June 23, 2010
This very long and detailed message is forwarded for your interest. It sounds to us like a daunting but worthwhile effort. IF you have any more info, let us know.
Kittoh
From: "dorinda moreno"
Date: Mon, June 21, 2010 9:40 pm
To: "Mrs. Stanley"
Cc: "Eagle Strong Voice"
Frederick Douglass, the black American who overcame his slavery,
said once,
"Make a man a slave and he loses all moral accountability."
Kittoh, I definitely support the position taken by Kevin Arnett and the
International Tribunal, to which we add our information onf the
Interntional
Tribunal of Conscience, Nov. 4-10, Mexico City, on displacement,
migration/immigration.
Dorinda Moreno
here is backdrop of the 'International Tribunal of Conscience', and also
info from the 'Civic Society' for participation (and if selected they
will
provide travel funds), SCROLL BELOW TO BOTTOM OF ENTIRE SCOPE OF THIS
HISTORIC ENDEAVOR; though, the ITC's efforts are not necessarily
altogether
in sync with the government entity of the civic society, rather we are
intent on observing their politic and strategize for a potential walk
out--
and nevertheless are committed to working with and also in opposition to
for
representing the people's forum which is the tribunal, assembly, and
caravan...
PLEASE CLICK THE LINKS BELOW FOR FILLING OUT APPLICATION FOR POSSIBLE
SELECTION AND TRAVEL FUNDS.
On 6/18/10, Camilo Perez Bustillo
<
camiloperezbustillo@yahoo.com.mx> wrote:
Dear compañeros: We are urging all those interested in participating in
the
Tribunal and Alternative Forum in Mexico City in November to please
submit
online applications at:
https://www.gfmd2010mexico.org/gf_registro.aspx, so
that you can hopefully be selected as a delegate to the "Civil
Society"
component (scheduled for Nov. 8-9 in Puerto Vallarta) of the official
Forum
(GFMD).
This would provide coverage of the costs of your transportation and
accomodations and make it possible for you to schedule your arrival in
Mexico City Nov. 3rd in time to participate in the Tribunal, and help
maximize our possible options for participation of critical voices from
key
regions.
Many thanks and warm regards, un abrazo y mil gracias, Camilo
Sisters and Brothers, this is the central priority that deserves broad
support in preparing delegates and resolutions on migration/immigration
at
the 'International Tribunal of Conscience', that shall concentrate on
Arizona and Gaza as first test cases.
There is much work to do over the summer towards developing this
tribunal,
assembly and caravan that intends developing a permanent global forum on
migration and its core causes for displacement.
Please let us hear your feedback and expressions of interest and plans
for
participation.
Also, planned is a night of the Cultural Arts and film, and an
Indigenous
Ceremony that will begin the proceedings.
dorinda moreno
International Tribunal of Conscience, November 4-10, 2010, Mexico
DF and
Puerto Vallarta:
The toxin and the antidote: with a focus honoring the Students,
Professors,
Women, and Human rights Activists in Arizona in the eye of the storm,
organizing, marching, boycotting, being arrested for protecting the
human
rights to life and the pursuit of happiness, in their language, culture,
and
pride... meet with us in Mexico City in November for bringing testimony
to
bear of this global platform and first of a kind world tribunal which has
as
an intent establishing a permanent global forum on migration. Also,
important for this formation is honoring the struggles of global
struggles
and the committee has issued an special invitation for the political
prisoners, The Cuban Five, Mumia, Leonard Peltier, and Ignacio Del Valle,
as
Honorary Judges of the Tribunal, in addition to assessing the impact of
SB
1070 in Arizona as its first case following requests from immigrant
rights
groups based in Arizona and California.
JOIN US IN MEXICO CITY IN NOVEMBER: International Tribunal of Conscience
GLOBAL ALTERNATIVE FORUM: *OF PEOPLES IN MOVEMENT AND PEOPLE´S CARAVAN*
PEOPLES IN MOVEMENT FOR UNIVERSAL CITIZENSHIP:
ALL RIGHTS FOR ALL, WITHOUT BORDERS
Call issued for International Workers´ Day, May 1st 2010
*
*
*
*
INTERNATIONAL MIGRANT ALLIANCE
MIREDES INTERNATIONAL
MEXICO CITY ORGANIZING AND HOST COMMITTEE
*Dorinda Moreno, US Liaison, Fuerza Mundial/Hitec Aztec Communications
Patricia Barba, Host Committee, Media Specialist, Colectivo Las
Americas*
*
*
4/30/10, Camilo Perez Bustillo
<
camiloperezbustillo@yahoo.com.mx
<
http://mc/compose?to=camiloperezbustillo@yahoo.com.mx>
>
*The International Tribunal of Conscience (ITC):*
is the first of its kind to focus on violations of the rights and dignity
of
migrants, refugees, and the displaced on a global scale, and seeks to
build
on the contributions and experiences of the Russell Tribunal, the
Permanent
People´s Tribunal (PPT)of the Lelio Basso Foundation, the Latin
American
Tribunal on Water, the Tribunal of Migrant and Refugee Women in
Argentina,
the Tribunal on Sexual Violence during the armed conflict in Guatemala,
Mexico´s International Benito Juárez Tribunal and International Tribunal
on
Labor and Union Rights, and to act in a manner complementary to the
mandate
of the International Tribunal on Climate Justice and the Rights of
Mother
Earth recently established as a result of the People´s Summit in
Cochabamba,
Bolivia (April 2010). Its emphasis will be on investigating,
documenting,
determining state and corporate responsibility, and recommending
remedies
and follow-up actions regarding violations of the rights to migrate, not
to
migrate, and not to be displaced, as measured both against existing
legal
minimums in international, regional, and national law, and the ethical
foundations which underly the demands of migrant movements.
The Tribunal´s first session will be held in Quito, Ecuador Oct.8-12
within
the framework of the IV World Social Forum on Migration, as part of our
commitment to coordinate our efforts in Mexico City in November with
convergent efforts elsewhere. The Tribunal has already decided to assess
the
impact of SB 1070 in Arizona as its first case following requests along
these lines from immigrant rights groups based in Arizona and
California.
*GLOBAL ALTERNATIVE FORUM OF PEOPLES IN MOVEMENT AND PEOPLE´S
CARAVAN*
*November 4-10 2010*
* *
*1) **International Tribunal of Conscience
(ITC) focused on violations
of the rights and dignity of migrants, refugees, and displaced persons
(“peoples in movement”) from throughout the world, Mexico City Nov.
4-6;*
* *
*2) **Third International Assembly of
Migrants, Refugees, and the
Displaced (IAMR 3), Mexico City Nov. 7-8;
3) **People´s Caravan from Mexico City to
Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco to
deliver the verdict of the ITC to civil society forum and government
delegations and participate in mobilizations at the site of the IV
Global
Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD), Nov. 9-11
*
* *
* *
OVERALL CONTEXT
The *Global Alternative Forum of Peoples in Movement* and its two key
components, the *first International Tribunal of Concience* focused on
the
rights of migrants, refugees, and displaced persons, and the 3rd
*International
Assembly of Migrants, Refugees, and the Displaced* (*IAMR 3*), which
seeks
to build upon the first two Assemblies of this kind which took place in
Manila in 2008 and Athens in 2009, are being organized as grassroots,
independent responses to the Mexican government´s hosting of the IV
Global
Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) from November 8-11.
Our description of these sectors as “peoples in movement” seeks to
respond
to the need for convergence between efforts grounded in the struggles,
demands, and rights of the human subjects of processes of migration,
refuge,
and displacement, and their inherent, shared origins in the depredations
of
contemporary globalized capitalism. It is such processes of intertwined
state, structural, and systemic violence which produce the upheavals of
forced movement at the heart of these phenomena.
*This is heightened in contexts such as Mexico, where violations of
migrant
rights and of broader human rights are tangled together, and jointly
serve
the interests of transnational corporate and state sectors in the U.S.
and
elsewhere, through neoliberal policies such as NAFTA (the North American
Free Trade Agreement), the "Security and Prosperity Partnership of
North
America", Mérida Initiative (or “Plan Mexico”, emulating the worst
of Plan
Colombia in the Andean region), *the "Mesoamerica
Project", CAFTA (the
Central American-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement which includes
the
U.S., Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador,Costa Rica, and the Dominican
Republic, which rank proportionately as among the states most impacted
by
migration and most dependent on remittances), the Free Trade Area
of the
Americas (FTAA, which was intended to be the framework for the expansion
of
NAFTA on a continental scale, but has been blocked by the emergence of
the
Bolivarian Alternative for the Peoples of the Americas-ALBA, and the
strengthening of Mercosur, among other factors), etc., along with the
"managed migration" agenda of the IOM (International
Organization for
Migration) and GFMD, and "Mode 4" of the WTO´s GATS (General
Agreement on
Trade in Services) process. The "leveraging" of remittances for
so-called
"development" is of course central to these approaches, which
do not satisfy
even the minimum human rights protections required by the UN framework,
which the GFMD is intended to undermine. *The upcoming IV GFMD to
be held
in Mexico is intended to be a culminating step in the imposition of such
policies, with the Mexican government as a key promoter within the
Global
South of the hegemonic migration policy paradigm summarized above, along
with the Philippines. *
Our events in November are intended to directly challenge the GFMD´s
promotion of such approaches and to repudiate its legitimacy and that of
the
Mexican state and government and equivalent sectors elsewhere in
countries
of origin, transit, and destination, who seek to suppress, supplant and
co-opt the voices, demands, and struggles of “peoples in movement” and
their
families, communities, organizations, and allies throughout the world. *
*
*
*
*We hope to see you all of you in Mexico in November in a unified
response
to such efforts.*
* *
CHALLENGES IN MEXICO
The Alternative Forum, Tribunal, and Assembly are also intended to
unmask
the Mexican state and government´s longstanding efforts to position
themselves *falsely* as “champions” of migrant rights (as well as the
rights
of indigenous peoples) in forums such as the UN, the OAS, the GFMD
itself.,
and related contexts. *The Mexican state and government are in fact
directly
and indirectly responsible for creating and perpetuating the conditions
of
poverty, inequality, discrimination, and militarization which have
forcibly
displaced millions of Mexicans, and for systematic human rights
violations
of a broader character well documented by human rights defenders and
social
movements within the country, the International Citizen´s Commission for
Human Rights Observation (CCIODH), Amnesty International, Human Rights
Watch, the UN Human Rights Council, and other UN agencies and monitors.
These concerns have been reiterated in two recent (November and December
2009) sweeping judgements issued by the Inter-American Court of
Human
Rights regarding current state responsibility for the continuing effects
of
the country´s “dirty war” against insurgents in the state of Guerrero in
the
1970´s, and for hundreds of women killed- many of them migrant workers
in
the maquiladoras- throughout the last 15 years as the result of
“femicides”
in the border city of Juárez. In this context as in so many others,
it is
women and youth who bear the brunt of systemic violence in Mexico and
around
the world.*
* *
*The Mexican state and government have further undermined their
legitimacy
as the result of widespread electoral fraud in the 2006 national
elections,
the persistence of the ongoing war against Mexico´s indigenous peoples
and
the free exercise of their rights to self-determination and autonomy
since
the Zapatista rebellion in 1994, the militarization of the rest of the
country in the name of a supposed “war against drugs” imposed by U.S.
policy
and intervention, and systematic human rights violations involving state
terror against workers, independent unions, women, and youth and through
the
imposition of neoliberal policies, which result in the dispossession of
strategic territories and resources and produce forced internal and
external
migration.*
*
*The transnational migrant rights movement based in communities of
destination in the U.S. and in those of origin in Mexico is also a key
part
of the overall movement for human rights and authentic,
participatory
democracy in Mexico, and deeply connected to related sectors struggling
for
social and global justice in Latin America, the U.S., and the rest of
the
world, without borders.
GLOBAL DIMENSIONS
*Our efforts in November seek to highlight the combined effects of
capitalism, racism and xenophobia evident in discriminatory policies
recently adopted in Arizona which criminalize all those “reasonably
suspected” of being undocumented immigrants,and which have also driven
outbreaks of xenophobic violence in South Africa, Italy, and Spain, and
measures targeting Islamic immigrants and their religious practices in
Switzerland, France and the Netherlands.* The subordination of migration
policies to the supposed imperatives of “free trade” and “national
security”
post-9/11 in the U.S. “anti-terrorist” context, which has resulted in
the
militarization and “externalization” of the U.S. border from Mexico to
Colombia, and from Colombia to the Southern Cone of Latin America,
including
the interception and sinking in international waters of vessels with
human
cargo between Guatemala and Ecuador, has been replicated in the European
Union´s approach to migration from the Maghreb, sub-Saharan Africa, and
the
Middle East, and in Australia´s detention of potential asylum seekers
from
Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere in Asia. Thousands of migrants have died
as
a result in the waters between Europe and Africa, and in the deserts of
North Africa and along the U.S.-Mexican border. Meanwhile the U.S. and
Europe seem to be locked in a race to see who will adopt the highest
walls
and the toughest policies as to deportations, extended detention, and
employer sanctions, along with equivalent measures taken by Israel
against
the Palestnian people.
*IAMR 3:*
* *
*The 3rd International Assembly of Migrants, Refugees, and the Displaced
(IAMR 3) is intended to build upon previous successful efforts along
these
lines in Manila and Athens in 2008 and 2009, and to contribute
specifically
towards creating ongoing organizational frameworks and spaces for
exchange,
dialogue, and collaboration as part of the historic task which confronts
us
: building a global, grassroots migrant movement capable of challenging
and
resisting dominant policies, and of transforming the overall correlation
of
forces, discourses, and practices regarding such issues on a global,
regional, and national scale. *Migrant organizations, networks, and
movements from throughout the world and their allies will be shaping the
agenda and attending from Latin America, North America, Europe, the
Middle
East, Africa, Asia, and Oceania.
*IAMR 3 will conclude with a People´s Caravan from Mexico City to Puerto
Vallarta, Jalisco leaving Mexico City on Nov. 9 and arriving to
participate
in mobilizations there against the Iv GFMD, and to deliver the verdict
of
the International Tribunal of Conscience.*
*The International Tribunal of Conscience (ITC):*
***is the first of its kind to focus on violations of the rights and
dignity
of migrants, refugees, and the displaced on a global scale, *and seeks
to
build on the contributions and experiences of the Russell Tribunal, the
Permanent People´s Tribunal (PPT)of the Lelio Basso Foundation, the
Latin
American Tribunal on Water, the Tribunal of Migrant and Refugee Women in
Argentina, the Tribunal on Sexual Violence during the armed conflict in
Guatemala, Mexico´s International Benito Juárez Tribunal and
International
Tribunal on Labor and Union Rights, and to act in a manner complementary
to
the mandate of the International Tribunal on Climate Justice and the
Rights
of Mother Earth recently established as a result of the People´s Summit
in
Cochabamba, Bolivia (April 2010). *Its emphasis will be on
investigating,
documenting, determining state and corporate responsibility, and
recommending remedies and follow-up actions regarding violations of the
rights to migrate, not to migrate, and not to be displaced, as measured
both
against existing legal minimums in international, regional, and national
law, and the ethical foundations which underly the demands of migrant
movements. The Tribunal´s first session will be held in Quito, Ecuador
Oct.8-12 within the framework of the IV World Social Forum on Migration,
as
part of our commitment to coordinate our efforts in Mexico City in
November
with convergent efforts elsewhere. The Tribunal has already decided to
assess the impact of SB 1070 in Arizona as its first case following
requests
along these lines from immigrant rights groups based in Arizona and
California.*
* *
*Please join us in Mexico at the Alternative Forum, Tribunal, and
Assembly
Nov. 4th-8th, and as part of the People´s Caravan Nov. 9-11, in
solidarity
with migrant families, communities, and organizations based in and
connected
to Mexico, and in a principled stand challenging the Mexican state and
government´s responsibility and complicity for the systematic violation
of
our rights!!
*
*Charter of the International Tribunal of Conscience of Peoples in
Movement
(ITCPM)*
*(MAY 2010 draft)*
* *
*“NO HUMAN BEING IS ILLEGAL” *
* *
*Objetives of the Tribunal*
* *
1. *To make visible, investigate,
document, judge, and determine the
ethical and/or legal responsibility of states, governments,
corporations,
institutions, organizations and/or persons implicated in policies or
practices which result in violations of the dignity and/or rights of
migrants, refugees, and the displaced (“peoples in movement”), and/or of
their families, communities, and peoples, in countries or places of
origin,
transit, and destination throughout the world*
*a) **within the framework of patterns and
practices of state,
structural, and/or systemic violence *
b) including their *rights to migrate, not
to migrate, and not to be
forcibly displaced,* which together lay the foundation for the
*universal
right to freedom of movement, transit, and/or “human mobility”,
“hospitality”*, or *ius migrandi (see Arts. 13 and 14 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights of 1948), and/or of their to right to remain
in
their current place of residence, or to return to their place of
origin*;
2. *To analyze representative cases of
violations of the dignity and/or
rights of **migrants, refugees, the displaced (“peoples in movement”),
and/or of their families, communities, and peoples*;
3. *To judge and determine the
responsibility of state and/or corporate
actors in light of the minimums established by relevant international,
regional or national instruments and/or jurisprudence, customary law,
and
their interpretation, as provided by Art. 38 of the Statute of the
International Court of Justice (1945); and/or *
a) *the ethical imperatives which underlie
the demands of movements and
peoples, and their insurgent legitimacy within the context of the
exercise
of their right to rebellion, including mobility as an expression of a
process of liberation; *
b) *from the perspective of alternative
law, including the right to
universal citizenship, social and/or political membership,and/or
participation based upon residence or domicile, and people´s rights to
freely choose their own destiny, as an expression of their right to
self-determination, as recognized in the Statute of the Permanent
People´s
Tribunal, based upon the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Peoples
(Algiers Declaration, July 4, 1976, Arts. 1-7); *
c) *the rights recognized and demands
included in the People´s
Agreement adopted by the World People´s Summit on Climate Change and the
Rights of Mother Earth on April 22d 2010, and in the Charter of Rights
of
Undocumented Workers adopted in Mexico City on April 30th, 1980, among
other
sources; *
d) *to recommend immediate, interim or
medium term, and long term
precautionary and/or remedial measures based upon the rights to justice,
compensation, reparation and/or restitution of harms; to truth, and/or
reconciliation, applicable to each case as appropriate, and with regard
to
the systematic patterns and practices which they might reflect; *
e) *to contribute from a critical,
counter-hegemonic perspective not
only to enhancing or deepening existing legal frameworks, but also to
the
expansion of their reach in terms of the recognition of rights, and to
their
transformation “from below”; *
f) *to facilitate the processing of appropriate cases into
relevant
international, regional, and national inter-governmental and
non-governmental institutional channels and frameworks of public action,
policy, and opinion, including coordination and collaboration as
necessary
regarding convergent issues with other Tribunals of Consciente or
similar
mechanisms *(such as The Tribunal of Migrant and Refugee
Women in
Argentina, the Permanent People´s Tribunal, the International Tribunal
on
Climate and Environmental Justice, the Latin American Tribunal on Water,
the
Tribunal on Sexual Violence during the armed conflict in Guatemala, the
International Tribunal on Trade Union Freedoms, and the Benito Juárez
International Tribunal, among others).
*Key Dates*
*1. **The Tribunal will conduct its first
session* within the framework
of the *Iv World Social Forum on Migration* *(WSFM;
http://www.fsmm2010.ec/)
* to be held *in Quito, Ecuador, Oct. 8-12, 2010; *
2. *The Tribunal´s second session will be
held in Mexico City from Nov.
4th to 6th, as part of the Global Alternative Forum of Peoples in
Movement
(Nov. 4-8; please see website at tribunal.migrante.saltoscuanticos.org;
e-mail:
tribunalmigrante@gmail.com),* which is among the counter-hegemonic
spaces and activities being organized *in response to the Ivth Global
Forum
on Migration and Development (GFMD) to be held in Puerto Vallarta from
Nov.
8-11,* which is being organized by the Mexican government and the BBVA
Bancomer Foundation;
3. *The dates, locations, and
characteristics of subsequent sessions of
the Tribunal will be determined by its Permanent Secretariat, to be
elected
in Mexico City in November; *
4. Cases admitted for consideration during
the first two sessions of
the Tribunal must be submitted to the Interim Secretariat of the Tribunal
in
Spanish or English (via e-mail to
tribunalmigrante@gmail.com, with a maximum
length of 5 pages, with the possibility of submitting additional
materials,
once admission of the case for processing has been notified) no later
than
Monday, August 2d, 2010 for hearing in Quito, and Friday, September 17th
for
hearing in Mexico City;
5. The Tribunal will issue initial verdicts
(to be supplemented later)
in Mexico City and Puerto Vallarta on November 10, 2010
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Plus other co-convenors from more than 40 countries:
Elvira Arellano, Emma Lozano y el Rev. Walter Coleman de Familia Latina
Unida Sin Fronteras, Centro Pueblo Sin Fronteras, y la
Adalberto Methodist
Church en Chicago,; Baldemar Velásquez, Farm Labor Organizing Committee
(FLOC; Estados Unidos); Eliseo Medina, Service Employees International
Union
(SEIU; Estados Unidos); Túpac Enrique Acosta, Tonatierra, Phoenix,
Arizona;
Dorinda Moreno, Fuerza Mundial y Hitec Aztec Communications; padre Luis
Angel Nieto de Nuestros Lazos de Sangre; Rufino Domínguez Santos del
Centro
Binacional para el Desarrollo Indígena Oaxaqueño, (CBDIO); el Obispo
emérito
Msgr. Samuel Ruiz García, Msgr. Raúl Vera García, el Sindicato Mexicano
de
Electricistas ( SME), Rosa Martha Zárate de los ExBraceros,; Juan Manuel
Sandoval, Red Mexicana frente al Libre Comercio (RMALC); Fernando Valadez
,
Programa de Atención Psicológica a Migrantes, Universidad
Intercontinental
(México); Manuel Fuentes, Oscar Alzaga, Adriana Jiménez Moles, Patty
Sánchez; Asociación Nacional de Abogados Democráticos (ANAD); José
Jacques
Medina, Martha Sánchez Soler, Luis Lopezllera y Carlota Botey del
Movimiento
Migrante Mesoamericano; José González, Frente Indígena de Organizaciones
Binacionales (FIOB); Epifanio Díaz Sarabia, Movimiento Indígena Alterno;
Pedro González Gómez, Asamblea de Migrantes Indígenas de la Ciudad
de
México; Martín Hernández, Secretariado International Cristiano en
Solidaridad con los Pueblos de América Latina (SICSAL); Dolores González
Saravia, SERAPAZ; padre Miguel Concha Malo, Centro de Derechos Humanos
“Fray
Francisco de Vitoria”; Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Matías de
Córdova,
A.C., Tapachula, Chiapas Centro de Derechos Humanos de la Montaña (CDHM)
Tlachinollan, A.C, Tlapa, Guerrero; LIMEDDH-FIDH; sección mexicana de
Amnistía Internacional; Comité Cerezo; Hijos/Hijas México-Colombia; Red
por
los Derechos de la Infancia en México (REDIM); Global Justice Workers
Alliance, Mexico Program; hermanas Silvia Conde, Socorro Hurtado, Ma.
Fefa
Martínez, Teresa Salgado, Conferencia de Religioso/as de México;
Federico
Campbell Peña, Enrique Toledo, Maribel Téllez; UACM: Enrique González
Ruiz,
Amarela Varela, Yolanda Gómez, Salvador Aguilar de Anda, Valeria Moscoso
Urzúa, Marylena Bustamante, Enrique Adar Guadarrama; Dr. José
Antonio
Foronda, Vanesa Foronda, PRECADEMAC; Fernando Suárez Solar, Proyecto
Guerrero Azteca; Alicia Castellanos Guerrero, Ana Esther Ceceña, Carlos
Fazio, Gen. Francisco Gallardo, Gilberto López y Rivas del capítulo
mexicano, Red de Intelectuales y Artistas por la Humanidad; Gustavo
Esteva
(Universidad de la Tierra, Oaxaca); Walter Martínez Alves y Enrique
Cortés
Reyna, Movimiento en Solidaridad con Nuestra América y Comité 68; Atilio
Borón, *Argentina, *Seyla Benhabib, Noam Chomsky, Thomas Pogge, Saskia
Sassen (*Estados Unidos*), Monique Chemillier-Gendreau (*Francia)*, Hans
Egil Offerdal (*Noruega*) y Enrique Dussel (*México/Argentina*); Raúl
Zibechi, *Uruguay; *Dr. Leo Gabriel, Instituto de Investigaciones
Intercultuales, (Viena, *Austria*), Miembro del Consejo Internacional
del
Foro Social Mundial; Martín Espada (poeta y ensayista), Daniel Nina,
*Puerto
Rico*; Teresa Gutiérrez, Coalición Primero de Mayo (Nueva York, EEUU) y
International Migrant Alliance (Alianza Internacional de Migrantes);
Philippine Forum (Nueva York, Estados Unidos); Tess Tesalona, Immigrant
Workers Center (Montreal, *Canada*); Francis Calpotura, TIGRA y La Liga
Global (EEUU); Monami Maulik, DRUM (Nueva York); David Bacon (EEUU);
Laura
Carlsen, Prog. de las Américas, Center on Internacional Policy
(EEUU/México); Victoria Cintra de MIRA (Mississippi, EEUU), Colette
Lespinasse de GARR; José Luis Soto de Espacio Insular, *Haití y
Republica
Dominicana*; Diego Lorente, Consejería en Proyectos- PCS; Marylena
Bustamante, Carlos López (Centro Pastoral de Atención a Migrantes-
CPAM,
Ciudad de Guatemala), Maria Eliza Orozco del Consejo Maya Mam
(Xela/Quetzaltenango), en *Guatemala*; Nelly Rosa Santos, Caravana de
Madres
y Familiares Hondureños (*Honduras)*; Luis Perdomo, COFAMIDE, *El
Salvador*,
Gerardo Sánchez, Confederación Solidaridad, *Nicaragua y Costa Rica*;
Mara
Girardi, *Nicaragua;* Ana Caicedo, CEFEMINA *Costa Rica; *Comité
Permanente
por la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos (CPDH) (Bogotá, Colombia),
Comisión
Intereclesial de Justicia y Paz (Colombia); Red de Alternativas a la
Impunidad y Globalización del Mercado; Karmen Ramírez Boscán, Cabildo
Wayúu
Nóüna de Campamento, Fuerza de Mujeres Wayúu, *Colombia (región
fronteriza
con Venezuela)*; Lina Cahuasquí, Manuel Hidalgo (Asociación para la
Integración de Latinoamérica, APILA), Natividad Obeso (Mujeres Unidas
Migrantes y Refugiadas), Silvana Mastromatteo, MIREDES International
en *Ecuador,
Perú, Chile, Argentina y Suiza*; Luiz Bassegio, Grito de los Excluidos
(Brasil); Iván Forero, CEAR (*Estado Español*); Agne Tamboura,
*Senegal* y *Estado
Español;* Andrés Le Doux Wamba of *Cameroon,* Liepollo Lebohang Pheko,
The
Trade Collective, *Sudfrica*; Anisur Rahman Khan, *Bangladesh; *Luigi
Ferrajoli, Enrica Rigo, *Italia*; Válery Alzaga (*Bélgica*); Nadia
Lamarkbi,
“24 Horas Sin Nosotros”, *Francia y Marruecos*; Abdellah El Hairach,
Asociación Sur Migración y Desarrollo (ASMD, *Marruecos*); Vassilis
Tsianos,
Hagen Kopp del No Border Network/Red Sin Fronteras en *Holanda, Bélgica,
Italia, Austria, Suecia, Finlandia, Estado Español, Grecia y Alemania, *
Ramón
Bultron, Asia-Pacific Mission for Migrants (*Hong Kong/Filipinas*);
among
many others (summarized list)
*GLOBAL ALTERNATIVE FORUM OF PEOPLES IN MOVEMENT AND PEOPLE´S
CARAVAN*
*November 4-10 2010*
Dorinda Moreno, Fuerza Mundial, 4 Colores-4 Rumbos/Hitec Aztec
Communications (Oakland, California); Patricia Barba, Colectiva Las
Americas; Tupac Enrique Acosta, Tonatierra-Nahuacalli; Elvira Arellano,
Familia Latina Unida Sin Fronteras; Marta Sánchez Soler, José Jacques y
Medina, Movimiento Migrante Mesoamericano; Camilo Pérez Bustillo,
MIREDES
Internacional; y Amarela Varela, Marylena Bustamante, UACM, en nombre
del
Comité Promotor Internacional del Tribunal Internacional de Conciencia.
* ***
* *
>
>
>
>
<
http:///?ui=1&view=att&th=1289490827289f86&attid=0.1&disp=attd&zw
>
*DECLARACION FINAL COCHABAMBA.doc*
68K View as
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*CONVOCATORIA 29 de mayo VS racismo.doc*
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*ESTATUTO TRIBUNAL MIGRANTES.doc*
31K View as
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<
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*UPDATED ENGLISH CALL FOR GLOBAL ALTERNATIVE FORUM APRIL 30 2010.doc*
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--
NINGUN SER HUMANO ES ILEGAL – NO LEGALIZACION, NO REELECCION – PAPELES
PARA
TODOS
Para comunicarse:
tribunalmigrante@gmail.com,
www.tribunalmigrante.saltoscuanticos.org
Stand against "Hate"! Join with the Artists Against Arizona
Campaign: Lift
your voices by becoming a signatory to the campaign against Arizona's
discrimination toward the undocumented, Ethnic Studies, and strides
repealing the l4th Amendment.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Artists-Against-Arizonas-SB1070/114160971948532?ref=ts
<
Community4ImmigrantRights-subscribe@yahoogroups.com>
Dorinda Moreno, Fuerza Mundial
Elders of 4 Colors 4 Directions
Hitec Aztec Collaborations/FM Global
<
fuerzamundial@gmail.net>
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