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Written by United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE)
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Published: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
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Last Updated: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
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Created: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
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United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of
America (UE) General Executive Board Calls for End to Bloodshed in Gaza
16 January, 2009
Meeting in Pittsburgh January 15 and 16, UE’s General Executive Board
adopted a statement condemning the current war in the Gaza Strip. The
union’s national leadership body reiterated the position adopted by
delegates to UE’s 70th Convention in 2007, which called for "replacing
the lopsided pro-Israel policy of the U.S. with a good faith,
even-handed effort to achieve lasting peace between Israel and
Palestine based on full justice and mutual respect." The GEB called on
the incoming Obama administration to move quickly to initiate such a
new policy.
Statement on the Conflict in Gaza
We are appalled by the rising death toll and human suffering that have
resulted over the past few weeks from the worsening conflict between
Israel and Palestine, in particular Israel's military assault on Gaza.
While we in no way condone the provocative and senseless firing of
rockets into Israel by Hamas, the Israeli response shows a complete
disrespect for human life and violates all standards of international
law. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed so far, and of
those, more that 300 are children. Close to 5,000 have been wounded
already, as the fighing continues.
In a scathing statement, the International Committee of the Red Cross,
which carefully avoids taking sides in conflicts, has accused the
Israeli army of failing to meet its obligation under international
humanitarian law to care for and evacuate the wounded and to recover
the bodies of those killed in the fighting, many of whom are women and
children.
Even before the current military offensive began in late December, the
humanitarian situation in Gaza was dire. Gazans live in poverty with
one of the highest population densities in the world – 1.4 million
people crowded into a territory just 25 miles long and approximately 5
miles wide. Malnutrition is widespread, and conditions have been made
worse over the past three years by Israel’s economic blockade causing
severe shortages of food, medical supplies, heating and cooking oil and
other essentials. Many Gaza civilians have lost access to safe drinking
water and to electricity, in the recent fighting. The Vatican said in
recent days that the conditions in Gaza “increasingly resemble a big
concentration camp.”
Delegates to UE's 70th Convention in September 2007 adopted a
resolution on the need for change in U.S. foreign policy. On the
Israel-Palestine conflict, it called for "replacing the lopsided
pro-Israel policy of the U.S. with a good faith, even-handed effort to
achieve lasting peace between Israel and Palestine based on full
justice and mutual respect." The resolution said that the current
"one-sided" U.S. policy "perpetuates injustice, instability, and the
threat of war," and pointed out that, "U.S. aid to Israel far exceeds
that of any other country, although Israel is by far the richest
country receiving U.S. aid."
We agree with the January 2 statement issued by U.S. Labor Against the
War (USLAW), a leading labor voice for peace with which UE is
affiliated, which said in part:
"The U.S. government supplied Israel with the military means to
carry out this attack and has generously underwritten the Israeli
government and military with tens of billions of U.S. tax dollars. Our
government’s failure to condemn this latest action makes it complicit.
The economic crisis which daily deepens in the U.S. requires that we
seriously reorient our foreign policy and stop spending hard earned
taxpayer dollars on proxy wars and reinvest the needed resources right
here at home… We urge all parties to agree to an immediate cease fire
and seek peaceful and lasting solutions. Recent history demonstrates
that bombings, rocket attacks, blockades and military invasions won’t
provide the best road to peace and security for the peoples of the
region. Quite the contrary, such actions perpetuate the cycle of death,
destruction, fear and heightened insecurity among the people of all
countries, including us here in the U.S…”
Senzeni Zokwana, president of the International Federation of Chemical,
Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM, with which UE is
affiliated) and president of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in
South Africa, issued a statement for the ICEM that calls on all parties
to address the serious humanitarian needs in Gaza. “There must be the
immediate opening of border crossings to ensure that the people of Gaza
are supplied with food, water, fuel and medical treatment. The Israeli
blockade of Gaza must be immediately lifted and full, unimpeded and
urgent access for medical teams allowed.”
UE reiterates its position in favor of peace, security, justice and
mutual respect for the Palestinian and Israeli peoples. We add our
voice to the many voices calling for an immediate end to the killing
and the suffering. We call on the new Obama administration to
immediately inaugurate a new U.S. policy that addresses the needs and
aspirations of the Palestinians as well as of Israelis, and that will
bring about true peace on the basis of human rights principles.
UE General Executive Board
January 16, 2009
http://www.ueunion.org/ueactionupdates.html?news=451