Centre for Research on Globalisation
[ home ]

 

International Appeal against the war in Afghanistan

 

 


Centre for Research on Globalisation (CRG),  globalresearch.ca   16  November 2001

 

International Appeal of Nobel Prize Laureates, Poets, Philosophers, Intellectuals and Human Rights Defenders FOR AN IMMEDIATE END TO THE WAR AGAINST AFGHANISTAN

Military measures intended to support the arrest of a terrorist have turned into a large-scale attack on one of the poorest countries in the world, as well as on its population, which is tormented by hunger and poverty and threatened by uprooting and death.

As little as the gap between rich and poor in the world was the cause of the murderous attack on Sept.11, all the more are the attacks against Afghanistan deepening this gap and thereby multiplying reasons to hate the West and its civilization. In the future the West will be less identified with its best qualities, with democracy, a constitutional order and prosperity than with its shadowy sides, with a lack of respect, arbitrary acts and violence.

With every bomb that falls and every western soldier who kills on Afghan soil, the rich part of this world closes its eyes to the suffering of the peoples in the south. Even the appearent successes presently do not change this. With its offensive the West is not only undermining the idea of a collective legal effort to counteract terror, but is also betraying its own principles. In the final analysis this undeclared war is no longer being waged to combat terrorism but rather to preserve a reputation of military invincibility. Finally, with every day that war is waged there and with every new security law passed here (in the western world) , that very freedom which is supposedly being defended is threatened and those refugees, who are the products of this military action and its consequences, are marginalized.

On September 11, not only did thousands of people suffer an agonising death, but even western civilization suffered a defeat. Those murdered in the attack will not be restored to life through the war against the Taliban. With every day of war the risk of a still greater moral and political disaster increases. It is still possible to learn from the failures experienced up to now. There is still a chance to return to negotiations and to reach a political solution which attempts to reestablish a legal order and to provide for justice and social equality in Afghanistan and in the world.

13th November, Frankfurt (Germany)

First Signatories:

Jos� Saramago (Portugal, Nobel Prize in Literatur 1998) - G�nter Grass (Germany, Nobel Prize in Literature 1999) - Adolfo P�rez Esquivel (Argentina, Nobel Peace Prize 1980) - Rigoberta Mench� Tum (Guatemala, Nobel Peace Prize 1992) - Jos� Ramos-Horta (East Timor, Nobel Peace Prize 1996)

Adonis (Ali Ahmad Sa'�d Esbir) (France/Lebanon) - Orhan Pamuk (Turkey) - Mahmoud Darwisch (Palestine) - Ogaga Ifowodo (Nigeria) - Harold Pinter (Great Britain) - Faraj Sarkohi (Iran)- Juan Villoro (Mexico) - Abdourahman A. Waberi (Djibouti/France) - Sean McGuffin (Ireland) - Christa Wolf (Germany)

Uri Avnery (Israel) - Monse�or Samuel Ruiz Garc�a (Mexico) - Danielle Mitterrand (France-Libert�, France) - Dr. Paz Rojas Baeza (CODEPU, Chile) - Akin Birdal (Human Rights Defender, Turkey) - Dr. Jean Ziegler (Delegate of Suisse to the United Nations) -G�nter Gaus (Germany)

Prof. Giorgio Agamben (Italy) - Prof. Neville Alexander (South Afrika) - Prof. Francis A. Boyle (USA) - Prof. Judith Butler (USA) - Prof. Hajo Funke (Germany) - Prof. Axel Honneth (Germany) - Prof. Walter Jens (Germany) - Prof. Steve Lukes (Great Britain/Italy) - Prof. Jean-Luc Nancy (France) - Prof. Bertrand Ogilvie (France)

This international appeal was initiated by the German, Frankfurt based, non governemental organisation medico international (Nobel Peace Prize for the Campaign against Land Mines 1997). The author is Prof. Micha Brumlik, University of Frankfurt (Germany).

For further informations and interviews please contact

Katja Maurer (medico international), Tel: +49 69 944 38 20, mobil: +49 171 122 12 61

 


The URL of this article is: http://globalresearch.ca/articles/NOB111A.html