VANCOUVER, BC -In an Oct. 3, 2012 letter to Speakers at a June 15-17, 2012 9/11 conference in Vancouver, BC, the 9/11 War Crimes Tribunal urged that Speakers "as a community assemble your collective evidence and
continue the work of the 9/11 Vancouver Hearings in a Tribunal of
Conscience to investigate, prosecute, try and convict the 9/11 Accused
named in your evidence."
With its Oct 3 letter, the Tribunal returned to the Speakers "all
Presentations, documents including Evidentiary Submissions and
Affidavits filed by 9/11 Vancouver Hearings speakers with this Tribunal,
with the exception of 9/11 Tribunal witnesses who have opted to stay as
witnessed with this Tribunal of Conscience. Such Presentations,
documents and Evidentiary Submissions and Affidavits are no longer in
the Witness Docket of this Tribunal and are not part of the Tribunal's
evidence."
The organizers of the June 15-17, 2012 conference and 17 of its 19 speakers essentially staged a walk-out from the 9/11 War Crimes Tribunal because Judges Fogal and Webre exercised judicial independence and introduced the affidavits of 9/11 witnesses Leuren Moret, MA, PhD ABD & Andrew D. Basiago, JD, MPhil (Cantab) into Tribunal evidence.
The four 9/11 witnesses with the 9/11 Tribunal presently include: Andrew D. Basiago, JD, MPhil (Cantab), Dean T. Hartwell, JD, Susan Lindauer, MA, and Leuren Moret, MA, PhD ABD.
The Tribunal states, "We urge you Speakers to cease your misguided war of
slander and division against the proper actions of the 9/11 War Crimes
Tribunal, its Judges, and its Witnesses and move on to the constructive
agenda that your Evidentiary Submissions and Affidavits demand.
"The statements of Alice Walker, a jury member in the ongoing
4th Russell Tribunal on Palestine,
a sister Tribunal of Conscience, this week on Democracy Now are set
out below as an example to show that there can never be too many
Tribunals of Conscience."
The Moret Affidavit: The U.K., French, and Canadian 9/11 connections
The Judge’s letter continues, “Leuren Moret's submission and affidavit is vital because it identifies key 9/11 Accused who are U.K., French and Canadian nationals and who appear to be members of an executive within an international war crimes racketeering organization that gave orders for 9/11, the ‘top’ of a pyramidal network, as it were. As U.K., French and Canadian nationals, these 9/11 Accused in turn provide the Article 12 jurisdiction for 9/11 before the International Criminal Court. Ms. Moret's affidavit is able to build on the singularly important affidavit of our distinguished attorney whistleblower witness, former DARPA participant Andrew D. Basiago.”
Article 12 of the Rome Statue of the International Criminal Court (ICC) provides that one of the grounds for ICC jurisdiction is that the person accused of war crimes be a national of a state that is a party to the Rome Statute establishing the ICC. The speakers who walked out of the 9/11 War Crimes Tribunal had mainly named 9/11 Accused who were USA or Israeli citizens, neither of whom are subject to ICC jurisdiction.
Judge Webre is in active coordination of prosecution of 9/11 Accused with Judge Fernando Imposimato, honorary President of the Supreme Court of Italy and former Chief Investigative Judge of Italy. Judge Imposimato recently announced he was launching a drive to prosecute key 9/11 Accused at the ICC.
The Basiago Affidavit: Circumventing an attempted suppression of 9/11 evidenceOn February 23, 2012, Judge Webre approached the organizers of the planned June 15-17, 2012 conference with a proposal that former U.S. chrononaut Andrew D. Basiago be a speaker at the upcoming conference. Judge Webre stated, “In a word, we have a whistleblower from DARPA quantum access projects who is an eyewitness to DARPA/CIA possession of images of the controlled demolition of the twin towers on September 11, 2011 in 1971. We have an eyewitness to Donald H. Rumsfeld's personal knowledge of these images in 1971, as defence liaison for this DARPA project to the 1971 Nixon Cabinet, of which he was a member. Need I remind you that Donald H. Rumsfeld is, by prima facie evidence, a prime suspect in the 9/11 false flag operation? (Please see [my] articles below).
“That eyewitness [Andrew D. Basiago] is a member of the bar of the state of Washington and a 10-year colleague of mine and of impeccable credentials, Andrew D. Basiago. We both spoke at the 2009 Conspiracy Con, and have spoken at numerous US and international conferences and media on these issues.
“As long as you continue to gate-keep this evidence and information about 9/11 by keeping at least a presentation of this evidence from a public forum like The Vancouver Hearings, you are doing the public a great disservice, IMHO.”
Although Mr. Basiago was not invited to be a speaker at the June 15-17, 2012 conference, Judge Webre was invited to be a Judge on the 9/11 Tribunal and in his position as War Crimes Judge was asked to invite other distinguished jurists and public figures to join him on the 9/11 Tribunal.
Indictment of 9/11 Accused on January 22, 2013
At a meeting of the Judges of the 9/11 War Crimes Tribunal
held Friday September, 28, 2012 in Vancouver, BC, Judge Constance Fogal, B.A.,
M.A, B.ED, LL.B and Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd reaffirmed the plan of the
9/11 Tribunal to issue Indictments of key Accused in the events of September
11, 2001 on January 22, 2013.
Judges Fogal and
Webre met two days after formally separating from conference organizers and
specific speakers at June 15-17, 2012 Vancouver, BC conference on a disagreement
over the 9/11 Tribunal’s judicial independence and an attempt at suppression of
9/11 evidence. The Tribunal’s separation
was made formal in a Notice of Decision dated September 26, 2012, set out on
the Tribunal’s website
9/11 War Crimes Tribunal Letter
Octpber 3, 2012
In Re: YOUR SEPT. 30, 2013 LETTER: Presentations, documents,
Evidentiary Submissions and Affidavits of 9/11 Vancouver Hearings
speakers
1. Evidentiary Submissions and Affidavits -
The Tribunal is forwarding you via Dropsend.com a file containing all
Presentations, documents including Evidentiary Submissions and
Affidavits filed by 9/11 Vancouver Hearings speakers with this Tribunal,
with the exception of 9/11 Tribunal witnesses who have opted to stay as
witnessed with this Tribunal of Conscience. Such Presentations,
documents and Evidentiary Submissions and Affidavits are no longer in
the Witness Docket of this Tribunal and are not part of the Tribunal's
evidence.
2. 9/11 Vancouver Hearings - This Tribunal
urges you as a community to assemble your collective evidence and
continue the work of the 9/11 Vancouver Hearings in a Tribunal of
Conscience to investigate, prosecute, try and convict the 9/11 Accused
named in your attached evidence.
We urge you Speakers to cease your misguided war of
slander and division against the proper actions of the 9/11 War Crimes
Tribunal, its Judges, and its Witnesses and move on to the constructive
agenda that your attached Evidentiary Submissions and Affidavit demand.
The statements of Alice Walker, a jury member in the ongoing
4th Russell Tribunal on Palestine,
a sister Tribunal of Conscience, this week on Democracy Now are set
out below as an example to show that there can never be too many
Tribunals of Conscience.
Best wishes on your future endeavours,
Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd
Judge, 9/11 War Crimes Tribunal
cc: Judge Constance Fogal, B.A , M.A, B.ED, LL.B
Alice Walker: Palestine Conditions 'More Brutal' Than In U.S. South
We continue our conversation with the legendary
poet, author and activist, Alice Walker, who has also been a longtime
advocate for the rights of Palestinians. Last summer, she was one of the
activists on the U.S. ship that attempted to sail to Gaza as part of
the Freedom Flotilla aimed at challenging Israel's embargo of the Gaza
Strip. Alice Walker also serves on the jury of the Russell Tribunal on
Palestine, an international people's tribunal created in 2009 to bring
attention to the responsibility other states bear for Israel's
violations of international law. Walker describes her upbringing in the
segregated South, then goes on to discuss today's segregation in the
Occupied Territories. "The unfairness of it is so much like the South.
It's so much like the South of 50 years ago, really, and actually more
brutal, because in Palestine so many more people are wounded, shot,
shot, killed, imprisoned. You know, there are thousands of Palestinians
in prison virtually for no reason," Walker says. [includes rush
transcript]
AMY GOODMAN: But you have refused, Alice, to have
your book translated into Hebrew for an Israeli publisher. Can you talk
about your decision and who the publisher was?
ALICE
WALKER: Yes. Well, actually, it was already published there in 19-I
don't know, 80-something. And at that time, there was no cultural
boycott of Israel for its apartheid practices and its persecution of the
Palestinian people. But now there is a boycott, and so I respect that
boycott in the same way that I respected the boycott when there was
apartheid in South Africa. And we were contemplating sending the film
there, and I lobbied against it.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about the parallels you make.
ALICE
WALKER: Mean apartheid ones? Well, first of all, in Israel and the
Occupied Territories, there's this gigantic wall, which is, I think, the
most offensive symbol of the apartheid. It not only segregates the
Palestinians from the Israelis, but they also, at the same time, have
stolen so much Palestinian land. I mean, they've essentially stolen what
was all of Palestine. And it's just horrible to see the treatment of
the people. I mean, the checkpoints are dreadful. We went through some
of them. And the way the Palestinians are treated is so reminiscent of
the way black people were treated in the South when I was growing up.
And it's an intolerable situation. And that our country backs this
treatment by standing with Israel through thick and thin is just
unbearable.
AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to turn to a clip of South
African Archbishop Desmond Tutu talking about apartheid, talking about
South Africa and talking about Israel.
DESMOND
TUTU: Coming from South Africa and going-I mean, and looking at the
checkpoints and the arrogance of those young soldiers, probably scared,
maybe covering up their apprehension, there's no way in which I couldn't
say-of course, that is a truth. It reminds me-it reminds me of the kind
of experiences that we underwent. I mean, I was bishop of Johannesburg
and would be driving from town to Soweto, where we lived, and I would be
driving with my wife, and we'd have a roadblock. And the fact of our
having to have passes allowing us to move freely in the land of our
birth, and now you have that extraordinary structure that-the wall. And I
do not, myself, believe that it has improved security, breaking up
families, breaking up-I mean, people who used to be able to walk from
their homes to school, children, now have to take a detour that lasts
several-I mean, it's-when you humiliate a people to the extent that they
are being-and, yes, one remembers the kind of experience we had when we
were being humiliated-when you do that, you're not contributing to your
own security.
AMY GOODMAN: Retired South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Alice Walker, your response?
ALICE
WALKER: Well, I'm very happy that Desmond Tutu speaks out on this
issue, because so many people are afraid to speak at all. And I think
this is very dangerous. I think that wherever there is this kind of
oppression, wherever you see people who are being humiliated, it's our
duty as human beings and as citizens of the planet to speak. You know,
that's all we can do: speak, at least.
AMY GOODMAN: You were in Gaza. Our producer Anjali
Kamat in 2009 interviewed you while you were there. I want to play a
clip of that.
ALICE WALKER: It's shocking
beyond anything I have ever experienced. And it's actually so horrible
that it's basically unbelievable, even though I'm standing here and I've
been walking here and I've been looking at things here. It still feels
like, you know, you could never convince anyone that this is actually
what is happening and what has happened to these people and what the
Israeli government has done. It will be a very difficult thing for
anyone to actually believe in, so it's totally important that people
come to visit and to see for themselves, because the world community,
that cares about peace and cares about truth and cares about justice,
will have to find a way to deal with this. We cannot let this go as if
it's just OK, especially those of us in the United States who pay for
this. You know, I have come here, in part, to see what I'm buying with
my tax money.
AMY GOODMAN: That was the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice
Walker in Gaza in 2009. Last summer, she was one of the activists on the
U.S. ship that attempted to sail to Gaza as part of the Freedom
Flotilla aimed at challenging Israel's embargo of the Gaza Strip. Dubbed
The Audacity of Hope after President Obama's bestselling book, the U.S.
ship was stopped by Greek authorities just as it set sail. Alice Walker
spoke to Democracy Now! producer Aaron Maté from the ship as it was
being turned back.
ALICE WALKER: It feels really good to know that the
world is watching, that there are people on this earth who care about
the people of Gaza so much that we all got out of our houses and into
our various cars and planes, and we made it to this boat, and we
actually tried to cross the water to get to the people of Gaza,
especially to the children, who need to know that the world is here and
the world cares and the world sees and a lot of us love them, and we do
not agree that they should be brutalized and harmed.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Alice Walker speaking on the Freedom
Flotilla. She is now serving on the jury of the Russell Tribunal on
Palestine, an international people's tribunal created in 2009 to bring
attention to the responsibility other states bear for Israel's
violations of international law. The Russell Tribunal will be holding
its fourth international session in New York October 6th. You're going
to be there, Alice Walker.
ALICE WALKER: I will be there. Yes, I will be there
with some wonderful people, including Angela Davis, Cynthia McKinney,
Mairead Maguire-
AMY GOODMAN: The Nobel Peace Prize winner.
ALICE WALKER: Stéphane Hessel-yes, lots of wonderful-Michael Mansfield, a lot of really good people.
AMY GOODMAN: Noam Chomsky will also be-
ALICE WALKER: Noam Chomsky will be there, Dennis Banks.
AMY GOODMAN: And what will you do?
ALICE
WALKER: Well, we will hear testimony about why it is that nothing seems
to move. The U.N. makes resolutions, you know, and they're ignored. And
there are so many resolutions. The one that particularly pains my heart
is Resolution 194-I think that's the number-which says to Israel that
you cannot keep the Palestinians, who were forced out of their homes-you
cannot prevent them from returning to their homes. And I'm such a
believer that people need to have a place to live that is theirs, that
they should never be run out of their own place. And if they are run
out, they should be able to return there. And this, with so many other
resolutions, was ignored and has never been addressed. And the United
States is complicit, because it backs Israel no matter what. And I think
this is corrupting, I think for our young people especially, to see
that, you know, justice in this case is just never even thought about.
AMY GOODMAN: You make comparisons to the South. Talk about your growing up and about your family.
ALICE
WALKER: Well, my family was a poor farming family, and we lived under
absolute segregation. Although, even though, you know, all of the hotels
and the motels and the restaurants and the water fountains, all those
things were segregated, we didn't have segregated roads, which you do
have in the Occupied Territories, roads that only Jewish settlers can
use, and the Palestinians have these little tracks, you know, these
little paths, often, you know, obstructed by boulders. And that is how
they're supposed to move around, for the most part. And the unfairness
of it is so much like the South. It's so much like the South of, you
know, I don't know, 50 years ago, really, and actually more brutal,
because in Palestine so many more people are wounded, shot, killed,
imprisoned. You know, there are thousands of Palestinians in prison
virtually for no reason.
AMY GOODMAN: Do you feel like public opinion is changing in the United States?
ALICE
WALKER: I feel that public opinion is changing, and I think it's
because people have decided that, you know, we're all in such danger.
We're all in harm's way now, and people are awakening to the fact that
unless we take care of each other, nobody is safe, there will never be
safety.
AMY GOODMAN: Alice Walker, we're going to break, and
then I want to ask you about your thoughts on President Obama, on the
election, and I'd like to ask you to read your newest poem. Alice
Walker, the award-winning author, poet, activist, is with us for the
hour. Stay with us.
Alice Walker, award-winning author, poet and
activist. Her book The Color Purple was published 30 years ago. It won
the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for
Fiction, and was later adapted into a film directed by Steven Spielberg,
starring Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey, and into a musical of the
same name. Her latest book is The Chicken Chronicles, and before that,
Overcoming Speechlessness: A Poet Encounters the Horror in Rwanda,
Eastern Congo and Palestine/Israel. She is set to participate next week
in the fourth session of the Russell Tribunal on Palestine.
--
Judge Alfred Lambremont Webre, JD, MEd
9/11 War Crimes Tribunal
A Citizen's Tribunal of Conscience
Contact information:
9/11 War Crimes Tribunal
Vancouver, BC CANADA V6N 3E5
Skype: peaceinspace
ARTICLE URL:
Join me in prayer for the protection and success of the 911 War Crimes Tribunal. This is exciting news, and we must pray continually for them and against Satan and all his demonic forces:
"The Illuminati is a Satanic cult of bloodline bankers."
Ephesians 6:12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.
Jeremiah 42:11 Be not afraid of the king of Babylon, of whom ye are afraid; be not afraid of him, saith the LORD: for I am with you to save you, and to deliver you from his hand.
Psalms 24:8, 138:1 Who is this King of glory? The LORD strong and mighty, the LORD mighty in battle. I will praise thee with my whole heart: before the gods will I sing praise unto thee.
Posted by: Susan Littleton | 03/21/2013 at 05:13 PM