לילי,../images/Emo41.gifלא הולכים לישון על בטן מלאה
שימי לב, לא "אנחנו" השתקנו פרסום . תחליטי אם "אנחנו" זה נועם חומסקי או הניו יורק טיימס שמכבס פשעים. שניהם זה לא יכול להיות כי מדובר בשני צידי המתרס !! ולידיעתך, מזרח טימור קיבלה עצמאות מאינדונזיה עפ"י משאל עם שנערך ב- 1999. בעתיד הקרוב לא צפויות שם התפתחויות מסעירות. הדיון הוא במה שקרה בעבר, בפרט בשנים 75-78. ועוד בעניין דחליל ה"אנחנו": 1. יש גבול עוסקת ב- 99.9% בענייני ישראל בלבד. 2. ארגוני זכויות אדם כמו HRW ואמנסטי עסקו ועוד איך בהפרות ע"י מדינות מחוץ למערב. את מוזמנת להציץ בקמפיינים על סין, סעודיה ורוסיה ב www.amnesty.org הנה מכתב מהארכיונים. חבל שלא שמרתי צילום של מכתב שבו מאשימים שלטונות ברה"מ את אמנסטי שהם פרו אימפריאליסטים: http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Quad/4426/testimonials.html FORMER USSR "While I was in Severodonetsk I received New Year's greetings cards from Austria, but without any sender's address. Now I understand that they came from an Austrian group of Amnesty International .... "It is difficult to imagine where I would be and in what condition I would be if it were not for your work. There were not only your letters addressed officially to the CPSU Central Committee, the Procurator General and the director of the camp, but there were also the letters which you addressed to me personally especially a greeting card for my birthday, which touched me deeply.... "The administration subjects the prisoners to a very great moral solitude. Many efforts can be undertaken to defend him: demonstrations, petitions, letters to the authorities, etc.... but the prisoner himself cannot know about these in the midst of rot and stench. And if by chance he does learn of this, a break in space and time is created. Everything that happens, everything that is done on his behalf happens in a completely different world, on a different level, it seems to the prisoner.... "And the guard learns . . . that there is a certain V. in the zone who is receiving letters from abroad. And these guards will be a little cautious regarding me, because an ordinary citizen is suspicious about everything foreign. Because of this I will be protected from the gratuitous cruelty of this petty administration, which is characterized by aggressiveness: I won't be beaten, I won't be put in a punishment cell, etc.... Of course if the higher authorities give certain orders to the guards 'the machine' will take its course and I will be beaten anyway, put in a punishment cell and denied food. But I will have 80 percent protection from all that. And all thanks to an envelope!" --released prisoner of conscience from the USSR, in a letter to an Amnesty International group "When you are in confinement, you have no contact with friends, or anyone. You feel completely cut off, deprived of the outside world. Suddenly I got the letters [from Amnesty International members]. It is difficult to explain what that meant. These two letters I got gave me hope. I understood how important this human rights support, and the defense from the West was for me, because only thanks to it did I keep my mind and my brain alive." After he was freed, Davydov was called into the office of the KGB colonel who had first investigated his case. The official pointed to a stack of letters sitting on the desk. "I want you to write to them and tell them you are free so they stop sending these letters" he said. The letters were from Amnesty International members and had been written to Soviet authorities appealing on Davydov's behalf. "The only reason why I am not in a psychiatric hospital, why I was not arrested again, is the activity of human rights organizations and other activity in the West in defense of Soviet human rights." --Viktor Davydov, dissident and released prisoner of conscience from the USSR who had been held in a special psychiatric hospital because of his "socially dangerous acts"