Showing posts with label bomb blasts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bomb blasts. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2009

Blog Contribution: Unexploded Bombs in the Land of a Million Elephants



Temple in Laos

Cluster bombs inside the bomb casing


Hmm...how do we move this bomb out of our backyard?

This blog post contains a Call to Action to do something about the 80 million bombs, cluster bomblets, etc left in the ground in Laos and Vietnam from the Vietnam war.  We are fighting new wars in new countries and haven't even cleaned up our past messes!!!  This article was written by OIA! contributor Nakhone, an American who came to the US from Laos while escaping the Vietnam war as a child.  He is now working hard to get bombs out of Laos - bombs that are still active and still kill people, 30 years after the 'end' of the Vietnam War.  

In this post you will find :

1.  A song to stimulate and empassion you while you read this post:


2. Links of interest:
2.  A letter to OIA! from Nakhone
3.  Nakhone's Call to Action
4.  Press release for A Peaceful Legacy Campaign
5.  More pictures


And we begin....


Dear OIA!,

It's been a while.  It's nice to receive emails from your lately.  Hope this email finds you well.  

Attached is an article I wrote in support of the launch of A Peaceful Legacy Campaign, which I am the Campaign Coordinator.  I would appreciate you publishing it on OIA!. Also attached is a recent Press Release about the launch of the Campaign in SF this past weekend. 

Thanks!  Let me know if you have any questions or need anything else from me.

Yours affectionately,

Nakhone
Gays United Network
Founder/Community Organizer

United We Can, Overcome We Shall!

www.gaysunitednetwork.org OR http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/group.php?gid=48959723335


Unexploded Bombs in the Land of a Million Elephants 
 
By Nakhone Keodara 
 
I was one of those Sally Struthers’ babies in the Christian Children’s Fund brochures, a young child running around my village in Laos, barefoot and naked, playing in the rice paddies.  One afternoon I was playing by a pond when I spotted a water snake swimming toward me hissing, as if delivering a message.  Running away, heart thumping, I heard a distant buzzing sound from above.  I saw an airplane and a small voice told me that one day I would ride that iron eagle to America--a place my sister Samountha had moved to some years before.  I was probably 6 years old.  That was almost 29 years ago.  It seems the water snake’s prophecy came to pass.  God had answered my prayer that fateful afternoon. 

I am an adult now, a gay man living in the United States (U.S.). I have come to believe that God brought me to this country for a reason--to help with efforts to erase the legacies of war that the U.S. left behind in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War-era.  For Laos, this effort is focused on the removal of unexploded ordnance (UXO), including over 80 million unexploded cluster bomblets as well as large bombs, rockets, mortars, and land mines. This is a humanitarian issue, a social justice issue, as compelling as human rights issues for gays.


The U.S. “Secret War”

Allow me to tell you the story behind this tragedy. While many Americans are aware of U.S. bombing in Vietnam and Cambodia and the impacts of Agent Orange, very few Americans have any knowledge of the massive U.S. air campaign in Laos.  From 1963 to 1974, the U.S. military waged a secret war against Laos, a neutral country, during the Vietnam War-era. Laos has the terrible distinction of being the most bombed country in the history of the world. The U.S. dropped over two million tons of bombs in 580,000 bombing missions on Laos. This is the equivalent to one planeload of bombs dropped every eight minutes, 24 hours a day, for nine continuous years. (for more information visit: www.legaciesofwar.org)

For the first time, the U.S. used cluster bombs extensively. Large cluster bomb casings released 600 to 700 small bomblets--the size of a soup can or orange--over wide areas, frequently missing intended military targets and killing nearby civilians. Of the 260 million bomblets, or “bombies,” as the Lao call them, at least 30 percent did not explode, leaving close to 80 million bomblets littering the Laotian countryside. In Laos the majority of people are subsistence rice farmers, dependent on farming to feed their families. With over 50 percent of the land contaminated with UXO, people must risk their lives to farm in order to feed their families. Since the end of war in 1973, over 34,000 civilians have been killed or injured by UXO, primarily cluster bombs. Every year at least 350 new casualties occur.  


Memories of Bombs 
 
For several years after the end of the civil war in Laos, conflict continued between Laos and Thailand.  It was during this time that I too experienced the horror of bombs falling during an attack by the Thai Air Force.  I still recall my mother waking us up in the night.  We could hardly make out what she was telling us as she screamed through her tears for us to hold onto each other’s hands.  The ground was trembling as we ran through the woods, fumbling, crouching down to hide beside bamboo stands as explosions flashed all around us from the bombs being dropped.  Flares shot up as high as the tallest trees and lit up the night sky with blinding brilliance.  We would hide in ravines or in water ditches beneath roads.  Eventually we made our way to the nearest village, where strangers would take us in and let us sleep under their houses. 


The Escape 
 
Like close to 750,000 other Laotians who fled Laos after the war, my family escaped in 1984.  My father had been in the Royal Lao Army and feared punishment by the now communist government.  He  envisioned a better future for us in America.  In the night, a family of eight packed into a rowboat crossing the Mekong River heading for Thailand.  Halfway across my mother prayed to the spirit of the Serpents to save our family from drowning.  The boat was filling with water.  In desperation, we turned around and head back to the Laotian shore, risking capture and execution by the government Border Patrols.  Our boat sank after we hit the riverbank, but we all jumped out to safety. We huddled in the bamboo stands shivering for about an hour before a second boat was fetched to take us on our way.  The stakes were high, but all we wanted was freedom and an opportunity to pursue the American dream!


A Cry for Help -- A Plea for Justice 
 
The untold human toll--the horror and emotional devastation for war survivors--is unspeakable. In her article, “Drawing the Future from the Past,” published on December 5, 2008, on Foreign Policy In Focus.org, Channapha Khamvongsa, Executive Director of Legacies of War, wrote, “Between December 1970 and May 1971, Fred Branfman, an American, and Boungeun, a Lao man, collected illustrations and narratives in the Vientiane refugee camps, where bombing victims fled. The drawings and narratives represent the voiceless, faceless, and nameless who endured an air war campaign committed in secrecy. Drawn in pencil, pens, crayons, and markers, they are raw and stark, reflecting the crude events that shaped their reality. The simplicity of the narration and drawings emphasize the illustrators' identities as ordinary villagers who bore witness to a devastating event.”

The collected illustrations were set aside after the war ended.  As fate would have it, these cries for help and pleas for justice resurfaced through a chance meeting between Ms. Khamvongsa and Institute for Policy Studies director John Cavanagh.  Mr. Cavanagh had kept the drawings for over 25 years, knowing that someday there would be an important place for them.  When he met Ms. Khamvongsa, he returned the illustrations to the Lao community. These drawings were the impetus for the Legacies of War project, founded in 2004.  Since that time, these stories of devastation, loss, and injustice have been told to thousands of people across the U.S.


The Slow Pace of Removing Bombs 
 
Since 1993, the United Nations Development Program and 18 countries, including the U.S., have provided funding to Laos for the removal of cluster bombs and other UXO. The Lao government and a number of nongovernmental organizations have made modest progress in clearing contaminated lands. However, given the current level of funding and the extraordinary scale of the contamination, it will take decades before land in populated areas is cleared and safe once again. Laos desperately needs substantial increases in funding to clean up the mess that the U.S. left four decades ago.


Why Now? 
 
The Laotian Diaspora has come of age.  And we have been caught up in the Zeitgeist that change has come to America.  After our parents escaped from Laos, they endured the trauma of settling in a foreign land and the ensuing struggles to survive.  They couldn’t afford the luxury of looking back and examining what they left behind.  In this transition to a new life, much has been lost to the next generations.  Now, my generation is trying to understand who we are as a people and where we came from.  We want to preserve our Lao traditions and culture.  In the search to integrate our heritage, we’ve discovered the terrible secrets and history of Laos that begs to be revealed and reconciled, so the Lao people can move on to a brighter future.  One might say, it was 40 years ago.  Why dwell in the past?  But our argument is that 40 years of death and injury to innocent lives is enough!  
 
In this Age of Obama, we expect accountability for our actions, responsibility for our mistakes, and hope for justice.  Let us relinquish our legacies of war so we can impress on our children a legacy of brotherly love, peace, and human compassion. 
 
I am speaking as a concerned citizen of the world, as an American resident, and as someone with roots in Laos.  This is a story whose time has come--a call to action for the Laotian Diaspora all across the United States and abroad.  On a basic human level, we cannot let the voiceless be silenced, the nameless forgotten and the faceless forever erased from history. We must not let the desperate cry for help and a plea for justice, for hope and for peace of those innocent villagers, whose suffering has echoed down across four decades, go unanswered.  Their stories will be told.  Are we listening America?  We can do better.  Yes we can! 


We Need Friends 
 
Laotian Americans need friends and supporters.  Any movement for social justice cannot obtain its objective by acting alone, whether it is the Gay, Cambodian, Vietnamese, Latino, African-American or Laotian American community.  So, as a gay man, I am advocating that the Gay community align itself with Lao Americans to form an unlikely coalition for mutual benefits.  Gays need allies to support gay issues and Lao Americans need support in getting funding to remove UXO from Laos.  I believe that building bridges to the Lao community would benefit the Gay community, especially in California as there is a huge Lao American population in key cities like San Francisco, San Diego and Fresno.

Other oppressed communities should coalesce with Lao Americans to flex our collective political muscle and exercise our voice to be included in the Zeitgeist of Obama.  We must ride the tide of change that has swept across America and the world.  Cambodians and Vietnamese should join our efforts to rid Southeast Asia of any traces of Agent Orange as well as UXOs.  Latino Americans can benefit from this new alliance in their fight for immigration reform and African-Americans can expand their political reach by aligning themselves with a new political voice.

In my search for justice, I have come to find that it is not a matter of settling the score but of finding common ground as spiritual beings sharing a common human experience.  It requires that we practice radical forgiveness, both for ourselves and for others, in order for true justice to be served.

The U.S. inflicted a huge injustice on tens of thousands of innocent civilians in Laos.  The time has come to make amends.  The very least the US can do is to fully fund UXO removal and victim assistance. For the past 13 years the U.S. has contributed on average $2.9 million per year for UXO removal, however, the U.S. spent $2 million a day for nine years to bomb Laos.  Legacies of War has asked the House of Representatives Appropriations Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs to increase funding for Laos to $6 million for FY2010. The Lao PDR government and the United Nations Development Program estimated that it will take $73 million over three years to fund the removal of UXO on high priority lands and provide victim assistance. The U.S. should provide a sustained funding program to achieve these goals. Only then can America truly achieve reconciliation and live up to President Obama’s commitment in restoring US moral leadership in the world.

Won’t you help both Laotians and Americans complete the journey of reconciliation and forgiveness?  Only then can we heal the wounds of war and have hope for a better tomorrow! 

I believe that America is a great country and her citizens are capable of much love for their fellow human beings.  The whole world witnessed the great depth of compassion that poured forth in the aftermath of horrendous tragedies like 9/11, Hurricane Katrina, the Indonesian tsunami, and, most recently, the China earthquake.  
 
I implore the American public to find its compassion once again for the people of Laos!  What you can do to help:  Write, call, or email your representatives in Congress, or sign the petition at  http://
act.legaciesofwar.org urging Congressional members to vote for the increased funding for Laos in FY 2010.  And encourage your friends and family to do this as well. Together, we can make a difference.

 
Nakhone Keodara is the Campaign Coordinator of A Peaceful Legacy: Petition to Remove Bombs from Laos, and sits on the Advocacy Committee of Legacies of War.  He is a community organizer and founder of the Gays United Network based in Los Angeles, California.
 



A Peaceful Legacy Campaign Press Release LOW Press Release-A Peaceful Legacy Campaign FINAL Obama IS America!



Bombs, bombs, bombs


Bombs and babies...

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Terrorist Attacks Terrorize India...Again....




This blog post contains three sets of information for you.

1. A commentary by the Editor of
OIA! on terrorism

2. Pictures on some of the bombings/terrorist activities that have been going on in India

3. An article on the
*bomb blasts and shootings* that happened in Mumbai, India this week.  *Click here* to link to the news report on this as published in the New York Times.


OIA! Editor commentary:

So, on November 26 (yesterday) there was a[nother] major terrorist attack in India, in which foreigners--particular Brits and Americans--were targeted.  There are still hostages being held right now as this is written.  Please send out some positive thoughts, energy, and prayers to those people!!

Terrorism in India seems to occur in revenge for
*Hindu violence against and oppression of Muslims*

During the attacks that happened on Wednesday, terrorists targeted foreigners, hotels and places of wealth and business in particular.  In this way, it seems that the goal of the terrorists is probably to scare foreigners from coming to India to participate in business and the tourist economy--thus harming the Indian economy as a whole, and serving as a form of revenge to get back at India, who is seen as the oppressor.

Terrorism makes sense but also makes no sense at all.

Terrorism as a tactic makes sense in that if you have a group of people that is soaked in fear and hatred (for whatever reason), and/or is consistently repressed, hated, and marginalized, certain people within that group will use lashing out through violence as a way to combat the hatred that is directed toward them by others.

However, terrorism makes no sense at all, because acts of violence perpetuate the cycle of hatred in a GRAND way. There are SO many other ways to make change happen.

Humans are SUCH powerful beings.

Imagine this....people feel powerless, so to feel power, which they believe comes from making others suffer as they (and their people have), they hide behind weapons, and they create and feed off of deep wells of hatred and negative energy in their hearts, which explode out through their hands, through their weapons and become directed at the destruction of other human beings.

If that power and energy was instead wielded through peaceful activism, change could be made in JUST as grand of a way. This has been the essential message of major leaders of change throughout history.

It is reprehensible that parts of India and certain political groups in India are themselves responsible for committing
*large-scale hate crimes* against the Muslim community. This is especially sad considering the *long-term historical context of this intolerance*.

Yet at the end of the day, VIOLENCE WILL NEVER BE THE ANSWER!!!! How can hate ever possibly solve anything?

A Colleague of the Editor of OIA! also made several central points about how completely ineffective terrorism is as a tactic for....whatever the purpose of terrorism is....revenge maybe? Does anyone have an answer to this?

The following discussion is about terrorism as a tactic in general, regardless of who you are ‘fighting’ on behalf of.

She made the point that firstly, if you are committing acts of violent terrorism, YOU DON'T KNOW WHO YOU ARE KILLING, WHAT THEIR VALUE IS, WHAT THEY DO.

You could be killing people who could change the entire world. They could be the very people who are fighting to change things for the better for your community, who could someday save the life of you or your child, they could be future allies of yours, or people working hard to make the world better for you and your loved ones.

An example of a beautiful person who worked hard to make the world a better place and was killed during a terrorist attack is Sergio Vieira de Mello.
*Click here* to read about this man.

If terrorism is a mechanism to accomplish a certain set of goals--getting attention for issues facing your community, getting revenge against those who commit crimes against you and your community, etc--at some point you have to realize that you have a set of goals that you want to accomplish. However, terrorism is a dead end job, because it will never pay off. Things won't get any better through this kind of violence, they will only get worse, and make things worse for your community. When you are violent, it brings attention to you. When you commit violence in the name of a group or a cause, and use violence and fearmongering to push a particular agenda that you claim is in your group’s best interest, you use innocent people as a pawns in your own game of violence that you set the rules for without really taking the repercussions of your actions on your own community into consideration. 

If terrorists really cared about the people they claim to be struggling on behalf of instead of just caring about themselves, they would NOT commit terrorist acts, because they lead to more hatred against a whole social group and simply create deeper divisions and even outright hatred and violence as a backlash to the terrorist actions--regardless of who cast the first stone.

Finally, terrorism does not target the root of the problems facing a community. If you are bombing, killing, and terrorizing families, farmers, children, just regular people in the community, then the people who are responsible for committing crimes against your community in the first place will always get away scott free.

This does NOT mean that the original perpetrators of virulent strains of thought should instead be targeted for murder. Killing these leaders is also not the answer, because you can kill a person, but not a thought process. If the thought processes driving oppression survive because terrorism continues, then the cycle of oppression and terrorism will NEVER STOP, and 10, 15, 348 years from now, you will still be fighting and killing - forever entrenched in the same pointless war - which is exactly the case in India, and between the Hindu/Muslim, Muslim/Christian, Jewish/Muslim conflicts.  People are killing their own brothers and sisters!!!






Another shot of the Mumbai train bombing





Bombing in Jaipur


Burning of the Trident Hotel in Mumbai after the attacks on the 27th (see below).


Article on the Mumbai attacks:


At Least 100 Dead in India Terror Attacks

Prashanth Vishwanathan for The New York Times

Police watched the Taj Mahal Hotel, set ablaze by terrorists, in Mumbai on Thursday. More Photos >

Published New York Times: November 26, 2008

MUMBAI, India — Coordinated terrorist attacks struck the heart of Mumbai, India’s commercial capital, on Wednesday night, killing dozens in machine-gun and grenade assaults on at least two five-star hotels, the city’s largest train station, a Jewish center, a movie theater and a hospital.

Readers' Comments

Even by the standards of terrorism in India, which has suffered a rising number of attacks this year, the assaults were particularly brazen in scale and execution. The attackers used boats to reach the urban peninsula where they hit, and their targets were sites popular with tourists.

The Mumbai police said Thursday that the attacks killed at least 101 people and wounded at least 250. Guests who had escaped the hotels told television stations that the attackers were taking hostages, singling out Americans and Britons.

A previously unknown group claimed responsibility, though that claim could not be confirmed. It remained unclear whether there was any link to outside terrorist groups.

Gunfire and explosions rang out into the morning.

Hours after the assaults began, the landmark Taj Mahal Palace & Tower Hotel, next to the famed waterfront monument the Gateway of India, was in flames.

Guests banged on the windows of the upper floors as firefighters worked to rescue them.

Fire also raged inside the luxurious Oberoi Hotel, according to the police. A militant hidden in the Oberoi told India TV on Thursday morning that seven attackers were holding hostages there.

“We want all mujahedeen held in India released, and only after that we will release the people,” he said.Some guests, including two members of the European Parliament who were visiting as part of a trade delegation, remained in hiding in the hotels, making desperate cellphone calls, some of them to television stations, describing their ordeal.

Alex Chamberlain, a British citizen who was dining at the Oberoi, told Sky News television that a gunman had ushered 30 or 40 people from the restaurant into a stairway and, speaking in Hindi or Urdu, ordered them to put up their hands.

“They were talking about British and Americans specifically,” he said. “There was an Italian guy, who, you know, they said, ‘Where are you from?’ and he said he’s from Italy, and they said, ‘Fine,’ and they left him alone.”

Sajjad Karim, 38, a British member of the European Parliament, told Sky News: “A gunman just stood there spraying bullets around, right next to me.”

Before his phone went dead, Mr. Karim added: “I managed to turn away and I ran into the hotel kitchen and then we were shunted into a restaurant in the basement. We are now in the dark in this room, and we have barricaded all the doors. It’s really bad.”

Attackers had also entered Cama and Albless Hospital, according to Indian television reports, and struck Nariman House, which is home to the city’s Chabad-Lubavitch center.

A spokesman for the Lubavitch movement in New York, Rabbi Zalman Shmotkin, told the Associated Press that attackers “stormed the Chabad house” in Mumbai.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry said it was trying to locate an unspecified number of Israelis missing in Mumbai, according to Haaretz.com, the Web site of an Israeli newspaper.

Several high-ranking law enforcement officials, including the chief of the antiterrorism squad and a commissioner of police, were reported killed.

The military was quickly called in to assist the police.

Hospitals in Mumbai, a city of more than 12 million that was formerly called Bombay, have appealed for blood donations. As a sense of crisis gripped much of the city, schools, colleges and the stock exchange were closed Thursday.

Vilasrao Deshmukh, the chief minister for Maharashtra State, where Mumbai is, told theCNN-IBN station that the attacks hit five to seven targets, concentrated in the southern tip of the city, known as Colaba and Nariman Point. But even hours after the attacks began, the full scope of the assaults was unclear.

Unlike previous attacks in India this year, which consisted of anonymously planted bombs, the assailants on Wednesday night were spectacularly well-armed and very confrontational. In some cases, said the state’s highest-ranking police official, A. N. Roy, the attackers opened fire and disappeared.

Indian officials said the police had killed six of the suspected attackers and captured nine.

A group calling itself the Deccan Mujahedeen said it had carried out the attacks. It was not known who the group is or whether the claim was real.

Around midnight, more than two hours after the series of attacks began, television images from near the historic Metro Cinema showed journalists and bystanders ducking for cover as gunshots rang out. The charred shell of a car lay in front of Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, formerly Victoria Terminus, the mammoth railway station. A nearby gas station was blown up.

The landmark Leopold Café, a favorite tourist spot, was also hit.

Reached by phone, some guests who had been trapped in the Taj said about 1 a.m. that they had heard an explosion and gunfire in the old wing of the hotel.

A 31-year-old man who was in the Taj attending a friend’s wedding reception said he was getting a drink around 9:45 p.m. when he heard something like firecrackers — “loud bursts” interspersed with what sounded like machine-gun fire.

A window of the banquet hall shattered, and guests scattered under tables and were quickly escorted to another room, he said. No one was allowed to leave.

Just before 1 a.m., another loud explosion rang out, and then another about a half-hour later, the man said.

At 6 a.m., he said that when the guests tried to leave the room early Thursday, gunmen opened fire. One person was shot.

The man’s friend, the groom, was two floors above, in the old wing of the hotel, trapped in a room with his bride. One explosion, he said, took the door off its hinges. He blocked it with a table.

Then came another blast, and gunfire rang out throughout the night. He did not want to be identified, for fear of being tracked down.

Rakesh Patel, a British businessman who escaped the Taj, told a television station that two young men armed with a rifle and a machine gun took 15 hostages, forcing them to the roof.

The gunmen, dressed in jeans and T-shirts, “were saying they wanted anyone with British or American passports,” Mr. Patel said.

He and four others managed to slip away in the confusion and smoke of the upper floors, he said. He said he did not know the fate of the remaining hostages.

Clarence Rich Diffenderffer, of Wilmington, Del., said after dinner at the hotel he headed to the business center on the fifth floor.

“A man in a hood with an AK-47 came running down the hall,” shooting and throwing four grenades, Mr. Diffenderffer said. “I, needless to say, beat it back to my room and locked it, and double-locked it, and put the bureau up against the door.”

Mr. Diffenderffer said he was rescued hours later, at 6:30 a.m., by a cherrypicker.

Among those apparently trapped at the Oberoi were executives and board members of Hindustan Unilever, part of the multinational corporate giant, The Times of India reported.

Indian military forces arrived outside the Oberoi at 2 a.m., and some 100 officers from the central government’s Rapid Action Force, an elite police unit, entered later.

CNN-IBN reported the sounds of gunfire from the hotel just after the police contingent went in.

The Bush administration condemned the attacks, as did President-elect Barack Obama’s transition team. The White House said it was still “assessing the hostage situation.”