Monday, June 22, 2009

Opening up Canadian embassy for injured protesters

E-mail Canadian lawmakers and tell them to open up their embassy to injured Iranian protesters! From blogger Mollfyrtio:

Many injured in Tehran can not go to the hospitals as the brutal
paramilitary Basij control the hospitals. There are unconfirmed rumours that
injured people have been dragged off from hospitals to unknown location.

As an answer to that many countrys, including Denmark, Finland and
Australia, have opened up their embassies to the injured.

BUT NOT CANADA!Write to the canadian senators and tell them to let the
injured people of Iran in.

Here are the emails to the different senators AND the PM AND MP Reza
Moridi. If anyone of them prove to be wrong plz let me know. Just copy the whole
lot and paste it into the adressfield:rmoridi.mpp.co@liberal.ola.org; pm@pm.gc.ca; anguswd@sen.parl.gc.ca; atkinn@sen.parl.gc.ca; callbc@sen.parl.gc.ca;info@larrycampbell.ca; carsts@sen.parl.gc.ca; cochre@sen.parl.gc.ca; chapum@sen.parl.gc.ca; dayja@sen.parl.gc.ca; senatorcon@sen.parl.gc.ca; pdowne@sen.parl.gc.ca; dyckli@sen.parl.gc.ca; fairbj@sen.parl.gc.ca; fureyg@sen.parl.gc.ca; charrs@sen.parl.gc.ca; edward@ecconway.com; hublee@sen.parl.gc.ca;kennyco@sen.parl.gc.ca; kinsen@sen.parl.gc.ca; lavigr@sen.parl.gc.ca; losier@sen.parl.gc.ca; mitchg@sen.parl.gc.ca; senator@albertasenator.ca; thibel@sen.parl.gc.ca; senatornancyruth@sen.parl.gc.ca; olived@sen.parl.gc.ca; pepinl@sen.parl.gc.ca; poyv@sen.parl.gc.ca; ringup@sen.parl.gc.ca; sibnic@sen.parl.gc.ca; stgerg@sen.parl.gc.ca; SHAVEK@SEN.PARL.GC.CA; tardic@sen.parl.gc.ca; Layton.J@parl.gc.ca; ducepg1@parl.gc.ca; Ignatieff.M@parl.gc.ca

1 comment:

  1. This is the letter I sent, I hope its content will be helpful to others.

    I am a citizen of the United States living and studying in Montreal at McGill. I wanted to make a personal appeal to you to help the people of Iran whose rights are being violated by their government to secure safe harbor for medical care at your embassy in Tehran. I know that I have no political influence, not even a vote, and that I am completely remote from your decision-making process. I ask you this as a citizen of the world. I do not want to think that innocent people will die and I did nothing.

    I believe that Canada is in a unique position to open their doors to protesters and make a profound and lasting statement to the international community about protecting human rights without appearing to interfere or influence the politics of Iran. With the United States' neo-colonial attitudes and actions in the middle east, it is very precarious for us to get involved. One of the qualities I admire most about the Canadian nation is its dedication to furthering not a national but a human agenda in cooperation with the United Nations. If I could hope that any of the world's greatest countries would extend a hand to help the people of Iran, it would be Canada.

    This is a new age for politics; an age when technology allows people of many countries to hear each other's point of view and choose to act outside of a centralized political framework. Be that as it may, the infrastructure of entrenched national politics, while slow and difficult, has the opportunity to stay relevant to my generation of citizens. Please respond to the pleas that so many individuals of different countries and ideologies have recognized. Open your embassy in Tehran to Iranian protesters.

    Thank you,

    Elisabeth Gill

    ReplyDelete