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  • Foreign Affairs Raises Passions

    FOREIGN AFFAIRS RAISES PASSIONS
    By Fred Contrada

    The Republican - MassLive.com
    http://www.masslive.com/hampfrank/rep ublican/index.ssf?/base/news-13/120729377357130.xm l&coll=1
    April 4 2008
    MA

    NORTHAMPTON - From riots in Tibet to the mess in its own back yard,
    the City Council took on a range of issues last night through a series
    of resolutions.

    The list included resolutions to hold public hearings on the landfill
    expansion, withdraw from the "No Place for Hate" campaign, support
    fair trade and condemn the Chinese crackdown of protests in Tibet. A
    total of 24 people addressed these various issues during the public
    comment session prior to the meeting and the council was still voting
    on the resolutions at press time.

    Some 30 members of the local Tibetan community jammed into council
    chambers to support the resolution condemning the actions of the
    Chinese government in their homeland and urging the U.S. government
    to pressure China to respect the rights of the Tibetan people.

    According to published reports, police have arrested hundreds of
    people since protests in the capital of Lhasa began last month.

    Tibetans abroad, including some in Hampshire County, have demonstrated
    in support of their brethren in the weeks since.

    Thondup Tsering, a spokesman for the Tibetan Association of Western
    Massachusetts, told the council that Tibet is going through the most
    critical period in its history.

    "We fear that massive massacres are happening inside Tibet," he said.

    "As Tibetans, we believe in truth and we want the world to know the
    truth of what has happened in Tibet. Tibet now needs your action."

    Emotions also ran high over a resolution submitted by the city's
    Human Rights Commission that Northampton rescind its partnership in
    the "No Place for Hate" campaign co-sponsored by the Anti Defamation
    League. Heather Johnson, the chairwoman of that commission, said the
    resolution is a response to the Anti Defamation League's refusal to
    recognize the Armenian genocide.

    "We learned that the Anti Defamation League's position had roots
    in Middle East politics and is a result of Turkey's alliance with
    Israel and the United States," said Johnson, noting that 11 other
    communities in Massachusetts have withdrawn from the campaign. "The
    Human Rights Commission believes it is important to recognize the
    truth of the Armenian genocide and not be constrained by international
    geo-politics."

    Leslie Fraidstern, the president of Congregation B'nai Israel in
    Northampton, called the implications of the resolution "scandalous."

    "This resolution is a slap at a prominent Jewish organization,"
    he said. "No one is denying that the Armenian genocide occurred."

    Joseph Blotnick and Jill Higgins of Dewey Court cited their
    experiences working in the Dominican Republic as they spoke in
    favor of the resolution that Northampton become a "Fair Trade Town,"
    supporting products certified as meeting international fair trade
    standards. Blotnick described the poverty of cacao farmers in
    the Dominican Republic, saying that the price of their product is
    manipulated by Wall Street.

    More than a dozen people spoke in favor of a resolution that the
    council sponsor at least four public forums to solicit comments and
    information on the proposed landfill expansion.
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