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Book now to hear George Monbiot, John Rumbiak, Carmel Budiardjo!

category national | miscellaneous | news report author Sunday May 18, 2003 17:26author by Mark Doris - West Papua Actionauthor email wpaction at iol dot ieauthor address 134 Phibsborough Road, Dublin 7.author phone 01 860 3431

Globalisation & Genocide in West Papua, Thurs., May 22, 7.30pm

Book now to secure a place at a unique event with three great individuals and speakers - George Monbiot, best-selling author and journalist; John Rumbiak, West Papua's leading human rights defender; Carmel Budiardjo, ex-political prisoner of the Suharto regime and founder of Tapol, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign.

Book now wpaction@iol.ie to secure a place at:

Globalisation & Genocide in West Papua: Human Rights Symposium, Dublin, Thursday, May 22, 7.30pm

Booking: 01 8603431 / 674 6415 or wpaction@iol.ie

George Monbiot (Chair), Guardian columnist and author.

John Rumbiak, West Papua's leading human rights defender.

Carmel Budiardjo, Founder of Tapol, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign.

The Human Rights Symposium - Thursday 22nd May 19.30 – 22.00

Main Hall, Cultivate, Temple Bar, 15-19 Essex Street West, Dublin 8

Part of the Annual Convergence Festival www.sustainable.ie/convergence

Co-hosted by Amnesty International, Frontline, Trócaire, West Papua Action, Afri, and Sustainable Ireland Cooperative

In the "information age", few people know about West Papua, where gold, copper and gas are being extracted, the rainforest is being cut down and the people are facing a genocide at the hands of the Indonesian military, the same military who brutally suppressed the people of East Timor. What are the roles of corporations, governments, the corporate media, human rights defenders, and 'ordinary people' in situations such as West Papua?

Booking: 01 8603431 / 674 6415 or wpaction@iol.ie

George Monbiot was born in 1963 and writes a weekly column for the Guardian newspaper. He is the author of a number of books including the The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a new world order (just published), Captive State: the corporate takeover of Britain, investigative travel books Poisoned Arrows (about West Papua), Amazon Watershed and No Man's Land. He is Honorary Professor at the Department of Politics in Keele and Visiting Professor at the Department of Environmental Science at the University of East London and formerly Visiting Fellow at Green College Oxford and Visiting Professor at the Department of Philosophy, Bristol. In 1995 Nelson Mandela presented him with a United Nations Global 500 Award for outstanding environmental achievement. He has also won the Lloyds National Screenwriting Prize for his screenplay The Norwegian, a Sony Award for radio production, the Sir Peter Kent Award and the OneWorld National Press Award. He helped to found the landrights campaign The Land is Ours.

John Rumbiak is West Papua's best-known human rights advocate. He was born in Biak in 1962. He studied linguistics at Cenderawasih University in Jayapura in the 1980s, and since then has worked in several non-government organisations concerned with human rights. He is currently supervisor of ELSHAM, the West Papuan Institute for Human Rights Study and Advocacy, in Jayapura. In 1999 he studied human rights advocacy at Columbia University, New York, USA. He is presently based in the US and is visiting scholar at the Center for Human Rights Study at Columbia University. He has begun working on the international affairs of Papua (human rights, justice and peace) in conjunction with the Papua Resource Center (PRC), a New York based non-profit institution that deals with programs such as human resource development, cultural promotion, information center, justice and peace.


Carmel Budiardjo founded TAPOL, the Indonesian human rights campaign, based in London, in 1973. She has worked tirelessly to highlight human rights violations in West Papua, Aceh, East Timor and in Indonesia itself. Born in London, June 1925, she worked with the International Union of Students in Prague from 1946-51. She then moved to Indonesia, where, in 1968 she was arrested and held without trial. She was released in 1971 and expelled from Indonesia. She co-wrote West Papua: the Obliteration of a People and wrote Surviving Indonesia's Gulag. In 1995, she won the Right Livelihood Award ( dubbed the 'Alternative Nobel Peace Prize' ) in recognition of her work for the peoples of Indonesia and its occupied territories.

West Papua, just north of Australia, was taken over by Indonesia in 1963: 40 years ago this month. With one of the last great surviving rainforests after the Amazon, and civilisations which have existed without outside interference for tens of thousands of years, at least 100,000 people have been killed by the Indonesian military. West Papua is resource-rich, with gold, copper and gas.

West Papua Action
134 Phibsborough Road
Dublin 7
Ireland
Tel. (direct) *353 (0)1 860 3431
Mobile *353 (0)87 2969742
Fax. *353 (0)1 882 7576
Email wpaction@iol.ie
http://westpapuaaction.buz.org
++++++++++++++++++++++++
for human rights in West Papua
including the right to self-determination
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


Related Link: http://westpapuaaction.buz.org

Comments (4 of 4)

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author by poormepublication date Sun May 18, 2003 22:26author address author phone

why are the events at convergence so expensive? I believe it costs 10 euro to go see/hear Monbiot...are there reductions for unwaged and students?

author by Smithpublication date Mon May 19, 2003 09:49author address author phone

Yeah, it does appear that alot of alternative and 'sustainable' events and courses that are trying to have broad appeal are becoming quite exclusive and Convergence certainly is doing this.

However, this MONBIOT talk on Thursday is €5 and if you can't afford it, you won't be refused. So, most people seem to be able to afford €5 for a pint, cigs, transport, cinema, whatever....

Monbiot is pretty interesting: http://www.monbiot.com but so too are the other speakers on Thursday!

COme along

author by Red 1913publication date Wed May 21, 2003 10:15author address author phone

Its so expensive because its organised by middle class wankers for middle class wankers. The last thing they want is any working class people coming along and upsetting their cosy consensus. The uncouth manners of the proles turns off these brats.

Its deliberately priced to keep out the riff raff.

author by Ken McDonnell - SPpublication date Wed May 21, 2003 13:55author address author phone

Red may be putting things a bit strongly but all of these events are overpriced and seem to be designed to cater for a wellheeled class of audience.

Public meetings organised by the SP do not have an entry charge.


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