[WSIS CS-Plenary] Human Rights Day in Mauritius

djilali benamrane dbenamrane at yahoo.com
Tue Jan 3 09:29:17 GMT 2006


Cher Jean Louis,
Bonne et heureuse année.
Cela fait plaisir de voir que tu restes toujours
vigilent et merci de nous tenir informé et éveillé.
Je rentre du Niger.... j'espère avoir fait avancer
les initiatives Niger/SONITEL/CSDPTT/PNUD...
Je t'informerai plus longuement
Amitiés
Djilali

--- Jean-Louis FULLSACK <jlfullsack at wanadoo.fr> wrote:

> To the particular attention of the HR Caucus, 
> this important information about a scandalous
> situation created years ago by this imperial country
> who always demands "good gouvernance" in DCs, in
> exchange for basic assistance and support. LALIT is
> a "transverse" mauritian CS organiztion which
> deserves our closest attention, so does the issue
> raised in the following information. Lest's hope
> that we'll hear something about it -a CS statement
> or communiqué- during the WSIS follow-up 
> All the best. 
> Jean-Louis Fullsack
> CSDPTT-France
> 
> The Military Base on Diego Garcia Must Be Closed
> Down
> 
> LALIT - 10 December 2005
> http://www.lalitmauritius.com/
> 
> 
> 
> Just at the time when Bush and Blair’s invasion of
> Iraq is being conclusively exposed as a war crime,
> the Mauritian Prime Minister offers to sign a
> “treaty” with Britain on the Diego Garcia base.
> You might think that P.M. Ramgoolam would want the
> base closed down in the face of the mounting
> evidence of war crimes committed from the base. You
> might think he would want to reunite the country and
> assure the right of return to all Chagossians to
> Diego Garcia, and at the same time distance the
> Mauritian State from the illegal acts of war being
> exposed so clearly right now. But no.
> 
> 
> The Prime Minister, egged on by Berenger, the Leader
> of the Opposition, is eagerly bending over backwards
> to assure the USA and UK Governments that the
> Mauritian State wants the military base to continue.
> This implies that the Mauritian State will follow
> Bush and Blair and their successors, whoever they
> may be, wherever they may go. War crimes or not.
> At this historically vital turning point, when the
> US empire is beginning to teeter, Lalit formally
> accuses both N. Ramgoolam and P. Berenger of acting
> against the interests of the people of Mauritius,
> and against the interests of people world-wide.
> Instead they are supporting hideous acts of war
> already committed, and harbouring those who may, in
> the future, before their fall, commit even worse
> atrocities.
> The shameful military base must be closed down at
> once, the islands it is built on reunited with the
> rest of Mauritius. Lalit once again makes this
> demand, today on Human Rights Day. We are once again
> making this demand, at a time when the Chagossians
> are challenging as illegal their displacement.
> Because today, 10th December, 2005, Harold
> Pinter’s Nobel Speech is being broadcast, we would
> like to quote from it. What he says is reasonable,
> and represents the way in which history will judge
> Bush and Blair in the future.
> “As every single person here knows, the
> justification for the invasion of Iraq was that
> Saddam Hussein possessed a highly dangerous body of
> weapons of mass destruction, some of which could be
> fired in 45 minutes, bringing about appalling
> devastation. We were assured that was true. It was
> not true. We were told that Iraq had a relationship
> with Al Quaeda and shared responsibility for the
> atrocity in New York of September 11th 2001. We were
> assured that this was true. It was not true. We were
> told that Iraq threatened the security of the world.
> We were assured it was true. It was not true.
> ���The truth is something entirely different.
> The truth is to do with how the United States
> understands its role in the world and how it chooses
> to embody it.”
> And, reminding us that the Mauritian State has never
> requested the Red Cross to check if there were
> illegal renderings that took place on Diego Garcia,
> our land, Harold Pinter continue: “Look at
> Guantanamo Bay. Hundreds of people detained without
> charge for over three years, with no legal
> representation or due process, technically detained
> forever. This totally illegitimate structure is
> maintained in defiance of the Geneva Convention.”
> It is important that Mauritius oppose this base. We
> do not want the Mauritian political leaders to be
> part of what will in future be adjudged a war crime
> by an International Criminal Court of Justice.
> Harold Pinter asks: “How many people do you have
> to kill before you qualify to be described as a mass
> murderer and a war criminal? One hundred thousand?
> More than enough, I would have thought. Therefore it
> is just that Bush and Blair be arraigned before the
> International Criminal Court of Justice.”


Djilali Benamrane : dbenamrane at yahoo.com
Tel/fax : (227) 75 35 09 BP 11207 - Niamey - Niger
Tél/Fax : (331) 01 45 39 77 02 Paris - France
Page web sur le Sommet Mondial sur la Societe de l'Information (SMSI) (mecanismes de financement) http://www.wsis-finance.org et groupe de discussion : http://fr.groups.yahoo.com/ 
Page web sur l'Afrique et la globalisation : http://www.multimania.com/djilalibenamrane/
Groupe de discussion: http://www.egroups.com/list/afriqueglobalization


		
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