Axis for Peace

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Axis for Peace is an initiative of Voltaire Network to set up an "anti-imperialist" intellectual movement capable of opposing neoconservatives. Its political line recalls that of the Non-Aligned Movement.

[edit] Axis for Peace 2005

The First Axis for Peace Conference was held on the 17 November and 18 of 2005 at the Résidence Palace, a conference centre managed by Belgium’s Prime Minister. The conference gathered some 150 leaders from 37 countries including intellectuals, politicians, diplomats and military officers. Also present at the conference were high level delegations from the Arab World, Eastern and Western Europe, the Americas; however Black Africa, Asia and Oceania were not largely represented at the forum.

The event was partially rebroadcast to the Arab World by Al Jazeera, to Latin America some days later by Telesur and to the Slavic world by Russia Today.

The Secretary General of the Arab League and several personalities did not attend the conference due to the unexpected call for a diplomatic summit in Cairo aimed at dealing with the future of Iraq. The French government denied Schengen visas to guests that would take transit through Parisian airports.[citation needed] Lebanon’s Prime Minister prohibited his ministers from participating in the conference. An Ecuadorian death squad named La Legión Blanca ("The White Legion") attempted to assassinate some participants upon their return to Latin America.[citation needed]

[edit] Main Members

  • Ayman Abdelnour (relator of the Bass Congress, Syria)
  • John D. Antony (president of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations, United States)
  • H. H. Prince Issa El-Ayoubi (journalist Lebanon)
  • Andreas von Bülow (former minister, Germany)
  • Giulietto Chiesa (European lawmaker, Italia)
  • Michel Collon (journalist, Belgium)
  • Enrique Román Hernández (special ambassador, Cuba)
  • Salim el Hoss (former prime minister, Lebanon)
  • General Leonid Ivashov (former Chief of Joint Chiefs of Staff, Russia)
  • Thierry Meyssan (writer, France)
  • Craig Murray (former ambassador, United Kingdom)
  • James Petras (university professor, United States)
  • Mateusz Piskorski (lawmaker, Poland)
  • General Vinod Saighal (former military academy director, India)
  • Jhanett Madriz Sotil (Vice-president of the Andean Parliament, Venezuela)
  • Webster G. Tarpley [historian, author of 9/11 Synthetic Terror, USA]
  • Ahmed Tibi (lawmaker, Israel)
  • Subhi Toma (sociologist, Iraq)
  • General René Vargas Pazzos (former Chief of General Staff, Ecuador)
  • Antonio Alberto Vulcano (organizer of anti-Bush demonstrations, Argentina)
  • Helga Zepp-LaRouche (Schiller Institute, USA)

[edit] External links

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