Friends,
Baltimore Peace Action has held a serious of
protests to condemn the fact that arms shipments are being loaded on Saudi
ships at the Port of Baltimore. In this press release, follow the
Facebook link to see photograph of trucks carrying arms for Saudi Arabia
entering an area near the Port of Baltimore. Kagiso, Max
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Contacts:
World BEYOND War: 647-769-0570, canada@worldbeyondwar.org
Labour Against the Arms Trade: 416-894-1662
On Canadian arms exports to Saudi Arabia: Anthony Fenton, doctoral student at
York University, fentona@me.com
Follow twitter.com/wbwCanada and twitter.com/LAATCanada for photos and updates
during rally. High resolution photos available upon request.
BREAKING: Activists block trucks at company transporting weapons to Saudi
Arabia, demand Canada stop fueling war in Yemen
Hamilton, Ontario - Members and allies of anti-war organizations World BEYOND
War and Labour Against the Arms Trade are blocking trucks at Paddock Transport
International, a Hamilton-area transportation company involved in shipping
Canadian-made, light armoured vehicles to Saudi Arabia.
The activists are calling on Paddock to end its complicity in the brutal
Saudi-led war in Yemen, which has killed almost a quarter of a million people,
and calling on the Canadian government to end arms exports to Saudi Arabia.
"The demonstration is part of a global day of action against the war on
Yemen featuring more than 300 organizations in 17 countries," says Rachel
Small of World BEYOND War.
"People across Canada are demanding the federal government immediately end
arms exports with Saudi Arabia and expand humanitarian aid for the people of
Yemen."
Yemen today remains the worst humanitarian crisis in the world, according to
the United Nations. Over 4 million people have been displaced because of the
war, and 80% of the population, including 12.2 million children, are in
desperate need of humanitarian assistance. To add to the already dire
situation, Yemen has one of the worst Covid-19 death rates in the world - it
kills 1 in 4 people who test positive.
This humanitarian crisis is a direct result of the Western-backed, Saudi-led
war and indiscriminate bombing campaign that has raged against Yemen since
March 2015, as well as an air, land and sea blockade which prevents
desperately-needed goods and aid from reaching the people of Yemen.
Despite the global pandemic and calls from the United Nations for a global
ceasefire, Canada has continued to export arms to Saudi Arabia. Since the
beginning of the pandemic, Canada has exported over $750 million worth of
weapons to Saudi Arabia, part of a $15 billion arms deal.
"Most Canadians don't realize that weapons manufactured here continue to
fuel a war that has led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people,"
says Simon Black, a professor at Brock University and member of Labour Against
the Arms Trade, a coalition of peace and labour activists working to end Canada's
participation in the international arms trade.
"Countries like Germany, Finland, the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden have
all cancelled their weapons deals with Saudi Arabia," he says.
"There's absolutely no reason why Canada can't do the same and help end
this war."
Light armoured vehicles manufactured by General Dynamics Land Systems, in
London, Ontario, are being transported to port by Paddock Transport
International, where they are loaded onto Saudi ships (see https://www.facebook.com/chris.hanlon.8626/posts/10157385425186615).
"A child in Yemen dies every ten minutes because of this horrific war. As
a parent, how can I ignore that tanks made in Canada are rolling right by me on
their way to the worst humanitarian situation on earth?" says Small.
"Working people in Canada want jobs that contribute to a better society, a
clean environment and a peaceful world, not those that manufacture weapons of
war and hurt and kill innocent men, women and children," says Black.
"Canada must join other democracies throughout the world and immediately
end its production and export of weapons to Saudi Arabia."
BACKGROUND
UN agencies and humanitarian organizations have repeatedly documented that
there is no military solution possible in the current conflict in Yemen. The
only thing the constant supply of arms to Yemen does is prolongs hostilities,
and increases suffering and numbers of the dead.
In September 2020, a report by the UN Group of Eminent International and
Regional Experts on Yemen specifically named Canada as one of the countries
"perpetuating the conflict" in Yemen through ongoing weapons sales to
Saudi Arabia.
On September 17, the one-year anniversary of Canada's accession to the Arms
Trade Treaty (ATT), a coalition of civil society organizations representing a
cross-section of Canadian labour, arms controls, human rights, international
security and peace organizations wrote an open letter to Prime Minister Trudeau
reiterating their continued opposition to the Liberal government's issuance of
arms exports permits to Saudi Arabia. The letter was part of a pan-Canadian day
of action against arms exports to Saudi Arabia, the second of its kind in 2020.
The ATT is an international treaty that governs the arms trade. It requires
states to assess weapons exports and determine if there is a risk they could be
used to commit or facilitate serious violations of international humanitarian
law or international human rights law. It also prohibits weapons exports to
countries where there is a "substantial risk" they would undermine
peace and security. Canada has been a state party to the ATT for one year and
is legally bound by the treaty.
The September 17th letter to Prime Minister Trudeau was the fourth such letter
raising concerns about the serious ethical, legal, human rights and
humanitarian implications of Canada's ongoing weapons exports to Saudi Arabia.
The signatories have yet to receive a response from the Prime Minister or
relevant Cabinet ministers on the matter.
Legal obligations under the ATT have not deterred the Liberal government's
support for weapons exports to Saudi Arabia. In the same year that Canada
acceded to the ATT, its arms exports to Saudi Arabia more than doubled,
increasing from almost $1.3 billion in 2018, to almost $2.9 billion in 2019.
Arms exports to Saudi Arabia now account for over 75% of Canada's non-US
military exports. Canada's pledged humanitarian aid for Yemen, $40 million,
pales in comparison.
###
Donations can be sent
to Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206,
Baltimore, MD 21212. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at]
comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives."
Eugene Victor Debs
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