Posts Tagged ‘Antonia Juhasz’

Austin: Iraq Veterans Against the War Convention Kick-off

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010
July 9, 2010
7:00 pmto9:00 pm

IRAQ VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR CONVENTION KICK-OFF
Friday, July 9, 7pm, 5604 Manor Road

Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) is holding its 2010 national
convention July 9-11 in Austin, and supporters of IVAW will have a chance
for informal discussion and socializing with the group’s members. Tickets
for the event, which will include a buffet catered by Mamas of Color
Rising, will be $15 at the door. In addition to an awards presentation,
the evening will feature a talk by Antonia Juhasz, director of the Chevron
Program at Global Exchange and author The Tyranny of Oil: the World’s Most
Powerful Industry, and What We Must Do To Stop It. Juhasz is a member of
the advisory board of IVAW. The panels and workshops for the IVAW
convention will be on Saturday, July 10, at Huston-Tillotson University,
900 Chicon St. Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) is a national
membership organization of veterans and active duty troops who have served in the “Global War on Terror” since September 11, 2001. Founded in 2004 by nine Iraq veterans, IVAW is now made up of 65 chapters comprised of close to 2,000 members, including chapters on military bases. IVAW is building a national GI and veterans’ resistance movement to 1) end the occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan, 2) attain quality health care and other benefits for returning troops, and 3) win reparations to rebuild a sovereign Iraq and Afghanistan. For more information visit the IVAW website.

http://www.ivaw.org

Houston: Activists arrested at Chevron shareholders’ meeting

Thursday, May 27th, 2010
TxLAW note:  Chevron is one of the big multi-nationals which worked with Dick Cheney to try to take over control of Iraq’s oil reserves.  For more on Chevron in Iraq, see  http://truecostofchevron.com/iraq.html
The following story is from Global Exchange,
http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/chevronprogram/chevronprograminthenews/6739.html
Chevron denies access to shareholder representatives in bid to silence truth about its human right and environmental impacts
Global Community Leaders Barred, Ejected and Arrested from Chevron Annual Meeting

True Cost of Chevron Network
May 26, 2010
PRESS RELEASE

Houston, TX – Shareholders and shareholder representatives from around the globe holding legal proxies were refused entry to Chevron’s annual meeting today. Five members of The True Cost of Chevron Network were subsequently arrested at the oil giants direction.Communities affected by Chevron attempted to enter its annual meeting while more “True Cost of Chevron” network supporters rallied outside.

[high resolution photo available at

http://rainforestactionnetwork.smugmug.com/Change-Chevron/Arrests-at-Chevron/12321036_V6SA8#879852504_gFEdg

Photos and videos at: http://justicenecology.posterous.com ]

“Chevron CEO John Watson opened the annual shareholder meeting touting Chevron as a good neighbor and yet they locked the door for communities from Houston, Alaska, Canada, Burma, Nigeria, and Colombia. This is the way we have been treated at home and meeting them here was no different,” explained Emem Okom, founder of the Kebetkuche Women Development and Resource Center of Nigeria.

Of the 37 delegates from the Network with validly executed proxy statements, only seven were allowed to enter the meeting, contradicting Chevron’s own policies and in potential violations of corporate governance laws.. Addressing the shareholders, Elias Isaac of Open Society Institute of Southern Africa, who has seen the results of Chevron’s oil contaminations in Angola, said, “The disappearance of fish in Angola is a clear sign that Chevron is not compatible with the fishing business, despite John Watson’s claims to the contrary during today’s meeting.”

Josh Coates from the Wilderness Society of Australia was denied admission into the meeting had a message for CEO Watson: “Today I’ve been denied the opportunity to give a clear message to Chevron and the shareholders that the proposed liquid natural gas processing facility in the Kimberley region of northwest Australia comes with unacceptable environmental costs. The Kimberley region in the west of Australia is a last refuge for many species in the region, including humpback whales and the endangered Australian flatback turtle. Chevron is pushing an off-shore processing facility in the home of the humpback, while other options exist.” Coates noted.

Aileen Suzara, of the Filipino-American Coalition for Environmental Solidarity, was able to gain entrance into the meeting and addressed Chevron’s operations in Manila, Phillipines, stating, “Over 80,000 residents in metro-Manila are threatened by Chevron’s toxic fuel tanks, constant leaks, spills and emissions. Chevron refuses to relocate its depot despite the public outcry and a Philippine Supreme Court decision demanding closure.”

Outside the meeting, activist Naing Htoo of EarthRights International from Burma was denied the opportunity to address the Board of Directors. Had he gained entrance, he would have told the company directly that, “Chevron continues lying to their shareholders and the public about human rights abuses associated with the Yadana Project in Burma. Even this year the UN Special Rapporteur for Burma documented the connection between human rights abuses and Chevron’s project. It’s time for Chevron to take responsibility for the harms they cause.”

Of the five arrested, one was Antonia Juhasz, Lead Author of “The True Cost of Chevron: An Alternative Annual Report”. Juhasz was dragged from the meeting as shareholders and their proxies chanted, “Chevron Lies, People Die” and CEO John Watson abruptly ended the meeting.

Others arrested included Reverend Ken Davis, a member Community for a Better Environment, from Richmond, California, Juan Parras of Houston-based Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Solutions (TEJAS), and Mitchell Anderson and Han Shan of Amazon Watch; all arrested after being denied entrance. AmazonWatch works with Ecuadorian leaders like Guillermo Grefa, who was also denied entrance.

Before his arrest, Reverend Davis stated “I represent an area where there is no beauty shop, groceries, or cleaners. Our industry is Chevron. My people breathe their contamination every day and are constantly sick. Our health is not for sale.”

The True Cost of Chevron Network will continue its effective alliance to expose and challenge the oil giant. For more information on the Network, visit www.truecostofchevron.com

Antonia Juhasz at Under the Hood Cafe, Killeen

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
December 12, 2009
3:00 pmto4:30 pm

Antonia Juhasz, author of The Tyranny of Oil: the World’s Most Powerful Industry—And What We Must Do To Stop It will speak 3-4:30 p.m., Saturday, December 12, 2009 @ Under the Hood, 17 S. College St., Killeen, Texas. Free

Under The Hood
5-10 p.m., everyday
17 S. College Street
Killeen, Texas
(254) 449-8811

http://www.underthehoodcafe.org/

In the spirit of the Oleo Strut, Under The Hood is a place for soldiers to gather, relax and speak freely about the wars and the military. Support services for soldiers include referrals for counseling, legal advice and information on GI rights.

Antonia Juhasz on “The Tyranny of Oil” at MonkeyWrench Books, Austin

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009
December 14, 2009
8:00 pmto10:00 pm

From the MonkeyWrench Bookstore Calendar.  MonkeyWrench is located at 110 E. North Loop, Austin.  Call them at 512-407-6925 for directions to the store

TYRANNY OF OIL: THE WORLD’S MOST POWERFUL INDUSTRY
Monday, December 14, 8pm

Antonia Juhasz is on the National Advisory Board of Iraq Veterans Against
the War and The (True Cost of) Chevron Program Director at Global Exchange
in San Francisco. She’s the author of The Tyranny of Oil: The World’s Most
Powerful Industry–And What We Must Do To Stop It, just newly released in
paperback, updated with a new preface on Big Oil and the Presidency of
Barack Obama.

Note from Texas Labor Against the War: In 2007, with Ms. Juhasz’ permission, we issued as a pamphlet her excellent NYTimes article, “Whose Oil Is It, Anyway?” which laid out how big oil corporations, aided by the US government, were trying to take over control of Iraq’s oil resources.  This short pamphlet is still available at MonkeyWrench–and Iraqi labor unions are still struggling against the privatization of Iraqi oil.