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[1] October 11th, 2007
Canadian Voice of Women for Peace Statement on the Border
Detainment of Medea Benjamin and Ann Wright:
The Canadian Voice of Women for Peace (VOW) decries the detainment of
world renowned peace activist, Medea Benjamin and retired Colonel Ann
Wright, at the Canadian border, as unacceptable and reprehensible.
VOW is calling on the Prime Minster and opposition parties in Canada
to redress the spectrum of repressive security and surveillance
legislative changes enacted since 9-11, including those that threaten
the rights of peace, social justice and global democracy advocates
and activists by confounding them as terrorists and criminals. The
government of Canada should be honouring not rejecting Medea
Benjamin, one of the 1000 PeaceWomen nominated in 2005 for the Nobel
Prize, whom we have just learned have been nominated again for 2007.
Canada with its long tradition as a peace builder must recognize its
commitments to UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in support of
`Women, Security and Peace´ and rethink and distance itself from US
defence and foreign policies based on an unfounded global `war on
terror´ and an SPP `Fortress America´ concept engineered by the Bush
administration.
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[2] Medea Benjamin's Blog
http://www.codepink 4peace.org/article.php?id=3562
Canada: We Come in Peace
By Medea Benjamin
As a young hippie in the mid '70s hitch-hiking across Europe and
Africa, I encountered tremendous hostility towards Americans because
of US foreign policy. My government was killing people in Vietnam,
supporting the white racists in South Africa, and had just overthrown
Salvador Allende's democratic government in Chile. Ashamed, I looked
northward and saw the enlightened Canadian government of Pierre
Trudeau. When I heard John Lennon say that "if all politicians were
like Pierre Trudeau there would be world peace," I was sold. Sight
unseen, I adopted Canada as my spiritual homeland. I drew a maple
leaf on my backpack, added "eh?" at the end of my sentences, and
started calling myself a Canadian.
Over the years, I have reconciled myself to being a U.S. citizen and
have dedicated my life to making my government one I can be proud of.
But I continue to have a soft spot for Canada. I admire Canada's
commitment to health care for all. The government's rational policy
towards Cuba allows Canadians to vacation in Varadero while Americans
are prohibited from "bathing with the enemy." Peace-loving Americans
are forever grateful to Canada for accepting Vietnam war resisters
and for spearheading the international treaty against landmines. And
when Canada refused to join George Bush's Coalition of the Willing to
invade Iraq, the US peace movement showered the Canadian Embassy with
flowers and thanks.
While I no long self-identify as Canadian, my ties to Canada are
deep. The fair trade organization I cofounded, Global Exchange, has
joined Canadian NGOs and labor unions to oppose NAFTA and other trade
policies that hurt the poor and the environment. We organize cross-
border strategy sessions on how to make businesses greener and more
socially responsible. We pressure the auto companies to produce more
fuel-efficient cars. We jointly visit factories from Mexico to China
to improve conditions for workers making goods sold in our stores.
When I cofounded the women's peace group CODEPINK to prevent war with
Iraq, we were honored to have Canadian parliamentarians stand with us
in front of the White House during our four-month vigil. After the
invasion, we joined with Canadians to set up an Occupation Watch
Center in Baghdad. And with more and more US soldiers from Iraq
seeking refuge in Canada, we work with Canadians to support this new
wave of war resisters.
It's not just war resisters making a beeline north. Some of our best
peace activists, beaten down by the Bush administration, have
immigrated to Canada. Others of us, determined to stay and struggle
on our home turf, keep in the back of our minds that if the situation
in the U.S. gets really bad, Canada will be our "exit strategy."
But my whole idea of a tolerant, independent Canada that we could
retreat to came crashing down on October 4. With my colleague Ann
Wright, a retired US Army Colonel and career diplomat who resigned in
opposition to the US invasion of Iraq, I was going to Toronto to meet
with the Stop the War Coalition. We crossed the border at the Rainbow
Bridge in Niagara Falls. While most U.S. visitors are simply waved
through with no screening, Ann and I were selected for a background
check.
Let me preface what happened next with some context about the war
itself and the U.S. peace movement. We have watched in horror as our
leaders took this nation to war based on lies, since Iraq didn't have
weapons of mass destruction and was never a threat to the United
States. We have agonized over the death of some 4,000 U.S. soldiers.
We have been heartbroken over the destruction of the cradle of
civilization, with this war leaving some one million Iraqis dead,
over 4 millions refugees, a wrecked infrastructure and a crumbling
economy.
To counter this ongoing tragedy, many Americans, including Ann Wright
and myself, have been working non-stop to bring our troops home. We
left our homes and families to crisscross the country educating and
mobilizing the public. We organized demonstrations, vigils, email
blasts, call-in weeks, lobby days, media campaigns. And we turned to
the ballot box to elect a new Congress in November 2006 with a
mandate for peace.
But nothing worked. Despite having the majority of the public on our
side, the Bush administration upped troop levels and the new Congress
continued to fund the war.
So we took a page from the hallowed tradition of non-violence civil
disobedience-a tactic used by the civil rights movement, the
suffragists, the gay rights activists, the disability movement, the
environmentalists, the animal rights folks. It's a critical part of
our heritage, our culture, our social change toolbox.
We organized mass arrests in front of the White House. (All you have
to do to get arrested in front of the White House, by the way, is
just stand there.) We did sit-ins in the offices of elected
officials. We laid down in the streets, actions called "die-ins", to
mourn the tragic deaths of US soldiers and Iraqis. For these
protests, we have been arrested and convicted of minor misdemeanors.
We are always peaceful-remember, we're a peace movement--and we have
even developed a camaraderie with the DC police who understand our
aims and respect our right to protest.
So, here we were at the Canadian border. The border officer checked
our passports on a computer, and told us to sit down. More and more
border guards gathered in a huddle, intensively discussing our
situation. Then they called us, one at a time, to review our
"criminal records."
I was shown a two-sheet print-out that had three convictions: one for
unlawful assembly at the White House on International Women's Day
2002; one for speaking out during a Congressional hearing in 2003;
and one for trespassing when a group of us tried to deliver 152,000
anti-war signatures to the US Mission to the UN in March 2005. Ann
was also questioned about her arrests, all of which were minor
misdemeanors-the equivalent of parking tickets--for which she had
paid fines.
How, we wondered, did the Canadians obtain these records? They told
us that the information came from an FBI database called NCIC or
National Crime Information Center. This database was created to
assist U.S. law enforcement agencies in finding fugitives, convicted
sex offenders, missing persons, and members of terrorist
organizations and violent gangs. Its purpose is to track dangerous
criminals, not peace activists. And Canada is the only foreign
country that has access to this database.
After almost three hours, we were escorted into a back room where
three officials told us the grim news. Canada does not allow anyone
into the country who has committed a criminal offense, no matter how
minor the offence, they said. The border guards were almost
apologetic, telling us that they knew we were not "bad people," but
the law is the law: We were "inadmissible". If we ever wanted to
enter Canada, they warned us, we would have to go to a Canadian
consulate and try to get "criminally rehabilitated."
It turns out, as we later learned at the Canadian Embassy in
Washington DC, that the request for "criminal rehabilitation" is a
long, complex process that entails getting court records, police
records, fingerprints, verification of residence for 10 years-18
pages of information. But don't even bother, the head of the
Consulate advised us, because we wouldn't be eligible. You have to be
clear of all offenses for five years before applying.
Wow! It was hard to believe that the country that had, for decades,
welcomed Vietnam war resisters with open arms was closing its doors
to peacemakers protesting a war that is not supported by either US or
Canadian citizens. George Bush, who is responsible for so much
needless death and destruction, is wined and dined by Prime Minister
Stephen Harper. And we, the peacemakers who hold all life sacred and
cry out to stop the violence, are deemed a danger to Canada!
Yes, it is outrageous that the FBI is placing peace activists on an
international criminal database-a blatant political intimidation of
US citizens opposed to Bush administration policies. But the Canadian
Border Service should not be using this FBI database as its Bible. We
have seen in the case of Maher Arar the tragic consequences that can
result from the unquestioning use of these databases.
Fortunately, the grassroots response to our ordeal has been
heartwarming. The day we posted a petition on our website
www.codepinkalert.org, thousands of people on both sides of the
border began signing and posting comments expressing their outrage.
The Canadian press took the government to task. Typical was the
October 6 Toronto Star editorial calling us middle-aged activists who
specialize in "chanting 'Give peace a chance' in inappropriate
places." Canada should be on the lookout for "brazen criminals, not
brazen peace activists," it concluded.
Members of Parliament contacted us immediately. MP Olivia Chow sent
an angry letter to the Canadian Consul General in Buffalo, NY. "I am
alarmed to learn that Canadian border police are enforcing rules that
have been determined by the FBI and other U.S.-based agencies," she
wrote. "In Canada, peaceful protest is not a criminal activity,
despite how some U.S. agencies may regard it."
Another Member of Parliament, Alexa McDonough, called to apologize on
behalf of Canadian citizens. Determined to change the policy, she is
working on an invitation for us to speak before the Canadian
Parliament.
As we pointed out to the Canadian press and Parliamentarians, if
Canada's policy of excluding anyone with a misdemeanor conviction
were truly enforced, the results would be absurd.
Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks and Cesar Chavez would never have
entered the country.
Dolores Huerta of farmworker fame would be barred for her 22 arrests
for workers' rights.
Actor Martin Sheen, the President in the TV series West Wing and a
devout Catholic, would be blacklisted for his 70 arrests promoting
struggles from a living wage to nuclear disarmament.
Singer Bonnie Raitt would be expelled for protesting the clearcutting
of forests.
Actress Daryl Hannah would be inadmissible for trying to save an
urban garden in Los Angeles.
Eighty-year-old California Congressman Tom Lantos, a Holocaust
survivor and chair of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs
Committee, would be banned for his 2006 arrest outside the Sudanese
Embassy in Washington to protest genocide in Darfur. So would 12
other Congresspeople, including Barbara Lee, the only one who voted
against a violent response to the 9/11 tragedy with her prescient
plea that we "not become the evil we deplore."
Americans arrested for protesting the Iraq war, and therefore
"inadmissible", would include Nobel Prize winner Jody Williams,
writer Alice Walker, Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, peace
mom Cindy Sheehan, as well as thousands ordinary schoolteachers,
nurses, retirees and college students.
At a press conference outside the Canadian Embassy in Washington DC
the day after our ouster, I mentioned that Canada is the only foreign
country using this FBI database. A journalist sidled up to me
afterwards and said, in confidence,"If I were you, instead of saying
Canada is the only country, I'd say Canada is the first to use the
U.S. database. Canada is a bellwether. If it gets away with this,
other countries, under U.S. pressure, will follow. And your world
will become smaller and smaller."
When I cofounded the organization Global Exchange almost 20 years ago
with the goal of building people-to-people ties between nations, I
pictured a world moving beyond nationalist divisions to a world of
global citizenship with human rights for all. I never imagined a post
9-11 world where my country would attack other nations
"preemptively", saturate the border with concrete fences and armed
guards, and imprison people without charges, indefinitely. And I
certainly never thought that I would be barred from seeking advice
and solace from our neighbors to the north.
With the U.S. gripped by fear, overwhelmed by militarism, and
indifferent to the protection of individual rights, we-U.S. peace
activists--need Canada. We need Canada to be a bastion of tolerance
and common sense. We need Canada to counterbalance to our nation's
hysteria. We need Canada to inspire us. We need Canada to embrace us
when we feel like strangers in our own home.
We come in peace. We come with humility. Please don't forsake us in
our time of need.
Medea Benjamin (medea[at]globalexchange.org) is cofounder of the
human rights group Global Exchange (www.globalexchange.org) and the
women's peace organization CODEPINK (www.codepinkalert.org). You can
sign the petition at www.codepinkalert.org/canada.
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[3] Related News on the Codepink Canada page
Related News Articles:
Canadian Voice of Women for Peace Statement on the Border Detainment
of Medea Benjamin and Ann Wright, VOW, October 11, 2007.
CODEPINK Activists Refused Entry to Canada, Ms. Magazine, October 10,
2007.
So this is what it means to be free in America, Edomonton Sun,
October 7, 3007
Give peaceniks a break, EDITORIAL, Toronto STAR, October 6, 2007
American Peace Activists Denied Entry to Canada After Appearing on
FBI Databases, Democracy NOW interview with Amy Goodman, October 5,
2007
U.S. peace activists say Canada setting dangerous precedent keeping
them out, Canadian Press, October 5, 2007
American peace activists stalled at Canada-U.S. border, By Sheldon
Alberts, CanWest News Service, October 05, 2007
Decision to bar U.S. activists draws fire, By PAUL KORING, Globe and
Mail, October 5, 2007
`Absurd' to bar entry, U.S. activists say, By Nicholas Keung, Toronto
STAR, October 5, 2007
U.S. peace activists stopped at border, By Sheldon Alberts, National
POST, October 05, 2007
U.S. peace activists barred from entry into Canada, CBC, October 05,
2007
Letter to U.S. Consul General on behalf of US peace activists denied
entry into Canada, from Olvia Chow, Member of Parliament, October 4,
3007
CODEPINK Press Release: Canada Refuses Entry to CODEPINK Cofounder
Medea Benjamin and Retired Colonel Ann Wright, October 04, 2007
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[4] Sign our petition now!
Canada Bars Entry to US Peacemakers:
Look Who's Signed our Petition!
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/424/petition.
jsp?petition_KEY=741
Debra Sweet, The World Can't Wait
Willie Nelson, singer/songwriter
Ann Nelson, environmentalist
Alice Walker, author
Noam Chomsky, author
Howard Zinn, author
Maude Barlow, Council on Canadians
Dr. E. Faye Williams, National Congress of Black Women
Cindy Sheehan, peace mom, Gold Star Families for Peace
Michael Ratner, Center for Constitutional Rights
Lori Wallach, Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch
John Stauber, Center for Media and Democracy
Tim Carpenter, Progressive Democrats of America
Norman Solomon, Institute for Public Accuracy
Mark Weisbrot, Center for Economic and Policy Research
Eli Pariser, MoveOn.org
Paul Rice, TransFair
Father Louis Vitale, Franciscan priest, Pace y Bene
Wade Rathke, ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform
Now)
Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Non-Violence
Janet Eaton, Canadian Voice of Women for Peace
Adele Welty, September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows
Kirsten Moller, Global Exchange
Ben Cohen, Ben and Jerrys Ice Cream
Matthew Rothschild, The Progressive
Jodie Evans, CODEPINK: Women for Peace
Eva Paterson, Equal Justice Society
Terry Tempest Williams, author
Susan Share, Women's Action for New Directions (WAND)
Nina Simons, Bioneers
Rabbi Michael Lerner, Network of Spiritual Progressives
Billy Wimsatt, League of Young Voters
Jeff Adachi, Public Defender of San Francisco
Reverend Lennox Yearwood, HipHop Caucus
John Cavanagh, Institute for Policy Studies
Kavita Ramdas, Global Fund for Women
Rob Ritchie, Fair Vote
Bill Goodfellow, Center for International Policy
Jeff Cohen, author/media critic
Ruth Benn, National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee
Leslie Cagan, United for Peace and Justice
Tony Clarke, Polaris Institute
Robert Naiman, Just Foreign Policy
Jef Keighley, World Peace Forum Society & Peace Without Borders
Prof. Walden Bello, International Development Studies, St. Mary's
University, Halifax
Margo Okazawa-Rey, 1000 Women for Peace
Ben Mansky, Liberty Tree
Ellen Woodsworth, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
(WILPF), Canada
Marta Drury, Heart and Hand Fund
Elizabeth Martinez, Institute for MultiRacial Justice
Cora Weiss, Hague Appeal for Peace
Felicia Gustin, Speak Out-the Institute for Democratic Education and
Culture
Over 12,000 signatures by now !
On October 4, 2007 CODEPINK: Women for Peace cofounder Medea Benjamin
and Retired Colonel/diplomat Ann Wright were denied entry to Canada because they have engaged in acts of non-violent civil disobedience against the war in Iraq. The Canadian border officials said the
women's names appeared on an FBI criminal database and that anyone convicted of a criminal offense, including a minor misdemeanor for peace and social justice, was "inadmissible."
We call on the FBI to stop including minor non-violent offenses on a database meant for serious crimes. We call on the Canadian government to reverse its policy and extend a warm welcome to U.S. peacemakers and other social activists who use the time-honored tradition of engaging in civil disobedience as a way to change unjust policies.
Sign here
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/424/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=741
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