-Caveat Lector- INFO: http://www.peaceinspace.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: USA - Dr. Carol Rosin 805-641-1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] Canada - Alfred Webre, JD, MEd 604-733-8134 [EMAIL PROTECTED] CANADA MUST HOLD EMERGENCY SPACE PRESERVATION TREATY CONFERENCE TO BAN SPACE-BASED WEAPONS VANCOUVER, B.C. - Space educators from Canada and the United States today called on the Government of Canada to immediately convene an emergency Treaty Conference to expedite the signing and ratification of the Space Preservation Treaty - a multinational agreement that will ban all space-based weapons in 2002. The Space Preservation Treaty is the companion Treaty to the Space Preservation Act of 2002 (H.R. 3616), introduced into the U.S. House of Representatives by Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio). "Because of the imminent weaponization of space, we urge Canada to convene an emergency Treaty-signing Conference for the Space Preservation Treaty, similar to the Treaty-signing Conference held in Canada in December, 1997, where 122 countries signed the Convention Banning Land Mines, known as the Ottawa Convention," stated Vancouver-based Alfred Webre, JD, MEd. Mr. Webre is a Director of the Institute for Cooperation in Space (ICIS), an educational foundation. Canadian M.P. Svend Robinson (in Motion M-527 of June 20, 2002) and Canadian Sen. Douglas Roche (on June 13, 2002), have each introduced parliamentary motions that call for "Canada to lead an international effort to ban the introduction of all weapons in space through a binding international agreement against the weaponization of space." "We recommend the Space Preservation Treaty as the multinational treaty of choice for this Treaty Conference. The Space Preservation Treaty establishes a permanent ban on ALL space-based weapons, prohibits the use of weapons to destroy or damage objects in space that are in orbit; and immediately orders the permanent termination of research and development, testing, manufacturing, production, and deployment of all space-based weapons," stated Dr. Carol Rosin, President of ICIS. Rosin is "regarded to be the original political architect of the move to stop the SDI and ASATs." "This is a win-win for everyone because the Space Preservation Treaty does not prohibit space exploration, space research and development, testing, manufacturing or deployment that is not related to space-based weapons or systems, or civil, commercial, or defense activities (including communications, navigation, surveillance, reconnaissance, early warning, or remote sensing) that are not related to space-based weapons or systems," Rosin said. "This is when the war industry can be transformed into a space industry that will benefit everyone." The Space Preservation Treaty is seen as a viable alternative to a flawed Russia-China draft treaty that was introduced on June 27, 2002 at the United Nations Conference on Disarmament (UNCD). H.R. 3616, the Space Preservation Act of 2002, provides Section 4: "INTERNATIONAL TREATY BANNING SPACE-BASED WEAPONS AND THE USE OF WEAPONS AGAINST OBJECTS IN SPACE IN ORBIT." It states, "The [U.S.] President shall direct the United States representatives to the United Nations and other international organizations to immediately work toward negotiating, adopting, and implementing an international treaty banning space-based weapons and the use of weapons to destroy or damage objects in space that are in orbit." Both the bill and the companion world treaty are designed to preserve space for cooperative, peaceful uses for all humankind. "The proposed Russia-China draft treaty introduced at the UNCD is deeply flawed and would permit the research, development, testing, manufacturing and production of space-based weapons and their functional deployment under the guise of it being called merely "research" or merely "testing," said Rosin. "The Russia-China draft would actually permit the funding and vested interests to continue and to build a momentum that would make space-based weapons unstoppable." "The Space Preservation Treaty establishes a vitally important outer space peacekeeping agency to monitor and enforce the ban," stated Webre. "The Russia-China draft has no enforcement mechanism, and hence no effective and practical means by which the weaponization of space would be prevented against an aggressor nation that wants to weaponize space," he said. It is thus recommended that the Space Preservation Treaty be the Treaty of choice in the UNCD as well," Rosin continued. "The Space Preservation Treaty incorporates the language and intention of H.R. 3616, the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, and international proposals. ICIS supports all efforts to ban space-based weapons including the continuation of negotiations - concurrent with the Fast Track Treaty Conference approach - on the Institutional Track approach at the UNCD regarding the prevention of an arms race in space (PAROS). "But, there are barriers to the UNCD being able to complete an effective multinational agreement to ban all space-based weapons in time to prevent the imminent weaponization of space and the accelerating momentum of funding and vested interests that would make the space-based weapons program unstoppable," stated Alfred Webre. "The UNCD is deadlocked. It may take the UNCD three to five years or more to reach a multi-lateral agreement to ban all space-based weapons." "We have a bill introduced in the U.S. Congress, and now we have a compatible, companion world treaty ready to be signed! What are we waiting for?" Rosin says. "I have had the honor of working closely with Congressman Kucinich. He hopes that all nation-state leaders will sign the Space Preservation Treaty, that they will send it to the Secretary General as Treaty Depositary and ratify it as quickly as possible. And he supports securing an international Treaty Conference to facilitate the signing and ratification of the Treaty. We have a champion in the U.S.. All we need is for Canada to initiate a Treaty Conference and we can get a ban on space-based weapons in 2002." "Now is the time for all nation-state leaders to sign the Space Preservation Treaty, to send it to the U.N. Secretary General as Treaty Depositary, and to ratify it," says Webre. "Canada and U.N. Member States may do this individually at any time. To facilitate this process, we call on the Government of Canada to immediately convene an emergency Space Preservation Treaty Conference." ##### <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A> DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. 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