Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Canadians to Baird: "Israel's Gaza Blockade Is Illegal. We Will Sail to Gaza"

Canadian Boat to GazaCanadian Boat to Gaza
May 30, 2011 11:59 ET

Canadians to Baird: "Israel's Gaza Blockade Is Illegal. We Will Sail to Gaza"


MONTREAL, QUEBEC--(Marketwire - May 30, 2011) - The Canadian Boat to Gaza (CBG) is dismissing Foreign Affairs Minister Baird's misinformation about the upcoming flotilla, and is promising to sail with the Freedom Flotilla II next month. John Baird, newly appointed Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister, has taken to discouraging Canadians from participating in the upcoming flotilla, which aims to break the siege of Gaza.

CBG views Minister Baird's statement as an attempt to abdicate the Canadian Government's obligation to ensure the safety of the Canadians who will be on board the flotilla, including the Canadian boat Tahrir and to justify, in advance, any crimes Israel may commit against peaceful unarmed civilians from Canada and all over the world, as it did a year ago tomorrow.

"We are sailing to change the unjust and illegal situation Israel imposes on Gaza and to challenge the Canadian government's support for those policies," says Wendy Goldsmith, CBG steering committee member.

"Baird has characterized the Freedom Flotillas as "provocative". How is aid provocative? How is standing up for international law and social justice provocative? How is it provocative to work for the freedom of the 1.5 million Palestinians in the open air prison of Gaza?" asks Ehab Lotayef, a CBG spokesperson.

"What's provocative is the government of Israel's impunity and systemic violations of international law," says Lotayef. "What's provocative is the Harper government acting as an apologist for all of Israel's actions, even when they are illegal and immoral, like the siege of Gaza. CBG and the flotilla are nonviolent direct responses to Israeli provocation."

In his statement Mr. Baird mentions Israel's right to prevent the smuggling of weapons. "What is he trying to imply?" asks Goldsmith. "If Mr. Baird has any doubts about our mission or what we will carry, we invite him or any Canadian body to inspect the Canadian Boat to Gaza." She added.
"We would like to remind Mr. Baird that the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), one of the official channels to send aid to Gaza, has itself said: "all States have an obligation to allow and facilitate rapid and unimpeded passage of all relief consignments, equipment and personnel [into Gaza]," not just those passing through channels approved by the government of Israel." [1] said Lotayef.

CBG is a civilian to civilian initiative funded by citizens and civil society organizations and did not benefit from any government funding or taxpayers funds as some misinformed media reports mentioned lately.

The full list of endorsements and supporting individuals and organizations is online at www.tahrir.ca.
(1) http://www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/update/palestine-update-140610.htm
Message In A Bottle

.Canadian Boat to Gaza Newsletter





Canadians and others demand safe passage for the Freedom Flotilla II
We demand safe passage for the Freedom Flotilla II: Press conference, Toronto (26 May, 2011)
Israeli blockade of Gaza challenged by Canada’s civil society
Canadians and others demand safe passage for the Freedom Flotilla II

Toronto, Thursday May 26th, 2011. Today prominent Canadians from diverse backgrounds united to demand safe passage for the boat sailing to Gaza (tahrir.ca) this spring as part of the Freedom Flotilla II (freedomflotilla.eu) to challenge the blockade which the International Committee of the Red Cross and the United Nations Human Rights Council have called “a crime against humanity.”

Human Rights activist (Independent Jewish Voices & Not in Our Name: Jews Opposing Zionism) Suzanne Weiss offers the following, “I am proud to stand today, as a Jewish holocaust survivor, in solidarity with the Canadian participants in Freedom Flotilla II in its courageous mission to challenge inhuman Israel's siege of Gaza. We must demand that the Harper government take steps to guarantee the safety of its citizens who are heading to Gaza on a humanitarian obligation.”

James Loney is a Toronto writer and member of Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT), an international violence reduction organization that places teams trained in nonviolence to work in lethal conflict zones. He was kidnapped in 2005 while leading a CPT peace delegation in Baghdad and held for four months. Last month, Loney published a memoir entitled Captivity chronicling his experiences in what is likely the most publicized kidnapping of the Iraq War. Loney states, “When facing injustice, we must choose between the power of violence and the power of nonviolence. Nonviolence leads to a new and transformed social order. The Freedom Flotilla II is nonviolence in action seeking the transformation of the Middle East. We call upon Stephen Harper to support nonviolent change in the Middle East by working to ensure the safe passage of the more than 30 Canadians who will be joining the Freedom Flotilla in late June. One of those Canadians is my friend Harmeet Singh Sooden, whom I was held hostage with for four months in Baghdad. I'm concerned for Harmeet, given what happened on the Mavi Marmara last year.”

Anton Kuerti, renowned classical pianist and human rights activist, states: “I strongly support the attempt by Canadians to send a highly symbolic shipment of medicine and other necessities to the people of Gaza, who have, for so many years, been strangled by Israel's cruel blockade, making Gaza indistinguishable from a concentration camp. All we hear about from our government is the need to ensure the security of Israel, but there can never be security for anyone in that part of the world as long as the legitimate needs and rights of the Palestinians in Gaza and elsewhere are deliberately ignored. Israel's arrogance in attacking boats bringing aid to Gaza in international waters can only further inflame the helpless furor of its essentially unarmed neighbour and prolong the debilitating stalemate which has ruined so many lives for so many decades.”

John Greyson, filmmaker, professor and activist who will be among the 32 Canadian delegates on the Tahrir, adds: “I'm getting on the boat because, as a filmmaker, I know how cinema can build bridges between worlds. Cinema can capture the subtleties and contradictions of people’s lives, in ways that illuminate and enlighten, that keep us all in a room together listening and talking to one other. I'm joining the flotilla because artists, like all citizens, have a responsibility to speak out in the face of injustice. I can hopefully use the tools of filmmaking to contribute something meaningful to this global movement to end the Israeli siege of Gaza. I'm getting on the boat because the people of Gaza need cameras, so that they can tell their own stories: their dreams, their realities, what it's like to live in an open air prison.”

Michael Mandel, Osgoode Law School professor and specialist in international law, explains: “The blockade of Gaza is an act of aggression under international law, as is the continued military and settler occupation of the territory seized in 1967 and the denial for 44 years of the fundamental human rights of the millions of Palestinians living there. The occupation has been condemned by the General Assembly of the United Nations, the Security Council and the International Court of Justice. It also clearly constitutes a grave crime in Canada, contrary to the Canadian Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act. I fully support the right of Israel to exist and to defend its legitimate borders within the ample limits of international law, but the blockade of Gaza goes far beyond that and is an integral part of an egregiously illegal occupation that has to end.”

Toronto Quaker and peace trainer Lyn Adamson is Co-Chair of Canadian Voice of Women for Peace and will also be on the Tahrir. She states: “We are extremely concerned about the continuing blockade of Gaza and about its severe impact on the people of Gaza. This blockade is ignored by governments around the world, including our own. We support whole-heartedly the second Freedom Flotilla which seeks to deliver essential aid for the people of Gaza and more importantly to challenge the blockade itself through nonviolent action.”

Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Prize winner (Ireland, 1976), was in Ottawa for the Nobel Women’s Initiative, and commented : “I fully support the call to the Israeli government for safe passage for the Canadian Boat to Gaza. The Canadian boat will join at least ten other boats and another thousand people sailing to Gaza to show the people of Gaza that the world has not forgotten them. I also call on the Egyptian government to allow the Spirit of Rachel Corrie to dock in an Egyptian port for them to deliver the sewage pipe to Gaza.”

David Heap speaks on behalf of the Canadian Boat to Gaza steering committee: “Despite the campaign of intimidation targeting our Freedom Flotilla partners in different countries, and despite the threats of violence by the Israeli government, we refuse to be intimidated. Where our governments have failed the Palestinians of Gaza, civil society must act instead. We will sail to Gaza next month to non-violently challenge this illegal and inhuman blockade. As the captain of one of the boats in last year’s Flotilla replied when hailed and ask to identify their destination: our course is the conscience of humanity. With this in mind, there can be no turning back.”

We also note that the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights welcomes the news of the opening of the Rafah crossing but emphasizes that this does not change the key issue, which remains the lifting of the Israeli blockade of Gaza, in compliance with international law.

-30-

For updates and to find out more about how you can donate to and support the Canadian Boat to Gaza, please visit tahrir.ca


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