Dear friends,
Here's a quick report back on recent campaigning at Avaaz. Our
community has grown like wildfire and is becoming really extraordinary
-- the pace and impact of our advocacy is intense. In just the last 8
weeks, we've run 9 major national and global campaigns on issues
ranging from climate change to Iran to Guantanamo. Much more remains to
be done on all these issues -- but together we're contributing in
powerful ways. Here are some highlights from the last 8 weeks:
Brazilian rainforest - Brazilian Avaaz members made 14000 phone calls
and sent 30,000 online messages to President Lula's office in two
days(!) and in the 11th hour successfully reversed a law that would
hand over much of the Amazon rainforest to agrobusiness for
exploitation - this was a major victory on climate change since the
Amazon consumes enormous amounts of the greenhouse gasses that are
warming the earth.
G8 Summit - last week 130,000 Avaaz members signed a petition in 48
hours calling for the G8 industrial countries to limit global warming
to 2 degrees celsius - focusing on shaming 3 countries who were
blocking progress. The petition was delivered at the summit to UK Prime
Minister Gordon Brown (see image), along with giant personalized
postcards.
Outside the summit, Avaaz members stripped down to green underwear in a
humorous theatrical delivery of the campaign's message that generated
substantial media coverage (pictured). As Avaaz and partners built
pressure in Italy and around the world, the blocking countries
relented, and the G8 leaders agreed to the 2 degree goal! However, they
failed to agree on specific actions to make the goal a reality -- our
challenge now is to make sure leaders live up to their rhetorical
commitments with a binding global treaty at the UN summit in Copenhagen
this December.
Iran Protests - our community rapidly responded to the election crisis
in Iran with an opinion poll to gauge the views of ordinary Iranians, a
petition to world leaders to withhold recognition of the new President
until the crackdown on protests ceased, and a fundraiser to support
technology that would allow Iranians to freely access the internet. The
rapidly deteriorating security situation has made it difficult to
conduct the poll (final word on that coming this week), but the
technology fundraiser has raised over a hundred thousand dollars to
support the best tools for Iranians to access the internet and
communicate freely. The situation in Iran remains uncertain, and we
will continue to both support freedom of expression and oppose those
who would exploit this crisis to justify military action against Iran.
Japan climate targets - In Japan, we raised the alarm as the Prime
Minister Taro Aso was about to choose a damagingly weak climate
targets. Funded by small online donations, Avaaz ran a national opinion
poll that showed that 63% of Japanese people wanted strong targets,
publicized it in the press, in a full page ad in the country's largest
business newspaper, and one in the Aso's favourite comic book (see
image). Internationally, Avaaz ran a front page ad in the Financial
Times, and Avaaz members demonstrated and met with Japanese climate
negotiators at summits in Paris and Bonn.
At last, the Prime Minister announced a target stronger than polluting
industries had urged -- but far from strong enough to stop catastrophic
climate change. So we redoubled the pressure with a widely-covered
international press conference dubbing the Japanese leader "George W.
Aso" -- comparing him to Bush for holding back progress on climate
change.
Free Burma's political prisoners - Over 400,000 of us signed a major
petition to UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon asking him to make the
release of Nobel prize winning political prisoner Aung San Suu Kyi and
other political prisoners his top priority. The petition was delivered
in an extended meeting with Moon's office and in a press conference at
the UN in New York. The UN chief issued a strong statement backing the
release of Suu Kyi and traveled to Burma to attempt to meet with her,
but was rebuffed by Burma's military junta. International pressure did
cause the junta to delay a new show trial to extend Aung San Suu Kyi's
prison sentence, but it will take much more pressure to secure her
release.
United States and Torture - A global fundraiser and petition on
stopping torture and closing Guantanamo prison allowed Avaaz to secure
a giant, 9 story billboard just blocks from the White House in the
heart of Washington DC to deliver our message -- but at the last minute
the company selling the ad space refused, despite members of the US
congress offering to help unveil the billboard in a press conference.
Avaaz has now secured an alternative option for delivering our edgy
message that will have Washington DC buzzing with our call for justice.
UN Climate Summit - At a major summit on climate change in Bonn, Avaaz
recruited among members in Germany to help our partners organize a
massive 500 person aerial photo spelling out 'Yes You Can' as a message
to leaders discussing climate targets (see photo). It helped raise the
profile and urgency of these faltering but urgent talks. Avaaz also
sent a 16-person lobbying/activist team to the summit negotiations and
members in 10 key countries joined "negotiator tracking teams" that are
following and responding to urgent needs to press individual country
negotiators at these summits.
Peru - Avaaz arranged with local indigenous and top political allies to
deliver a global petition against new laws that would cause massive
devastation to the Peruvian rainforest and its people, taking out an ad
in the national newspaper (see image).
The ad and campaign generated much attention, and the domestic and
international pressure worked, for now -- the Peruvian congress has
revoked the controversial laws!
Israel - As Prime Minister Netanyahu prepared to make a speech
responding to Obama's historic Cairo address and demand that Israel
stop illegal settlements of Palestinian land, Avaaz took out a front
page ad in a major newspaper - Haaretz - delivering a joint petition
from global and Israeli Avaaz members edgily asking Netanyahu to 'be
more like Obama' and stop the settlements. Netanyahu has so far
refused, but we're helping to build an unprecedented wave of Israeli
and global pressure and attention on this issue.
The petitions, fundraisers, rallies, and lobbying campaigns our
community is doing are having an incredible impact. Avaaz has grown by
50,000 people a week and is now almost 3.6 million engaged citizens in
every country of the world -- and we're truly global - operating in 14
languages our community has 25,000 members in Singapore, 35,000 in
South Africa, 130,000 in Italy, 50,000 in Mexico... There hasn't really
been a community like ours before, able to rapidly and effectively
mobilize people power all over the world to the greatest needs and
concerns of all human beings -- it's a reason for hope.
It's also an exciting journey -- looking forward to taking on the next 8 weeks, and 8 months, and 8 years together!
With hope,
Ricken, Alice, Pascal, Ben, Veronique, Paul, Graziela, Brett, Raluca,
Luis, Raj, Milena, Paula, Iain, Taren, Margaret and the whole Avaaz
team.
PS - To see some of the highlights of Avaaz campaigning in 2007 and 2008 and leave a comment, click here:
https://secure.avaaz.org/e..n/report_back_2/
And to check out other recent Avaaz campaigning highlights like our
climate victory in Germany, our messages to Obama wall in DC, the
delivery of our Swine Flu petition to the WHO, our Green Recovery march
at G20 Summit in London, or our support to Tibetan organizations to
break the blackout on their communications -- visit the Avaaz blog:
http://www.avaaz.org/blog/..en/.