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ChristineMarie
November 7th, 2007, 01:17 PM
Several hundred political leaders, among them 378 MPs from 70 countries, have joined to call for the establishment of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations (UNPA). The joint appeal states that, in an age of globalization, citizens need to be vested with a stronger voice in global affairs. The call is the core of an international campaign which is being launched through a series of events in more than ten countries.

The appeal is supported by 550 political leaders, VIPs and civil society activists from 89 countries. It has broad political support across party lines and world regions. Among the endorsers are also over 20 acting and former national Government Ministers including two former Prime Ministers and six former Foreign Ministers, the President of the Pan-African Parliament, four Nobel laureates and 80 professors.

The document recommends "a gradual implementation of democratic participation and representation on the global level". To achieve this, the appeal says that the establishment of a consultative UNPA is "an indispensable step". "A Parliamentary Assembly would make the U.N. more transparent, more efficient and more democratic", says former U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, one of the signatories of the appeal and patron of the next milestone in the campaign, a conference planned for October.

Initially the UNPA could be composed of a small number of representatives from each national parliament. However, the appeal suggests that over time, the assembly should be vested with "genuine rights of information, participation and control" and could eventually be composed of directly elected members. In the long-run, the campaign thus envisages the UNPA to evolve into a world parliament.

The campaign is being organized by several non-governmental organizations, among them the Secretariat of the UBUNTU Forum and the World Campaign for In-depth Reform of International Institutions, the Society for Threatened Peoples International, the World Federalist Movement and 2020*Vision Ltd. The campaign’s Secretariat is led by the Committee for a Democratic U.N.

Presentations are scheduled for Berlin, Berne, Brussels, Buenos Aires, Dar Es Salaam, Dhaka, London, Madrid, Mumbai, Ottawa, Rome and Vancouver.

http://en.unpacampaign.org/news/ih001.php

ChristineMarie
November 7th, 2007, 01:19 PM
http://en.unpacampaign.org/documents/index.php

Campaign documents

Date
Title
Institution
Download

09/2007
Overview of the Campaign
UNPA-Campaign
EN

05/2007
Message from Dr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali

DE EN ES FR

05/2007
The Purpose of a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly
UNPA-Campaign
AR DE EN ES FR RU

04/2007
Appeal for the Establishment of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. Initial signatories by name
UNPA-Campaign
EN

04/2007
Appeal for the Establishment of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. Initial signatories by country
UNPA-Campaign
EN

04/2007
Appeal for the Establishment of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. Return Form.
UNPA-Campaign / KDUN
AR CA CZ DE EN ES ET FI FR GR HE HU IT JP KR NL NO PT PL RU RO SK TR ZH



Background papers

Date
Title
Institution
Download

09/2007
The Case for Global Democracy: Advocating a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly

EN

11/2006
A United Nations Parliamentary Assembly - Frequently Asked Questions
KDUN
EN FR RU

05/2005
Developing International Democracy - For a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. Pocket book version.
KDUN
DE EN

09/2004
Developing International Democracy - For a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. Brochure version.
KDUN
ES FR IT

09/2004
Developing International Democracy - For a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. Executive Summary.
KDUN
DE DK EN ES IT NL PT RU TR

10/1992
The Case for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly

ChristineMarie
November 7th, 2007, 01:20 PM
http://en.unpacampaign.org/appeal/support/civilsociety/index.php

list of all NGOS

ChristineMarie
November 7th, 2007, 01:22 PM
Take Action - What you can do
As an individual you can do the following


Sign the Campaign's "Appeal for the Establishment of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations". Sign appeal
Talk to your friends and colleagues or write them an e-mail and ask them to sign the appeal as well.
Write politely to the member of parliament of your local constituency and ask him/her to support the proposal to establish a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, referring to the 410 parliamentarians from all over the world who have already signed the Campaign appeal.
Make a donation to the UNPA-Campaign which would help us maintain our operations. How to donate
Volunteer your professional skills. The Campaign is largely based on volunteers all over the world. We need translators, internet programmers, graphic designers, research assistants and many others.
If you are a member of a civil society organization, a political party or any other group, campaign for its support of the UNPA Campaign. To date, more than 100 NGOs from all continents have already done so.
You maintain an internet website? Spread the word and promote the UNPA Campaign by including links onto this website. Resources for webmasters
Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper in support of international democracy and a U.N. Parliamentary Assembly, should an article published ask for a comment.

http://en.unpacampaign.org/takeaction/index.php

ChristineMarie
November 7th, 2007, 02:03 PM
Alliance Programme for
Health, Peace and Social Justice

A New World Parliament Of Equal Nations
A new, just world order also requires a new, democratic world parliament, in which not only a few powerful countries have a voting and veto right, but in which all nations of the earth work together on an equal basis. The programme for such an alliance of equal member nations was presented to the world public in June 2004 for the first time. This was the moment that the UN Security Council destroyed the charter of the United Nations and the code of international law based on it by retrospectively legitimising the Iraq occupation – and thus the illegal Iraq war.

The idea of this fundamentally new alternative of equal collaboration between the world’s countries has initiated debate about ‘reform of the UN’. Now that the UN Security Council has itself broken international law, the United Nations and its sub-organisations lack any legal legitimacy. No ‘reform’ of the UN, however thorough, can revive the UN charter and the UN’s legal status.

Any so-called ‘reform’ of the UN by expanding the Security Council to include, principally, the most important industrialised nations, is a farce. This merely further consolidates existing global injustice and makes the UN a political tool to advance their commercial interests against the interests of over 120 developing countries.

The world’s people have an historic opportunity to end a chapter of world history, which was marked by the fact that five nuclear powers appointed themselves as sole members of the UN’s ‘world government’ after the end of the Second World War. From the very beginning the great majority of almost 200 countries in the world had no right to vote in the UN’s sole decision-making committee, the Security Council. In contrast, the resolutions of the UN General Assembly, to which all nations belong, have no binding authority whatsoever. This is no basis for a just world order with future potential.

http://www.health-peace-justice.org/programme/programme_11.html

http://www.radford.edu/~gmartin/WCPA%20page.htm

WORLD CONSTITUTION AND PARLIAMENT ASSOCIATION

HisAlways
November 9th, 2007, 04:14 PM
Message from Dr. Boutros Boutros-Ghali

Hmmm....I just saw that name in an article reporting him "going off" about Israel being the worlds' biggest problem. Just this morning, I read it, and though it was a really dumb name.