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Category — Events

Pushing back against SComm in Amherst!

Monday (4/9): Help Amherst Preserve our Civil Rights

Join us at 6:30 PM on Monday April 9 at Amherst Town Hall in front of the Amherst Select Board to support a proposed town bylaw (Article 29 on the Amherst Town Warrant) to protect immigrants and to stop the Federal Government’s “Secure Communities” Program

MONDAY, APRIL 9th at the Amherst Town Hall, 2nd Floor
• 6:30-6:45 PM: opportunity to give public comments
• 8:15-8:45 PM (roughly): Article 29 formally presented before the Amherst Select Board
*** Come to a meeting in between the above 2 agenda items from 7:00-8:15 PM at Amherst Town Hall, 1st floor, for supporters of Article 29 to plan outreach to Amherst Town Meeting Members

In May 2012, the Amherst Town Meeting (a 250-member governance body for the town) will vote on a first-of-its-kind proposed bylaw that would take a step in preventing Federal Immigration authorities from tasking the Amherst police department in the enforcement of federal immigration policies. These policies already cause millions of undocumented immigrants living in the United States to live in constant fear and isolation.

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April 5, 2012   No Comments

Non-violent Direct Action Training (Feb. 25)

Click here to register!

Do you want to be involved in direct action? Want to train on how to engage in civil disobedience?

Join Paki Wieland and Jeff Napolitano for a civil disobedience training on February 25, from 9am to 4pm, in Northampton.

The training is free to all (donations graciously accepted), but we ask that you register below so that we can get a sense of the number of participants.

Click here to register!

February 16, 2012   No Comments

Paki Wieland (Northampton resident) arrested in Bahrain

Urgent: 

Northampton resident Paki Wielend arrested and detained in Bahrain

Northampton resident Paki Wieland was one of six U.S. citizens arrested Tuesday in Manama, Bahrain while acting as international observers of a peaceful protest on the one year anniversary of the Arab Spring. The six US citizens were part of a peaceful protest marching towards the Pearl Roundabout – site of last year’s peaceful round-the-clock protest in Bahrain, modeled after Egypt’s Tahrir Square – when they were attacked by Bahraini authorities. The six observers remain in Bahraini custody in the Naem Police Station in Manama. This group of internationals is the second to be deported by the Bahraini government. The U.S. State Department is currently providing consular assistance to the six arrested U.S. citizens.
 
What you can do: Call 202-647-4000 and leave a comment with the U.S. State Department. Ask them to halt the Bahraini government’s deportation of U.S. citizens who are in Bahrain and have observed government brutality against peaceful protesters. You can also tweet the State Department at @StateDept. Please help spread the word. 

February 14, 2012   No Comments