C E B O . org


Council of Ethics-Based Organizations Associated with The Department of Public Information of the United Nations
"Representing our individual organizations but joined in common cause, we have formed a council of peers to share information and raise awareness of ethical humanist responses to UN-related initiatives in the fields of human rights, intellectual and religious freedom, peace and conflict, corporate ethics, and sustainable development". Cebo.org is a collegial approach to information sharing between ethics-based organizations with NGO status at the United Nations. Please contact the member parties for specific information regarding the positions of their respective organizations on matters expressed in this online journal. We welcome enquiries and additional members: info@cebo.org
EVENTS
UNITED NATIONS
ACTION ALERTS
PEACE & CONFLICT
CORPORATE ETHICS
HUMAN RIGHTS
INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM
DEVELOPMENT RESOURCES
NEWSLETTER
Actions, networks, news and strategies to aid peacemaking and disarmament

COUNCIL OF ETHICS ORGANIZATIONS

American Ethical Union

American Humanist Association

Humanist Society of Friends

International Humanist and Ethical Union

National Service Conference, American Ethical Union

REGIONAL AFFILIATES

Humanist Society of Metropolitan New York (AHA)

New York Society for Ethical Culture (NYSEC)

UNITED NATIONS NGO COMMITTEES WITH CEBO MEMBERS

AMICC American NGO Coalition for the International Criminal Court

Subcommittee for the Elimination of Racism of the NGO Committee on Human Rights

NGO Committee on Freedom of Religion or Belief

Working Group on the Rights of the Child of the NGO Committee on Unicef

UNITED NATIONS RELATED GROUPS WITH CEBO MEMBERS

Values Caucus ____________

Cebo.org is hosted by Humanists.net
a project of the Institute for Humanist Studies

|ARCHIVES|

CORE DOCUMENTS

United Nations Charter

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Human rights instruments

Convention on the Rights of the Child

CEDAW: Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination against Women

Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief

United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination

International Criminal Court

ICC Victims Trust Fund

DERIVED DOCUMENTS AND CHARTERS

International treaties and conventions

Charter of Fundamental Rights, European Union

African Charter on Human and People's Rights

American Convention on Human Rights

Earth Charter

RESOLUTIONS AND STATEMENTS

AEU Resolutions adopted since 1948

Read/Sign the UNITING FOR PEACE PETITION

Some major Peace and Justice Groups:
American Friends Service Committee | EPIC (The Education for Peace in Iraq Center) | Fellowship of Reconciliation | Foreign Policy In Focus | Fourth Freedom Forum | Global Exchange | Institute for Policy Studies | International ANSWER | MoveOn.org | The Nation: Act Now | National Network to End the War Against Iraq | Not In Our Name | Peace Action | Stop the War Coalition, Britain | Voices in the Wilderness | Student Peace Action Network | Traprock Peace Center | War Resisters League |

Tuesday, October 08, 2002

Following is the text of the resolution submitted by California Congresswoman Barbara Lee, with 26 co-sponsors to resolve the issues concerning Iraq through the UN by peaceful means
***********
Expressing the sense of Congress with respect to the importance of the United States working through the United Nations to assure Iraq's compliance with United Nations Security Council... (Introduced in House)

HCON 473 IH 107th CONGRESS 2d Session H. CON. RES. 473

Expressing the sense of Congress with respect to the importance of the United States working through the United Nations to assure Iraq's compliance with United Nations Security Council resolutions and advance peace and security in the Persian Gulf region.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, SEPTEMBER 19, 2002

Ms. LEE (for herself, Mrs. CLAYTON, Ms. RIVERS, Mr. HINCHEY, Mr. JACKSON of Illinois, Mr. MCDERMOTT, Mr. KUCINICH, Ms. MCKINNEY, Mr. OWENS, Ms. KILPATRICK, Ms. WATSON of California, Mr. RUSH, Mrs. CHRISTENSEN, Mr. HILLIARD, Mr. CLAY, Mr. STARK, Mr. FARR of California, Ms. KAPTUR, Ms. BALDWIN, Mr. FILNER, Ms. WOOLSEY, Mr. CLYBURN, Mr. DAVIS of Illinois, Ms. BROWN of Florida, Mr. SERRANO, Ms. SOLIS, and Mr. CONYERS) submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was referred to the Committee on International Relations
------------------------------------------------------------
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION

Expressing the sense of Congress with respect to the importance of the United States working through the United Nations to assure Iraq's compliance with United Nations Security Council resolutions and advance peace and security in the Persian Gulf region.

Whereas on April 6, 1991, during the Persian Gulf War, Iraq accepted the provisions of United Nations Security Council Resolution 687 (April 3, 1991) bringing a formal cease-fire into effect;

Whereas, in accordance with Security Council Resolution 687, Iraq unconditionally accepted the destruction, removal, or rendering harmless of `all chemical and biological weapons and all stocks of agents and all related subsystems and components and all research, development, support and manufacturing facilities related thereto', and `all ballistic missiles with a range greater than one hundred and fifty kilometers, and related major parts and repair and production facilities';

Whereas, in accordance with Security Council Resolution 687, Iraq unconditionally agreed not to acquire or develop any nuclear weapons, nuclear-weapons-usable material, nuclear-related subsystems or components, or nuclear-related research, development, support, or manufacturing facilities;

Whereas Security Council Resolution 687 calls for the creation of a United Nations special commission to `carry out immediate on-site inspection of Iraq's biological, chemical, and missile capabilities' and to assist and cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency in carrying out the `destruction, removal or rendering harmless' of all nuclear-related items and in developing a plan for the ongoing monitoring and verification of Iraq's compliance;

Whereas United Nations weapons inspectors (UNSCOM) between 1991 and 1998 successfully uncovered and destroyed large stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons and production facilities, nuclear weapons research and development facilities, and Scud missiles, despite the fact that the Government of Iraq sought to obstruct their work in numerous ways;

Whereas in 1998, UNSCOM weapons inspectors were withdrawn from Iraq and have not returned since;

Whereas Iraq is not in compliance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 687, United Nations Security Council Resolution 1154, and additional United Nations resolutions on inspections, and this noncompliance violates international law and Iraq's ceasefire obligations and potentially endangers United States and regional security interests;

Whereas the true extent of Iraq's continued development of weapons of mass destruction and the threat posed by such development to the United States and allies in the region are unknown and cannot be known without inspections;

Whereas the United Nations was established for the purpose of preventing war and resolving disputes between nations through peaceful means, including `by negotiation, enquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, resort to regional arrangements, or other peaceful means';

Whereas the United Nations remains seized of this matter;

Whereas the President has called upon the United Nations to take responsibility to assure that Iraq fulfills its obligations to the United Nations under existing United Nations Security Council resolutions;

Whereas war with Iraq would place the lives of tens of thousands of people at risk, including members of the United States armed forces, Iraqi civilian non-combatants, and civilian populations in neighboring countries;

Whereas unilateral United States military action against Iraq may undermine cooperative international efforts to reduce international terrorism and to bring to justice those responsible for the attacks of September 11, 2001;

Whereas unilateral United States military action against Iraq may also undermine United States diplomatic relations with countries throughout the Arab and Muslim world and with many other allies;

Whereas a preemptive unilateral United States first strike could both set a dangerous international precedent and significantly weaken the United Nations as an institution; and

Whereas the short-term and long-term costs of unilateral United States military action against Iraq and subsequent occupation may be significant in terms of United States casualties, the cost to the United States treasury, and harm to United States diplomatic relations with other countries: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), That the United States should work through the United Nations to seek to resolve the matter of ensuring that Iraq is not developing weapons of mass destruction, through mechanisms such as the resumption of weapons inspections, negotiation, enquiry, mediation, regional arrangements, and other peaceful means.




"War does not determine who is right--only who is left." - Bertrand Russell