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Africa advocacy groups urge African
Members of UN Security Council to Vote Against War
March 7, 2003
To the Governments of Guinea, Cameroon and Angola
Dear President Lansana Conte, President Paul Biya, and
President Jose Eduardo dos Santos:
As African-American leaders and activists we urgently call
upon your governments to stand firm against the efforts by the
United States, Britain and Spain to undermine the work of the
United Nations' weapons inspectors now working in Iraq and to
initiate a war against Iraq.
We understand that your respective governments are under
considerable pressure from the United States and Britain to
support their resolution designed to authorize war with Iraq. We
believe that this would be a terrible mistake. The USA and
Britain are committed to commencing a war that breaks all
international laws and precedent. It is a war that is not based
on a real threat to Iraq's neighbors or to other countries.
Indeed none of Iraq's neighbors have made a call for an
international military mobilization against the Baathist regime
in Iraq.
As you may know, there is considerable opposition within the
USA to the planned war. At least 81% of African Americans oppose
the planned war. Support within the rest of the country for war
is extremely limited, with answers to polling questions varying
dramatically depending on how the questions are phrased. And, as
you certainly know, around the globe, millions of people have
stood up in opposition to this planned war.
We believe that the U.S. and British effort to initiate a
world war in the Middle East is not only unwarranted and
unwelcome, but also that it will have devastating economic and
social consequences for the most impoverished and most
vulnerable citizens and countries throughout the world. Africa,
in particular, would suffer significantly from the global
economic consequences of war at a time when Africans are facing
the truly greatest global threat to human security, namely the
HIV/AIDS pandemic. This should be the scourge receiving the
attention and resources that have been devoted instead to
debating and designing interventions against Iraq.
We hope that with Guinea taking over the Chairmanship of the
Security Council this month, that the African members will
provide the necessary leadership to avoid a war that will be
especially antithetical to the interests of African and Arab
peoples, and disastrous for the rest of the world.
We hope that in the consideration of this matter that you
decline to support the US/British/Spanish initiative and will,
instead, promote a course that encourages the peaceful
resolution of this international dispute.
Respectfully submitted by,
Mary Frances Berry, University of Pennsylvania*
Salih Booker, Executive Director, Africa Action
Bill Fletcher, Jr., President, TransAfrica Forum
Patricia Ford, Executive Vice President, Service Employees
International Union*
Danny Glover, Actor/Activist
Richard Gordon Hatcher, President of National Civil Rights Hall
of
Fame; Valparaiso University School of Law*
Sylvia Hill, University of the District of Columbia*
Jesse L. Jackson, Founder and President, Rainbow/Push Coalition
Joseph E. Lowery, Co-Founder and President Emeritus, SCLC;
Chairman Emeritus Black Leadership Forum
William Lucy, President, Coalition of Black Trade Unionists
Julianne Malveaux, Economist/Author
Fred Mason, Maryland/DC AFL-CIO*
Walter Mosley, Author
Harold Rogers, International Affairs Director of the Foreign
Affairs Committee and Executive Board Member of the Coalition of
Black Trade Unionists
Damu Smith, Founder, Black Voices for Peace
- - - - - - - -
The Advocacy Network for Africa
c/o The Washington Office on Africa
212 East Capitol Street - Washington, D.C. 20003, U.S.A.
Phone: 202/547-7503 - Fax: 202/547-7505 - E-Mail: woa@igc.org
<mailto:woa@igc.org>
March 7, 2003
Ambassador Mohamed Aly Thiam
Embassy of the Republic of Guinea
2112 Leroy Place NW
Washington, DC 20008
Dear Ambassador Thiam:
The Advocacy Network for Africa (ADNA), originally founded in
the late seventies as the anti-apartheid South Africa Working
Group, is a network of 231 US-based human rights, religious,
development-oriented and other organizations working with
African colleagues and networks to address common concerns
regarding US-Africa policy. Thirty to forty representatives of
these organizations meet monthly in Washington to discuss
current issues and to coordinate common advocacy. We share a
passion for and a commitment to political, social and economic
justice for Africans and a more just and mutually beneficial
relationship between the US and African countries.
We come today to express our solidarity with the people of
Guinea as decisions are reached regarding Security Council
actions on the Iraqi question. We believe, as do you, that peace
should be given a chance in Iraq. We note approvingly the action
of the African Union meetings in Addis Ababa last month, where
heads of state and government urged all parties to make
sustained efforts to avoid the use of force and reaffirmed the
central role of the United Nations and, particularly, the
Security Council, in any action or initiative aimed at
maintaining and strengthening peace and international security.
Not only will a war against Iraq bring humanitarian
catastrophe of great magnitude; it will also create reactions
that no one can predict or control. It has the potential to
threaten to destabilize African countries politically, and it
will affect African economies negatively. At least 13 African
countries lost 1% of their GDP due to spikes in oil prices
during the 1991 Gulf War, and there is no reason not to expect
similar difficulties now. Moreover, a policy of pre-emptive war
violates the principles upon which the United Nations was
founded, and it will create a dangerous precedent.
We therefore urge you to hold firm to those principles. No
doubt there are risks for Guinea should you challenge our
government's preparations for pre-emptive war and thereby refuse
to serve the narrow self-interest of our government. We are
convinced, however, that your government's having the courage to
stand for peace will not only contribute to a peaceful
resolution in this case, it will also strengthen African voices
in international forums in future. Such an affirmation of our
common humanity is the true sign of Security Council relevance.
Please accept this letter as a respectful expression of our
concerns and hopes.
On behalf of my colleagues at ADNA, I am
Yours sincerely,
Leon P. Spencer Co-facilitator of ADNA and
Executive Director Washington Office on Africa
Cc: Permanent Mission of the Republic of Guinea to the UN;
Permanent Mission
of the Republic of Angola to the UN;
Permanent Mission of the Republic
of Cameroon to the UN;
Ambassador of the Republic of
Angola;
Ambassador of the Republic of
Cameroon
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Angola Peace Network
Declaration Against War in the World
February 15, 2003
[This statement was received from the Angolan Peace Network
through AfricaFiles in Toronto ( <http://www.africafiles.org>).
Thanks to Thomas Brown for the translation from Portuguese.]
Luanda
February 15/03
Inter-Church Committee for Peace in Angola.
Luanda, Angola
To: His Excellency Dr. Kofi Annan,
Secretary-General,
United Nations.
Subject: Declaration Against War in the World
Excellency:
The world has today, February 15, 2003, marked the United
Nations Day Against War, at a time when Angolans are
experiencing the transition from a situation of war to one of
peace, even though the armed conflict yet continues in one part
of our national territory.
Looking at the various conflicts in the world the Peace
Network, as a living force in Angola civil society which
struggled to bring about peace in Angola, notes with great
pre-occupation that the world continues divided between those
countries which as a result of their resources and their
geo-strategic importance are of major importance to the
super-powers and those, which given their small economic
importance are not represented by the economic interests of the
powers of this time.
The imminent attack by the United States and its allies on
Iraq and the war in the Middle East (between Palestinians and
Israelies) today dominates the calendar of the United Nations
and the international press, to the detriment of the
long-standing conflicts in other parts of the globe, especially
Africa, where wars never stop as a result of a lack of serious
intervention and an investment of the resources and time, with a
vision of finding ways conducive to the search for a genuine and
lasting peace in these countries.
In our African continent, of which Your Excellency is a
beloved son, countries such as Democratic Republic of Congo,
Burundi, Sierra Leone, Ivory Coast, Somalia and Liberia, to name
a few, continue to bleed because of the wars whose consequences
are catastrophic, placing the people of these countries in a
situation of total dependence and sub-human conditions. Sadly
the connivance of the international community does not allow us
to discern on the horizon an immediate end to these conflicts.
As a people still emerging from a fratricidal war of 27
years, as well as the other wars which preceded it due to the
resistance against Portuguese colonialism, Angolans know well
the deathly results of any war. Thus we believe the
justifications of a war, however objective, do not diminish the
destructive character of war, nor diminish its immoral
character.
As agents of peace we are convinced that violence only
generates more violence and for this reason we vehemently
repudiate the attack which is being perpetrated against the
sovereign state of Iraq, and call on the Security Council to use
its power and mandate to promote world peace and stop the use of
force against the martyred people of Iraq, since there has not
been until now convincing reasons which justify such outrageous
acts against a sovereign people.
We repeat our appeal to the United Nations, as a legitimate
representative of the aspirations of the world's people, to
strengthen further this peace in the whole region of the Middle
East, particularly for the people of Palestine and Israel who
for 50 years have lived on the edge of an explosion.
In face of the inherent pre-occupation for universal survival
we cannot allow, on the part of anyone, that we be diverted from
the great struggles of humanity today, namely: the fight against
poverty, drugs and the traffic in children and the great
epidemics such as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, as well as
those efforts which are yet to be made for the establishment of
governance which is just and participatory in this global
village and respect, for all, of a international judicial order.
We entreat the Permanent and Non-Permanent of the Security
Council, especially those from Africa (Angola, Cameroon and
Guinea) to re-affirm the commitment of the Organization of
African Unity at its recent extraordinary assembly in its voting
against any war effort.
Luanda, February 15, 2003,
For the Peace Network,
Dr. Daniel Ntoni-Nzinga,
Executive Secretary, COIEPA
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