Greenpeace at this weekend's Green Festival DC

Live in the Washington DC area? Want to do something fun and show your green? Greenpeace will be at this year’s Green Festival at the Convention Center in Washington DC Saturday from 10am-7pm and Sunday 11am-6pm. Come over and say hello to our friendly volunteers who will be spreading the word about the UN Climate Negotiations in Copenhagen and what folks can do to get our leaders to engage in a fair, ambitious, and binding international treaty to curb global green house gas emissions and prevent the worst of climate change impacts. There will be information about many Greenpeace campaigns, so come to booth 122 with questions, concerns, or even a high five. If you can’t make the festival this weekend, you can sign on to our petition now, or find out about the International Day of Climate Action event in your area.
At Green Festival you can sample organic foods, listen to new music, learn about green innovations, see an environmental movie, listen to speakers like Ed Begley, Jr., Amy Goodman, and just announced, Ralph Nader. Find out more at the Green Festival website. Hope to seeyou there!

T2: Looking forward
Greenpeace Communications Center, Aomori, Japan:

The defense expert witness Prof. Dirk Voorhoof has just left Japan after a whirlwind of press interviews, speaking events, and on Monday, a reception with Greenpeace Japan, Amnesty International Japan, ASEED and others commemorating the 20th anniversary of Japan ratifying the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. This agreement is the basis for Vorhoof’s opinon and the international human rights argument for Junichi and Toru’s innocence. By uncovering a whale meat embezzlement scandal the Tokyo Two were contributing to an important debate and fulfilling their role as an NGO, a watchdog in a democratic society.
After updates of disputed convictions on the grounds of freedom of speech cases such as the Tachikawa case where activists were detained for 75 days for leafletting and later convicted by the Japanese Supreme Court. To announce a new future for freedom of expression and NGO work like that of the Tokyo Two and Greenpeace, Prof. Voorhoof said a few words and popped open a bottle of Cava.
After the dust clears and a plane takes Voorhoof back to Belgium, the Greenpeace Japan office and T2 team are tasked with winning freedom for Junichi and Toru and waiting to see if Voorhoof’s eloquent and expert opinion will even be permitted into the actual trial. In the meantime, the T2 defense team must prepare for the next pre-trial hearing August 4th and figure out how to get the Prosecutor's office to disclose information that they were instructed to handover. Go here for more on the human rights argument and Voorhoof’s legal opinion.
Outreach to the publiv will be the focus until the trial start date which has been pushed back yet again, this time until October 2nd. Plans full of colorful flare are being formed for participation in one of Japan’s most popular festivals which will take place in Aomori in August.
I have traveled to Aomori to provide some relief to the team there which runs the vivid Aomori T-shirt exhibit out of GP’s Aomori Communication Center (ACC). People can come to
see original T-shirt art from Greenpeace campaigns all over the world, other vintage Greenpeace paraphanalia, watch the whaling on trial video, get the scoop on other campaigns, and even add artwork to their own Greenpeace T. Read about the opening . Our US forests team would be proud to know that the Kleercut shirt seems to garner interest from people coming inside and Greenpeace Japan staff. You can see a slideshow of some of the T-shirts exhibited here.
I was leafletting today, getting passersby to come inside. A detective came in to get a background on me since I was new to the area. They are watching the ACC most of the time. We are restricted to the area in front of the ACC. For me this is fine. I have only been taught two phrases in Japanese for when I am leafletting and one is “Its just upstairs.”
The town is quaint, the countryside is breathtaking, and the ocean breeze is a great break from the exhaust of Tokyo sprawl. This is the place without key NGOs networking together, where one judge handles most criminal cases and whose decisions and recommendations usually lead to a conviction. I do hope, that by reaching one person at a time, including our US supporters we can do something positive toward the success of the T2 in this trial, for ending whaling in Japan, and challenging norms of suppression of freedom of speech in Japan.





The Latest on the Tokyo Two
June 18th, 2009 
4:15pm Tokyo
Yesterday during the 4th pre-trial hearing in the case of the Tokyo Two, Prof. Dirk Voorhoof defense counsel expert witness, submitted his legal opinion to the District Court of Aomori. It explained how under principles of the European Court of Human Rights, principles to which Japan has signed onto through the International Convenant of Civil and Political Rights, Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki were justified in their tactics of exposing a whale meat embezzlement scandal. According to Voorhoof, precedence would show that as campaigners for an NGO, the T2 are protected in their pursuit and obligation to contribute to public debate and democratic society in Japan. However, whether Voorhoof’s opinion will be accepted as evidence into the actual trial for the T2 is yet to be seen. See the previous entry of this blog for a summary of the Prof. Voorhoof’s legal opinion or read the complete statement just submitted to court.
Latest Controversy
Prof. Voorhoof was well-received by media at a press briefing regarding his opinion and the human rights implications of the T2 case. Reporters were also interested in another new development. On Monday, before the latest pre-trial, at the request of the court, the prosecutor’s office disclosed parts of a written statement given by the crew of the whaling fleet implicated in the whale meat embezzlement scandal exposed by Junichi and Toru. However, the core part of the statement has been whited out. The judge must now decide whether to proceed in spite of the prosecution’s lack of disclosure.
Read about Greenpeace’s dossier of evidence exposing the scandal, a timeline of events, and more.

Looking Forward


The Tokyo Two on Trial
Two weeks ago, the Japanese government was set back in its attempt to cover up a whale meat embezzlement scandal while prosecuting two brave Greenpeace activists. The court has agreed to hear key evidence the prosecution has fought to keep out of the trial of Junichi Sato and Toru Suzuki. Also, additional evidence held by the prosecutor's office may be forced to be made public.
On June 20th, it will be one year since the arrest of Junichi and Toru. In this time they have faced detention, police pressure, and a series of closed pre-trial proceedings. See the Timeline of the T2 story. We are glad that the full story will now be heard in court. Without pressure from activists around the globe, Junichi and Toru would not have this fighting chance. Please continue to take action and spread the word about the T2. I will be blogging from Japan in the coming weeks as I help the effort to free the Tokyo Two, an effort that has been galvanized by supporters and partners worldwide. Sign the petition: Free Junichi and Toru or Arrest Me Too!
See the video: Whaling on Trial

About Me
allisonkole
Washington, DC USA
Allison is the Campaigns Department Assistant located in Greenpeace US Headquarters, Washington, DC.
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