Syrian people of
different factions to meet, speak and negotiate a just peace;
1.
opening dialogue with Syrian civil society fighting through nonviolent
means for human rights, democracy and social justice. We will build a
process to meet Syrian activists and civil society organizations at the
next World Social Forum in Tunis in 2013, and at Sarajevo peace event in
2014, to hear about their priorities, favour exchange with international
civil society, plan together future actions like: capacity building and
training programmes on peacebuilding and human rights for activists,
support for conscientious objectors who leave the army or armed rebel
factions, development of independent community media in Syria, symbolic
peace actions like bringing the kaki tree of Nagasaki to Syria;
1.
sharing views and proposals to bring humanitarian assistance to Syrian
refugees abroad, rejecting the logic of huge refugee camps which become
inhuman prisons. We will also try to bring aid and solidarity inside the
Syrian territory, through internal actors that must be identified, and
through international delegations as soon as it will be possible;
1.
creating pressure for avoiding a new war against Iran, because peace in
Syria necessarily passes through a dialogue with Iran.