Wir stellen ein
We’re hiring!
That sign greeted a couple of hundred participants in IPPNW’s “Human Target” congress as our buses approached the Heckler & Koch headquarters in Oberndorf this morning in a steady rain.
H&K, the largest manufacturer of rifles and handguns in Europe, is increasing its workforce in order to keep up with the demand for weapons that have killed two million people since its foundation in 1949, according to Jürgen Grässlin, the foremost expert on German weapon exports. That’s 114 people killed every day, on average, by a firearm made either here, in Oberndorf, or in one of the H&K facilities with a “legal” export license outside of Germany. Read more…
Freedom of speech and steel rain
Last night, the Lord Mayor of Villingen-Schwenningen, Dr. Rupert Kubon, welcomed about 300 people to his city in southwest Germany at the opening of IPPNW’s international congress on the social and health effects of the global arms trade. A member of Mayors for Peace and a former Chair of the Pax Christi Commission for Non-violence, Dr. Kubon had taken on the city council, which initially wanted no part of this event, and somehow persuaded them to co-host the congress and to provide the venue.
What was the city council’s problem with a meeting of health professionals and peace activists meant to draw attention to the global carnage caused by firearms? As it happens, the largest German producer of handguns, assault rifles, submachine guns, and grenade launchers—Heckler & Koch—is in the Lord Mayor’s backyard and is a serious economic and political force in this country. Read more…
The Way to Villingen

I wanted to write this blog about a week ago. See, we had the idea in the Berlin IPPNW office that we should write about what it was like to be part of the organisation of a congress like “Human Target“, starting on Thursday in Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany. And now here I am on the train with eight long hours, at last, to spare. Before today there was no time at all to write blogs.
Of all of us in the Berlin office, I had perhaps the least to do for this Congress. Mainly because I had the brainwave early on in the proceedings and told Frank – our Executive Director – that he should take on Elena to help out. Which he did, thank God, and also Isa. Although the local group in V-S, under Helmut’s fantastic leadership, have been working round the clock getting all the logistics set up, we really needed Elena’s and Isa’s help. I was very busy with ICAN and the preparations for the big action at the German nuclear weapons base at Büchel in August, so I knew I couldn’t take on the usual load that I’d take for other congresses we’ve done in the past.
My job was to help structure the planning of the congress organisation using a project structure plan that we have refined over several congresses. In this plan we’re able to quickly check through all the different tasks, assign responsibilities, make a timetable and set deadlines. So Frank and Helmut had the job of running the show as project managers and the rest of the team divided up the rest of the work. In essence there were actually three teams working on the Congress: the local team, the Berlin team and the Boston team.
Angelika and Samantha worked on advertising the Congress through setting up a website, a facebook event and writing to the press. Flyers and posters were designed, printed and distributed. Helmut worked on the programme with Maria in Boston and Frank in Berlin, mostly late in the evening or well into the night because of his work as a busy GP and the time difference. Hours were spent on the telephone to embassies in Africa and other parts of the world, trying to persuade the staff to give people visas – who sometimes had travelled hundreds of kilometres just to find out they had changed the whole application system. Speakers cancelled and new speakers had to be found. Everything had to be translated into English for the website and the programme and then also proofread. Registration had to be set up, name tags printed, confirmations sent out. While I am writing this blog, Jens-Peter and Lale are loading up the van with materials to drive down tomorrow to Southern Germany and begin setting up for the Congress.
That’s just a brief sketch of what has been done and doesn’t do justice to the (probably) thousands of e-mails, telephone calls, faxes, letters, photocopies, skype conferences and meetings over a year, involving hundreds of people. It doesn’t say anything about the planning of the action at Heckler & Koch in Oberndorf or the bike tour from Ulm, visiting and choosing hotels and venues, organising transport and all the rest of it.
And from only doing my little part – mostly translation and correction, sometimes brainstorming with Frank or helping him with international communication – the main thing that strikes me most about all of this is the substance of what we are doing. Bringing people from all over the world to this little corner of Germany where the weapons are made that kill people in the countries those people are coming from. Especially the doctors that treat patients wounded by bullets from those guns, with their stories of those people and their communities. For the community living in the shadow of Heckler & Koch that never talk about the killing that is being exported from the town just down the road, it is an opportunity to witness the effects of those exports. For those visiting Oberndorf, it is an opportunity to make their feelings and the suffering in their countries known. Most of all, it is a chance to make a mark on the landscape of suffering caused by small arms by calling for an end to the export of death and terror.
I, for one, am looking forward to this.
Xanthe Hall is international campaigner for IPPNW Germany
“Bikes not arms” on the road to Villingen
Taking their protest against small arms trade to the streets, 30 young IPPNW activists from all over the world will cycle from the German arms manufacturer Walther in Ulm to the small Black Forest town of Villingen, where IPPNW is organizing the Small Arms Congress “Human Target.” From 26 May 26-30, the bikers will meet politicians, organize public demonstrations, give interviews and spread information on the impact of the Global Arms trade in the region.
The cyclists have started their own blog, where you can follow them on their journey to Villingen.
Sustainable world depends on nuclear abolition
The risk of nuclear weapons and current progress towards abolition
by Andrew Kanter, Ira Helfand, and John Burroughs
Nuclear weapons continue to pose an existential threat to human civilization. Their elimination must be our highest priority if we hope to bequeath a sustainable world to our children.
During the Cold War it was generally understood that a large scale war between the US and the Soviet Union would be a disaster not just for them, but for the entire planet. With the fall of the Berlin Wall there has been a dramatic decline in our awareness of the danger of nuclear war, but the weapons have not gone away. There remain nearly 20,000 nuclear warheads in the arsenals of the world and there is no indication that the nuclear weapons states intend to eliminate these weapons. Read more…
Carl Bildt — Is he serious?
Carl Bildt, the Swedish Minister of Foreign Affairs, feels that the South African-led joint humanitarian appeal for the elimination of nuclear weapons, signed by 80 NPT Member States, is “below my position.”
We in SLMK, the Swedish affiliate of IPPNW, have worked hard over a long time to resurrect the failing dedication to nuclear disarmament in the Swedish Foreign Office. We tried repeatedly to get the MFA to sign on to the South African paper at the NPT PrepCom. We also reminded the MFA that when Sweden now leaves the New Agenda Coalition (NAC) group, which it once founded and which was so important at the 2000 NPT Review, Sweden should search to develop other means to work for nuclear abolition.
We had no success. The MFA prefers to align itself with the nuclear-weapon states. Read more…
ICAN—the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons—has started a global petition drive ridiculing the “stupid” decision by the world’s nuclear-weapon states to endanger our survival and calling for the commencement of negotiations on a treaty banning nuclear weapons. Noting that there are still 19,000 nuclear weapons in the world, with some 2,000 on high alert and ready to be launched, the petition warns that “we are potentially only minutes away from the horror of seeing an entire city flattened in an instant, killing hundreds of thousands of people with no adequate humanitarian relief possible.”
“We all do stupid things,” ICAN stated in launching the petition. “Some stupid things are far more concerning than others.” Including playing with nuclear fire.
You can read and sign the petition on the ICAN website.
Japan admits the obvious
When some 50 protesters gathered outside the Japanese Mission to the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva yesterday, questioning that country’s refusal to sign onto a joint statement on the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons submitted to the NPT PrepCom by 74 other non-nuclear-weapon states, Ambassador Mari Amano felt obliged to give an answer. Why, after all, would the only country ever to have felt the full effects of atomic bombings find it difficult to condemn their existence on humanitarian grounds and join an appeal for their total elimination? Read more…
74 NPT States issue humanitarian appeal for abolition
The number of countries demanding the elimination of nuclear weapons as a humanitarian imperative grew to 74 today, when South Africa read a joint statement on the humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons on behalf of that many delegations to the 2013 Non-Proliferation Treaty Preparatory Committee in Geneva.
Declaring that “our countries are deeply concerned about the catastrophic humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons,” the States criticized the NPT for ignoring its very reason for existence “for many years,” even though “the humanitarian impact of nuclear weapons has increasingly been recognised as a fundamental and global concern that must be at the core of all deliberations on nuclear disarmament and nuclear non-proliferation.” Read more…
The legacy of chemical warfare in Iran
Twenty-five years ago, in 1988, Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons against the Kurdish town of Halabja. This atrocity is what we most often talk about when we decry chemical warfare. We do not remember Sadasht and all the other cities in Iran that were also attacked by Iraq. We forget that Iran is a country which has suffered, by far, much more than any other from the terrible effects of mustard gas and nerve gas. This upsets the Iranians today, with good reason. Read more…





