Initiative seeks similar agenda for as peace as there’s for defense ministry
by GEORGE KAGAME
With several parts of the world bubbling with conflict currently, Rob Acheson a resident of Pickering and his colleagues in the campaign to establish the Canadian Department of Peace, are hopeful that governments across the universe will reserve the same commitment to peace efforts as they do for war.
The Canadian department of peace initiative (CDPI) is part of a worldwide peace campaign that activists propose to be part central government cabinets around the world. It currently has a 24 country membership. Members join the movement as countries-where the initiative has been adopted like in Nepal with a full Ministry of Peace and Reconstruction-while in other countries like Canada, enlistment is according to chapters based on provinces and cities. There are now more than 8 chapters across Canada, 19 organizations representing 120,000 Canadians. Rob Acheson leads the Toronto Chapter, he is a busy man Acheson.
On top of his day job as operations officer of a logistics company in Scarborough, Acheson has to coordinate meetings of the Toronto Chapter once or twice a month downtown Toronto. “Our group is comprised of regular folks with interest in adding their voices to global peace activities, they are drawn from a wide range of social demographics and we meet at a downtown Toronto bar on a monthly basis.”
He is now busier because the CDPI is in advanced stages of organizing their annual general meeting set to take place on the 17 through to the 19th of April at McMaster University in Hamilton.
Among participants at the AGM are high profile public speakers and opinion leaders, they include a bi-partisan cast of members of parliament while renown journalist and writer Linda Mcquaig will deliver the keynote address titled: “After Afghanistan: Reinvigorating Canada’s role as a global peace builder”.
According to CDPI official documents, among its major aims is to create a Department of Peace just as there’s one for Defense. A Minister of Peace would be charged with keeping Canada’s peace-building capacity current, flexible, proactive, and responsive to ever-evolving conflict. Peacekeeping—and conflict transformation and peacemaking, all of which are distinct aspects of the larger field of peace building—is not a one-size-fits- all approach.
“We have a very highly elaborated architecture of war,” says Saul Arbess, a one of the key figures in CDPI.
“It consumes over a trillion dollars and can be mobilized at a moment’s notice. We have no corresponding architecture of peace.”
Furthermore, the CDPI draws upon the inspiration of the climate change activism that was deemed unreasonable fifty years ago but have taken centre stage in key policy circles all over the universe today.
Wednesday, 25 March 2009
Tuesday, 24 March 2009
After the Budget breakfast due on Friday at Scarboro
by GEORGE KAGAME
A panel of Scarborough MPPs and the Toronto Board of Trade along with business community representatives will this Friday 28th share their perspectives and answer questions about the $8.7 billion provincial operational budget due to be released on Thursday afternoon.
MPPs that will attend the breakfast are Gerry Phillips, chair of cabinet, Brad Duguid, minister for Aboriginal Affairs, Margaret. R. Best for Health, Wayne Arthurs and Lorenzo Berardinette and Bas Balkissoon. The provincial legislators will discuss the budget, its implications on the local businesses during the annual ‘After the Budget Breakfast’ event at Scarboro Golf and Country club on Friday beginning at 7.30 a.m.
Among the issues set to be tabled at the two hour debate include a 4 percent tax increase on home owners, hiring new city councils employees and a hike in the TTC fares.
The budget breakfast discussion is open to the public at a subsidized fee. Members are required to pay $25 and non members $40.
Monday, 23 March 2009
Ex justice minister calls for an en to war crimes impunity
Sudan must be taught that it is vulnerable
by GEORGE KAGAME
Canada’s former minister of Justice and current Member of Parliament of Mount Royal Quebec, Irwin Cotler has called on the international community to arrest people suspected to have perpetuated war crimes and crimes against humanity wherever they maybe.
Cotler was speaking at the University of Toronto while presenting a paper titled; “Rwandan Genocide: Lessons to be Learned, Actions to be undertaken” at a conference organized by the Canadian Centre for Genocide Education. Referring to the fugitives of the Rwandan genocide who are living in many powerful countries including Canada while evading justice at home, Cotler said; “The wheels of justice don’t stop, if there’s anybody that perpetuated crimes in Rwanda, they will be brought to justice.”
The conference, titled “Remembering Rwanda15, Lessons Learned/ Not learned” is part of a long running series of activities organized internationally to commemorate 15 years since the genocide was stopped in July 1994.
Referring to the current arrest warrants against Sudanese President Hassan El Bashir, Cotler said African countries should stop giving the excuse that the warrants were a ploy by ‘colonialists’ against Africans because there are 30 African nations that signed to the treat creating the ICC’s 108 membership and therefore should stop portraying the warrants as ‘selective justice.’
Cotler also said that Bashir was helping in enforcing the culture of impunity by promoting his minister Ahmed Haroun whom the ICC initially targeted for his role in the killings in Darfur by appointing him into a senior position directly responsible for efforts to save the native black Sudanese in Darfur who are allegedly targeted by Arabic militias supported by Bashir’s government. Cotler suggested that as a way to force Sudan to change its policy on Darfur or arrest Bashir, telephone networks in Sudan should be jammed, establishing a millitary presence at Sudan port to show the vulnerability of Sudan and enforcing a no fly zone over the country.
The Conference was attended by Canada’s leading academicians and activists on genocide who debated the causes, the implementation of the genocide, how to stop future genocides and the reconstruction that Rwanda has gone through since 1994. Beginning on Friday and ending on Sunday 22, it brought together such experienced figures Professor James Orbinski who as head of the Doctors’ Without Boarders was present when massive killings erupted in Rwanda in April 1994 and after 100 days, the killings had claimed close to one million Rwandans.
Orbinski who also won a Nobel Peace prize with his organization in 1999 gave a moving account of events in Rwanda’s capital Kigali as a witness to the genocide, others included academicians from leading universities in Canada including Professors Marie Eve Desrosiers, University of Ottawa Villia Jefremovas Queen’s University Adam Jones, British Columbia and many more.
The conference also paid homage to Allison Des Forges a researcher and human rights activist who first drew attention to the Rwandan genocide in the international community as early as 1993, later chronicling it in her book “Leave None to Tell the Story”, Des Forges died last month in a plane crash in Buffalo USA.
The activists also discussed on efforts currently underway in the Sudanese region of Darfur where over 250,000 people have been killed in a government insurgency instigated by an Arabic militia, the recent arrest warrant and its implications issued by the International Criminal Court against Sudanese current president Hassan Bashir. Gerry Caplan an influential academic on the Rwandan genocide said that the killings in Rwanda were precipitated by negotiations by politicians who were engaged in talks in neighbouring Tanzania known as Arusha Accords.
Desrosiers argued that contrary to what is known in Rwanda today, the governments of Gregoire Kayibanda and Juvenal Habyarimana which created a fertile ground for the Rwandan genocide were very intelligent and calculating politicians; “They shaped behavior in order to control the behavior of Rwandan.” Jefremovas an economist with wide expereince from Rwanda said that the current Rwandan leadership needs to listen more to the views of its citizenry; “Rwanda is a country that needs its people to speak truthfully to the administration.”
by GEORGE KAGAME
Canada’s former minister of Justice and current Member of Parliament of Mount Royal Quebec, Irwin Cotler has called on the international community to arrest people suspected to have perpetuated war crimes and crimes against humanity wherever they maybe.
Cotler was speaking at the University of Toronto while presenting a paper titled; “Rwandan Genocide: Lessons to be Learned, Actions to be undertaken” at a conference organized by the Canadian Centre for Genocide Education. Referring to the fugitives of the Rwandan genocide who are living in many powerful countries including Canada while evading justice at home, Cotler said; “The wheels of justice don’t stop, if there’s anybody that perpetuated crimes in Rwanda, they will be brought to justice.”
The conference, titled “Remembering Rwanda15, Lessons Learned/ Not learned” is part of a long running series of activities organized internationally to commemorate 15 years since the genocide was stopped in July 1994.
Referring to the current arrest warrants against Sudanese President Hassan El Bashir, Cotler said African countries should stop giving the excuse that the warrants were a ploy by ‘colonialists’ against Africans because there are 30 African nations that signed to the treat creating the ICC’s 108 membership and therefore should stop portraying the warrants as ‘selective justice.’
Cotler also said that Bashir was helping in enforcing the culture of impunity by promoting his minister Ahmed Haroun whom the ICC initially targeted for his role in the killings in Darfur by appointing him into a senior position directly responsible for efforts to save the native black Sudanese in Darfur who are allegedly targeted by Arabic militias supported by Bashir’s government. Cotler suggested that as a way to force Sudan to change its policy on Darfur or arrest Bashir, telephone networks in Sudan should be jammed, establishing a millitary presence at Sudan port to show the vulnerability of Sudan and enforcing a no fly zone over the country.
The Conference was attended by Canada’s leading academicians and activists on genocide who debated the causes, the implementation of the genocide, how to stop future genocides and the reconstruction that Rwanda has gone through since 1994. Beginning on Friday and ending on Sunday 22, it brought together such experienced figures Professor James Orbinski who as head of the Doctors’ Without Boarders was present when massive killings erupted in Rwanda in April 1994 and after 100 days, the killings had claimed close to one million Rwandans.
Orbinski who also won a Nobel Peace prize with his organization in 1999 gave a moving account of events in Rwanda’s capital Kigali as a witness to the genocide, others included academicians from leading universities in Canada including Professors Marie Eve Desrosiers, University of Ottawa Villia Jefremovas Queen’s University Adam Jones, British Columbia and many more.
The conference also paid homage to Allison Des Forges a researcher and human rights activist who first drew attention to the Rwandan genocide in the international community as early as 1993, later chronicling it in her book “Leave None to Tell the Story”, Des Forges died last month in a plane crash in Buffalo USA.
The activists also discussed on efforts currently underway in the Sudanese region of Darfur where over 250,000 people have been killed in a government insurgency instigated by an Arabic militia, the recent arrest warrant and its implications issued by the International Criminal Court against Sudanese current president Hassan Bashir. Gerry Caplan an influential academic on the Rwandan genocide said that the killings in Rwanda were precipitated by negotiations by politicians who were engaged in talks in neighbouring Tanzania known as Arusha Accords.
Desrosiers argued that contrary to what is known in Rwanda today, the governments of Gregoire Kayibanda and Juvenal Habyarimana which created a fertile ground for the Rwandan genocide were very intelligent and calculating politicians; “They shaped behavior in order to control the behavior of Rwandan.” Jefremovas an economist with wide expereince from Rwanda said that the current Rwandan leadership needs to listen more to the views of its citizenry; “Rwanda is a country that needs its people to speak truthfully to the administration.”
Sunday, 22 March 2009
Scarborough artist to participate in Ideal-Way exhibition
Inspirational Javed part of a select team to showcase their talent
by GEORGE KAGAME
A Scarborough resident Shabana Javed is among a few artists selected throughout Toronto to participate in a four day long art show dubbed Ideal-way exhibition at Varley Gallery’s Eckhardt McKay house in Unionville.
The art exhibition which seeks to promote the talents of intellectually disabled persons in Ontario starts on 1st and ends on 5th April. The selection process was supervised by Andrew Hamilton an established painter, fine arts professor and curator. Javed who was born with Down syndrome and turns 27 next month, is a well established artist as well as humanitarian activist according to her mother Lolita Javed also a Scarborough artist.
“She started painting aged 14 and has participated in many festivals in Toronto, she has also donated many of her art pieces to community art groups.” In fact Javed is much more than just an artist, she is a dancer with widespread experience. As well as participating in art exhibitions, Javed has also been part of the Kiwanis dance festivals at York University. She favours the Indian classical North Indian dance styles which have ensured her entry in the York University Kiwani dance festivals since 2006 to 2008.
Javed has also participated and exhibited in the Scarborough Civic Centre exhibitions annually from 2006 to date and the Port Union Community centre winning many trophies and medals in the process. “She specializes in the multi colour and is also very good in Chinese brash paintings. Her work has been described as unique and mastepieces”, Lorita adds.
Javed was among a handful of applicants that applied to showcase their talents in the Ideal Way Exhibition from 500 initial competitors. The competition according to organizers targets ‘To build bridges joining those with an intellectual disability and others, as a pathway to inclusion. To improve the lives of such persons by creating, and enhancing, opportunities for mainstream community interaction. To educate, and positively improve mainstream social attitudes in order to make all persons with intellectual disability feel I.D.E.A.L.... Included, Deserving, Equal, Appreciated and Loved.” Organizers say it is the first of its kind in the province.
Javed will also stage her own art exhibition mid May to early June at the Scarborough Civic centre
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)