Tag: freedom

  • Farah Souames meets Khaled Abol Naga

    Farah Souames meets Khaled Abol Naga

    “I think the best thing I have ever learned from you is to carry on and never ever give up. Thank you very much Haluk Demirbag. I couldn’t have done this without your coaching.”
    Farah Souames, 21.02.2011
    khaled pic
    Khaled Abol Naga speaks to Al Jazeera Talk English

    Farah Souames meets Khaled Abol Naga

    Monday 21 February 2011

    AJTE: Where you optimistic when you thought of participating in the strikes?

    Khaled Abol Naga: Yes, I was optimistic, but I did not expect that millions of Egyptians will take part in the events. At that time I was busy with my new movie; I came late and could be there in the opening day. Once I reached  Tahrir square, I couldn’t believe the crazy crowd, I took my camera an started shooting, the police was all over Tahrir square , I was shooting from the bridge and trying to put videos online, the coming days internet was not available in Egypt for a couple of days.

    On Friday, I think people have learned the lesson that everybody should come and be an integrated part of the revolution. There was not a real plan, but people call each other to gather, they wanted it to be bigger and reach Tahrir square which is a symbol of revolution for all Egyptian.I was there for the hope of a better Egypt, for Change, For Freedom.

    AJTE: Do you think that without social media like facebook and twitter, this revolution could have happened?

    Khaled Abol Naga: I think it would have happened even without social media, there were revolutions in Egypt in the past before those technologies appear. In fact the difference here is that the youths of 25 January strikes are educated students who did know their right, that’s why their initiative was structured. You can obviously see that the media was unable to lie.

    AJTE: what were the extreme feelings you had, the happiest and the saddest ones?

    Khaled Abol Naga: The happiest feeling I felt, was not the success of the revolution, but it was when I reached Tahrir square, I felt that I belong to this place, to this country. After the revolution people were cleaning the mess all around the square. I felt the real unity between people of all categories, youths, adults, kids, Muslims, Copts , educated and non.

    People started to feel their dignity back, that dignity which was hijacked along decades. People are not feeling anymore afraid of claiming their rights, their dignity, their money, they lost by corruption.

    The worst feelings were obviously, during the killing of people, I think I will never forget these moments as long as I am living. Those youth died simply because they asked for change, they wanted corruption and rights violation to end.

    AJTE: We saw you a couple of time with Dr Baradei and his supporters, do you think he is the appropriate person to rule Egypt in this important transition?

    Khaled Abol Naga: I support all who ask for change, for rights. I was really hurt when media started spreading lies; it is unfair for a peace noble prize person to face such accusations. Dr Baradei is still banned from national TV’s, as media is still under the old regime’s control.

    Egyptian started revolution because of injustice, and I think that Dr Baradei must feel it after the media spread stupid accusations and lies against him, just to discredit him.

    People and politicians do know his noble character , and his strong viewpoints like his oppositions to war against Iraq, so it is obvious that media have to start apologizing for those mistakes.

    AJTE: What are your expectations for Egypt after Mubarak steps down?

    Khaled Abol Naga:Mubarak was just a symbol of the regime; the real achievement of the revolution is the return of the spirit to people, now Egyptians know that no one will ever hijack their rights.

    AJTE: a last word for Aljazeera Talk English?

    Khaled Abol Naga:This revolution made of me a proud man, I think I never be so proud in my life, I strongly feel that I belong to that place, to that country. Seeing all Egyptians reunited in Tahrir square, Egyptians from all categories Muslims, Copts, Educated, Uneducated, rich, poor, facing tear gas bombs and facing rubber bullets and real bullets and brutal treatment and detention

    Tahrir square pic

    http://aljazeeratalk.net/en/node/7391, 21.02.2011

  • RELEASE MORDECHAI VANUNU

    RELEASE MORDECHAI VANUNU

    VANUNUTargeting: Barack Obama (President, USA), Rt Hon David Cameron (Prime Minister, UK) and Binyamin Netanyahu (Prime Minister, Israel)
    Started by: Gail Vaughn

    The following letter has been sent by Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Laureate, and Gerry Grehan, Chair of the Peace People, Northern Ireland, to President Barak Obama, UK Prime Minister David Cameron, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, other world leaders and prominent personalities, to ask for their help in obtaining the lifting of all restrictions on Mordechai Vanunu and for him to be granted freedom to leave Israel.

    Please express your support for this letter by signing this petition.

    28 July 2010

    We are writing to you on behalf of a good man, a man of peace and conscience, who was returned to prison for three months on 23 May 2010.

    He was released from prison on Sunday 8 August 2010.  We need your support to help gain his freedom from Israel.

    He is Mordechai Vanunu the Israeli nuclear whistle blower.  In October l986, Vanunu told the world that Israel had a Nuclear Weapons Programme.  He was kidnapped and given 18 years imprisonment for espionage and treason.  Twenty four years later he continues to be punished.  In the Jewish Scriptures there is great emphasis on justice and freedom.   He served the full 18 years of his sentence (twelve years in solitary confinement, described by Amnesty International as “cruel, inhuman and degrading”).  Upon his release, the Israeli Government put severe restrictions upon him, including forbidding him to leave Israel and speak to the foreign media.  It was the breaking of these restrictions, in summer 2004, by speaking to the foreign media, (mainly a long interview to the BBC), which resulted in his being returned to solitary confinement again this May.

    Last month Amnesty International declared him a prisoner of conscience and called on the Israeli authorities to lift the restrictions immediately.  “The restrictions on Mordechai Vanunu arbitrarily limit his rights to freedom of movement, expression and association and are therefore in breach of international law.  They should be lifted and he should be allowed to start his life again as a free man.   Mordechai Vanunu should not be in prison at all, let alone be held in solitary confinement in a unit intended for violent criminals.   He suffered immensely when he was held in solitary confinement for 11 years after his imprisonment in 1986 and to return him to such conditions now is nothing less than cruel, inhuman or degrading.”  18 June 2010 Amnesty International

    Yet, when he is released from prison he will still have to remain in Israel and the restrictions will be reviewed and probably renewed yet again, as they have been renewed each year for the past 6 years.

    Vanunu is seen as a traitor by some, a hero by others.   One thing is clear, he has been punished and served the full sentence and it is time after 24 years to do the human thing and let him live as a free man.

    The Israeli Supreme Court continues to accept the Secret Services’ claims that he still has secrets, but a report by Reuters, 20 December 2009, shows that he does not :

    ” … Yet Uzi Eilam, a retired army brigadier-general who ran the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission between 1976 and 1986, said anything that Vanunu — a cause célèbre among disarmament campaigners — might still disclose about Dimona is of little relevance. “I’ve always believed he should be let go,” said Eilam.

    “I don’t think he has significant things to reveal (about Dimona) now.”

    However, we believe that he will be free and our hope is that you will in some way facilitate his early release which would be welcomed by a world waiting and watching for a peaceful and secure future for Israel and its people.    We would greatly appreciate your advising us of any action you take – info@peacepeople.com.

    Shalom,
    Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Laureate
    Gerry Grehan, Chair of the Peace People

    Vanunu has been nominated year after year for the Nobel Peace Prize.

    The many prominent names who have called for his release and respect of his human rights over the last 24 years include:

    The late Nobel Laureates Joseph Rotblat and Harold Pinter; Nobel Laureates Former President Jimmy Carter; Archbishop Desmond Tutu; Mary Ellen McNish (on behalf of AFSC); Betty Williams; Adolfo Perez Esquival; Rigoberta Menchu; Shirin Ebadi; Wangari Maathai; Mairead Maguire; John Hume

    Kidnap victims Brian Keenan; Anthony Gray

    Politicians and human rights activists: the late Robin Cook, former UK Foreign Secretary; former Israeli Minister Shulamit Aloni; Helen Bamber; Simon Hughes; Daniel Elsberg; Bruce Kent; Noam Chomsky; Rabbi Philip Bentley (USA); Michael Mansfield QC; Dr Paul Oestreicher; Baroness Helena Kennedy QC; Tariq Ali; Jeremy Corbyn; Ken Livingstone; Ben Birnberg; David Goldberg QC; Alex Salmund

    Actors, writers, musicians and artists:  Emma Thompson; Julie Christie; Susannah York; Vanessa Redgrave; the late Corin Redgrave; Yoko Ono; Bono; Peter Gabriel; the late Graham Greene; the late Yehudi Menuhin; Janet Suzman; Gilad Atzmon; Richard Hamilton; Michael Rosen; David Gilmore; Benjamin Zephaniah, Alexie Sayle; Maggie Hambling; Tom Conti; Simon Callow; Jeremy Hardy; Miriam Margolyes; Prunella Scales; Arnold Wesker; John Williams; Roger Lloyd-Pack; Christopher Logue; the late Adrian Mitchell

    Journalists:  Andrew Neil; Jon Snow; John Pilger; Robert Fisk; Duncan Campbell; Victoria Brittain; Richard Norton-Taylor