Mobilize Now, Save The World
CALIFORNIA
DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE LIST OF COMPANIES DOING BUSINESS WITH THE IRANIAN
PETROLEUM/NATURAL GAS, NUCLEAR, AND DEFENSE SECTORS (AS OF FEBRUARY 9, 2010)
|
1. ABB Ltd. [Switzerland] |
26.
Linde AG [Germany] |
|
2.
ACS, Actividades de Construccion Y |
27.
Lukoil OAO [Russia] |
|
Servicios,
S.A. [Spain] |
28.
Oil & Natural Gas Corp. (ONGC) |
|
3.
Alstom [France] |
[India]
|
|
4.
Ashok Leyland, Ltd. [India] |
29.
OMV [Austria] |
|
5.
Aker Solutions [Norway] |
30.
PetroChina Company Limited [China] |
|
6.
China National Petroleum Corp. [China] |
31.
Petrofac Limited [United Kingdom] |
|
7.
China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. |
32.
Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) |
|
[China]
|
[Malaysia]
|
|
8.
CNOOC Ltd. [China] |
33.
Petronas Gas Bhd [Malaysia] |
|
9.
CNPC (Hong Kong) Limited [Hong |
34.
PT Citra Tubindo Tbk [Indonesia] |
|
Kong]
|
35.
PTT Exploration & Production PCL |
|
10.
Daelim Industrial Co., Ltd. [South |
(PTTEP)
[Thailand] |
|
Korea]
|
36.
PTT Public Company Limited |
|
11.
Dragon Oil PLC [Ireland] |
[Thailand]
|
|
12.
Edison Spa [Italy] |
37.
Ranhill Bhd [Malaysia] |
|
13.
Eni S.p.A. [Italy] |
38.
Repsol YPF [Spain] |
|
14.
Everest Kanto Cylinder Ltd. [India] |
39.
Royal Dutch Shell Plc [United |
|
15.
Finmeccanica SPA [Italy] |
Kingdom]
|
|
16.
GAIL (India) Limited [India] |
40.
Sasol Limited [South Africa] |
|
17.
Gas Natural SDG [Spain] |
41.
Siemens AG [Germany] |
|
18.
Gazprom Neft [Russia] |
42.
StatoilHydro ASA [Norway] |
|
19.
Gazprom OAO [Russia] |
43.
Tatneft [Russia] |
|
20.
GS E&C (Engineering & Construction) |
44.
Technip S.A. [France] |
|
[South
Korea] |
45.
Trevi-Finanziaria Industriale S.p.A. |
|
21.
GS Holdings Corp. [South Korea] |
(Trevi
Group) [Italy] |
|
22.
Hyundai E&C (Engineering and |
46.
Total S.A. [France] |
|
Construction)
Co., Ltd. [South Korea] |
47.
Welspun-Gujarat Stahl Rohren Limited |
|
23.
Hyundai Heavy Industries [South Korea] |
[India]
|
|
24.
Ina-Industrija Nafte DD [Croatia] |
48.
Worley Parsons Ltd. [Australia] |
|
25.
Indian Oil Corporation, Ltd. [India] |
49.
Ulan-Ude Aviation Plant JSC [Russia] |
|
50.
ZiO-Podol’sk OAO [Russia] |
Please send scheduled events information to schedule@iranprotests.com
Relevant links:
22 Jewish Leaders
Arrested Calling for Removal of Iran at UN
An anti-terrorist divestment campaign fires blanks
Manifesto
Divest
What
Khamenei says
Jerusalem Center for Public
Affairs
http://www.no2ahmadinejad.com/protest.html
The
Israel Project
In the news:
US pension funds may have to offload terror-linked stocks
Manifesto:

Mobilize now, save the world
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Just over three years ago, at
the first-ever global forum on anti-Semitism organized by the State of Israel,
the essential task was to define the beast - the new anti-Semitism. Since then,
as the fourth such global gathering meets this week, efforts to incorporate the
"three-D" distinction between legitimate criticism of Israel and the
new anti-Semitism - demonization, double standards and delegitimization - have
become part of international documents and discourse.
These and other
accomplishments, as important as they are, have been dwarfed by the quantum
leap anti-Semitism itself has taken. It has leapfrogged from isolated attacks
against Jews to incitement to genocide - the actual elimination of the Jewish
state.
This shift has come in the
form of a pincer movement. On one side, we have the Iranian regime, which is
denying the Holocaust and calling for Israel to be "wiped off the
map" while racing to develop the physical means of doing so. On the other
side, we have what is, in effect, international silence in response, coupled
with growing willingness to discuss Israel's existence as a mistake, an
anachronism, or a provocation.
We must recognize the fact
that though sympathy for Iran's expressed goal of Israel's destruction is
hardly mainstream, the idea of a world without Israel is more acceptable in
polite company, the media and academia today than Hitler's expressed goal of a
Europe without Jews was in 1939.
Given this situation, it should
be clear that we are beyond the stage of definitions. The Jewish world now must
mobilize at a level no less than during the struggles to establish the State of
Israel and to free Soviet Jewry. It is this latter struggle that presents the
most potent model for action today.
Though both sides of the
genocidal pincer are in quite advanced stages of development, the Jewish world
remains mired in pre-mobilization debates reminiscent of the early stages of
the Soviet Jewry struggle in the 1960s. This may be hard to recall in light of
the subsequent success, but back then a debate raged among Jews over whether a
campaign to free Soviet Jewry was "too parochial," and whether being
out front risked making it too much of a "Jewish issue."
BEFORE THESE internal debates
were resolved the Soviet Jewry effort could not be regarded as a movement,
capable of attracting allies and moving governments. Nor were such debates
easily, or ever fully, put to rest.
As late as 1987, when the by
then mature and powerful movement organized the largest-ever Soviet Jewry rally
on Washington's mall to coincide with Mikhail Gorbachev's visit, some Jewish
leaders wondered if the community could be mobilized, and if such a rally would
be counterproductive. They warned that only a few thousand souls would brave
the winter weather, and that the Jewish community would be considered
"warmongers" who were spoiling the recent warming of US-Soviet
relations.
In actuality, over 250,000
people came to a rally that was pivotal in opening the floodgates, not just to
10,000 or 20,000 Jews, which seemed like a dream at the time, but to a million
Jews who came to Israel over the following decade.
Since it has been a while, a
reminder is in order of what full mobilization looks like.
First, as Shlomo Avineri has
recently proposed, Iranian officials should get the Soviet treatment. Just as
no Soviet official, including sport and cultural delegations, could travel
without being accosted by protests and hostile questions, so it should be with
anyone representing the Iranian regime. As in the Soviet case, such protests
will not themselves change Iranian behavior, but they are critical to creating
a climate that will influence the policies of Western governments.
Second, an inventory of the
governments and companies that provide Iran with refined oil, huge trade deals,
and even military and nuclear assistance should be taken and public pressure be
put on them to end their complicity with a regime that is racing to genocide.
Third, the pension funds of US
states should be divested from all companies that trade with or invest in Iran.
This divestment campaign must be pursued without apologies or hesitation.
Fourth, every country that is
party to the Genocide Convention should be called upon to fulfill its
obligation under that treaty and seek an indictment of President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad on the charge of incitement to genocide, which is a
"punishable offense" under Article III of that treaty.
Fifth, human rights groups,
such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, which are heavily
nourished by Jewish values, passion
and funding, must stop
squeezing both sides of the genocidal pincer. These groups must be challenged,
on the one hand, to press for enforcement of the Genocide Treaty, to stand up for
human rights in Iran, and to oppose and expose Iranian support for terrorism.
On the other, they must stop perverting the sacred cause of human rights into a
cudgel in Iran's hands against Israel. This happened just months ago when,
during the Lebanon war, such groups all but ignored Hizbullah's terrorism from
behind human shields and called Israel's self-defense a "war crime."
JUST AS the two sides of the
pincer themselves are connected, so too must be the efforts to combat them. All
the above steps concern the Iranian side of the pincer. But combating the other
side, the denial of Israel's right to exist, is no less critical - and more
difficult, since at times they necessitate confronting, not a rogue regime, but
our own cherished institutions. On this front:
First, universities that
provide chairs for professors who campaign against Israel's right to exist
should be boycotted. In a number of countries, denying the Holocaust is a
criminal act. In the current context, denying Israel's right to exist lays the
groundwork for a second holocaust even more directly than does denying history.
Therefore, the promulgation of such an ideology should be fought even by
societies that justifiably revere freedom of speech.
This may seem a hopelessly
difficult task, but it is not. After 9/11, one woman, a student, took on
Harvard University, which was ready to accept a $10 million "gift"
from a Saudi sheikh. Harvard backed down, showing that moral clarity,
unapologetically and passionately expressed, can change seemingly unassailable
ideas.
We must stand for a basic
principle: If denying the Holocaust can land a professor in jail, denying
Israel should not land him tenure.
Second, support for Israel
must be demonstrated. Two decades after the massive Soviet Jewry rally of 1987,
we need to return to the Mall on Israel's Independence Day in May with two
messages: Support Israel and Stop Iran. It is late, but not too late, to
overcome those fears of being "too parochial" that the Soviet Jewry
movement succeeded in dispelling more than 30 years ago.
The fight to support Israel
and stop Iran now is, if anything, less "parochial" than the Soviet
Jewry movement was then. Then, the Jewish world took on a global superpower,
the Soviet Union, and confronted the reigning American foreign policy paradigm
- detente - with a very different one: linkage of trade to human rights.
Then, we successfully argued
that the freedom to emigrate was not just a Jewish concern, but a universal
one, and we were more right than we knew. The Jackson-Vanik amendment and the
Helsinki Accords were critical factors in triggering the internal collapse of
the Soviet empire. This collapse not only freed millions of Jews, but all the
peoples behind the Iron Curtain, and ended a half-century-old superpower
stalemate that threatened the entire planet.
NOW
THE WORLD stands at a no less fateful watershed. The world's most dangerous
rogue regime is on the verge of obtaining the ultimate weapons of terror.
Already, Iran's confidence that it will not be stopped has led to one war, last
summer's war in Lebanon started by Hizbullah. Already, Iran is fueling
conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon and Gaza - and all this before the
regime enjoys its own full, declared nuclear umbrella.
The moment before mobilization is always a lonely one, in which it seems that
the obstacles to making a cause universal are insurmountable. Yet, as in the
case of the Soviet Jewry movement, we are not alone. We are surrounded by
potential allies who may not themselves know they are ready to join us until we
create a movement for them to join.
Our leadership will give others the opportunity to act. If the Jewish world
does not lead the way, who will? It is as true now as it was then; if we build
it, they will come.
A decade after the wave of democracy that came with the fall of the Soviet
Union, an Iranian-led wave of terror is rising that will not stop until it is
stopped. Ultimately, we overcame our fear of parochialism to stand up for
Soviet Jewry, and left the world a much better place for it. Now we must do the
same to prevent a second holocaust, and in the process save the world.
Financial weapons can be the most
effective against terror.
22 Jewish Leaders Arrested Calling for
Removal of Iran at UN
by Alex Traiman
Twenty-one rabbis, and a Jewish community layperson were arrested at the
United Nations Tuesday, demanding that Iran be removed from the
international body.
The group, organized by AMCHA
– Coalition for Jewish Concerns, was arrested by New York City Police and
imprisoned for several hours after peacefully crossing over from the
public city street to the steps leading down to the United Nations.
AMCHA Director, and Rabbi of
the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, Avi Weiss stated in response to his
incarceration, "It's a serious matter to step beyond the line, to
violate the law. But we must do so as a moral outcry to the world that it
can't be business as usual. The time has come to expel Iran from the
United Nations."
After being warned of
their impending arrest, the group sat down under the large Peace Wall
quoting the words of the biblical prophet Isaiah: "Nation shall not
lift up sword against nation; neither shall they learn war any
more."
At the rally which began
several blocks away at the Iranian Mission to the UN, Weiss exclaimed,
"There's a fire burning, and we must raise a voice of moral outrage.
We urge that the presence of any Iranian delegation be protested, that
pressure be put on countries not to trade with Iran, that state governments
divest from companies trading with Iran, and that nations signed on to
the Genocide Convention strongly condemn Iranian President Ahmadinejad
who's threatened to wipe Israel off the map.
"We demand that the
United Nations expel Iran, which has threatened to annihilate Israel, a
fellow UN member state."
The group then
proceeded to the headquarters of the World body, with the intent of
getting arrested.
Former Deputy District
Attorney, turned Conservative Rabbi, Mark Ankorn, of the Southwest Orlando
Jewish Congregation stated prior to his arrest, "It’s not a decision
I take lightly, believe me. I’ve never written a letter to the editor,
never written my congressman or my senator about any issue, never been a
part of a sit-down or teach-in or anything else.
"But the government
of Iran denies the Holocaust and supplies the rockets that killed dozens
in Israel this past summer. They furiously seek nuclear weapons and
kidnap British sailors. When will it stop? When will we stand up and say,
Enough?"
Rabbi Joseph Potasnick,
president of the New York Board of Rabbis, stated after the protest,
"Iranian President Ahmadinejad says he'll wipe Israel off the map.
We say, remove the map from him -- he should not be allowed to enter any halls
of power anywhere. Ahmadinejad should be made to feel like a
pariah."
Conservative Rabbi
Bruce Ginsburg of Congregation Sons of Israel added, "Iran trains
terrorists to murder Israelis and insurgents to kill American soldiers
and Iraqi civilians. We say to UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, kick
Iran out of the United Nations."
Each of the 22 arrested
protestors were released after being held for over five hours, and were
charged with disorderly conduct. Each of the protestors must appear in Criminal
Court by May 15.
Following their release,
organizers added, "We call upon the American Jewish community to
organize a mass march on Washington, joined by hundreds of thousands, to
raise a powerful voice of moral conscience and a simple message: there's
a fire burning, burning from Iran. There cannot be business as usual
until Iran is stopped."
"We are calling upon all rabbis and clergy of other faiths to join
together and in an act of civil disobedience demand that Iran be expelled
from the United Nations. To be successful in our mission, our actions
need to be continuous and make a significant impact that will cause a
shift around the world. On the week of Holocaust Remembrance Day, we, the
leaders of our communities, will stand together and show the world that
we will not tolerate Iran’s threats to the Jewish State, nor will we
accept Iran’s defiance of nuclear treaties without being expelled from
the UN."
The Arrested Community
Leaders
Rabbi Mark Ankcorn, Southwest Orlando Jewish Congregation
Rabbi Moses Birnbaum, President, Long Island Board of Rabbis,
Plainview Jewish Center
Rabbi Steven Burton, Congregation Shaarei Shalom
Rafi Farber, rabbinical student, Yeshivat Chovevei
Torah
Rabbi Jeffrey Fox
Rabbi Avidan Freedman, Yeshivat Chovevei Torah
Rabbi Bruce Ginsburg, Congregation Sons of Israel
Ben Greenberg, rabbinical student, Yeshivat Chovevei Torah
Yehuda Hausman, rabbinical student, Yeshivat Chovevai Torah
Rabbi Jason Herman, Congregation Beth Israel/West Side Jewish Center
Rabbi David Kalb, CLAL
Rabbi Pinchas Klein, Mount Freedom Jewish Center, Morasha
Rabbi Aryeh Leifert, Congregation Rodfei Sholom, San Antonio, Texas
Rabbi Etan Mintz, Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
Rabbi Ronald Price, Congregation Netivot Sholom, UTJ/Morasha
Glenn Richter, Amcha-Coalition for Jewish Concerns
Rabbi Aaron Rubinger, Congregation Ohev Shalom, Orlando, FL
Ross Shapiro, rabbinical student, Yeshivat Chovevei Torah
Rabbi Uri Topolsky, Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
Rabbi Avi Weiss, Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
Rabbi Akiva David Weiss, Yeshivat Chovevei Torah
Rabbi David Willig, Bayside Jewish Center