“Dear Afghanistan:” A New Year’s Call for Peace

( – promoted by buhdydharma )

From Kathy Kelly in Kabul:

While the US may be the world’s single super power in military terms, it faces another super power: the voices of war-weary millions who detest violence and killing. In Afghanistan, in the United States, and among the populations of countries whose governments have joined the NATO coalition, millions of people are calling for an end to war in Afghanistan.

On New Year’s Day, 01/01/11, people around the world are invited to raise their voices, through Facebook, Twitter, Free Conference calls, Skype, and blogs at several websites in a massive refusal to accept the Afghanistan war any longer. Let your New Year’s resolution be to stand for the people and end wars by sending a digital or spoken peacemaking message to people in Afghanistan.  By amassing millions of messages calling for peace, we can create yet another indication that ordinary people within and beyond Afghanistan have had enough of war.

 

Afghanistan’s people need food not bombs, health care not warfare and courage for peace, not war.  In the words of Abdulai, an Afghan teenager whose father was killed by the Taliban, the “Dear Afghanistan” campaign offers an alternative to the Obama administration’s most recent review of the war. Abdulai’s experiences of impoverishment, bereavement, and discrimination highlight realities that Afghans face every day. The U.S. government’s December review paid no attention to these conditions.  

You can let Afghan people know that their lives matter as much as yours.  Assure them that the U.S. government’s war is unacceptable to you and that you are working to end it.

We can catch courage from one another, sparking a New Year’s momentum to put an end to war.  

Follow the steps below to communicate the simple yet crucial demand:  Stop the Killing in Afghanistan.

On New Year’s Day 2011, from 7.05 pm Eastern Standard Time on the 31st of December 2010 to 7.05 pm Eastern Standard Time on the 1st of January 2011, from wherever in the world, you can:

·  Call from your Mobile or Home phone by dialing (661) 673-8600 & access code: 295191#. Please arrange to talk by sending an email to [email protected]

· SKYPE: Please arrange to call Afghanistan by sending your Skype ID in an email to [email protected]

· Send an email message to [email protected]

· Text or sms by mobile at +93 7791 84146 or +1 727-248-0308 (001-727-248-0308 if text messaging from outside U.S.)

· Facebook: Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers

· @DearAfghanistan on Twitter

For more information: Visit Dear Afghanistan

A note on timings for the NEW YEAR CALL :

Place                Time                                 Date

London        12.05 am to 12.05 am       1st Jan to 2nd Jan

EST              7.05 pm to 7.05 pm          31st Dec to 1st Jan

Pacific Std     4.05 pm to 4.05 pm          31st Dec to 1st Jan

Jordan          2.05 am to 2.05 am          1st Jan to 2nd Jan

Afghanistan   4.35am  to 4.35 am          1st Jan to 2nd Jan                  

 

5 comments

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  1. Say you’ll do it

  2. NOT KILL THEM!

    Pursuit of Osama bin Laden?  That has to be and still is a joke of the century!  They NEVER intended to get bin Laden!

    Why did we go there?  Why are we still there?  Everyone should KNOW the answer, it wasn’t about bin Laden ever!

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    December 16, 2010

    Azerbaijan (ChattahBox World News)-Just 18 months before the devastating explosion at a BP oil rig that caused a massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, BP swept the details of a separate blowout at an Azerbaijan rig under the rug, but newly-released WikiLeaks cables reveal the details. The Sept. 2008 Azerbaijan blowout occurred following a gas leak, BP said, noting that the company was lucky to have evacuated the 212 rig workers without harm, the UK Guardian reports.

    BP opined that a “bad cement job”* caused the Azerbaijan gas leak-the same excuse that BP head Tony Hayward offered after the Gulf oil spill, the Guardian notes. However, additional information was hard to get out of BP at the time, and embassy cables show that BP was “exceptionally circumspect in disseminating information” about the blast. . . . .

    *”Bad cement job?”  Now, where have we heard this before??????

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