Peace & Demilitarization
ISSUES
Information on Peace and Demilitarization
Please find below links to articles, statements, resolutions, videos and internal education on peace and demilitarization.
An Open Letter to William Ruto
By Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o Dear William Ruto, The images of your recent State visit to the USA were very disturbing to me and to every
GPAM Resolution on Militarism in West Africa
On September 20, 2023, the Global Pan African Movement, North America Delegation (GPAM) held an internal education session on the successive coups that have happened
Internal Education: U.S.-Africa Relations, Regarding the 2022 US Strategy Towards Africa
Pan-Africanists have long argued that the expropriation and exploitation of African people and resources have been central to the accumulation strategies of capitalist imperial states.
GPAM Resolutions on Cop City
Despite the organized opposition of the people of Atlanta on the construction of Cop City, on Tuesday, June 6, 2023, the Atlanta City Council approved
Sudanese Revolution Enters a Pivotal Stage
BY HORACE G. CAMPBELL – MAHDER H. SEREKBERHANAlso published on counterpunch.org Military situation in Sudan, as of 20 April 2023. Photograph Source: ElijahPepe – CC BY-SA 4.0
The Global Pan African Movement Statement on the March 18th Action for Peace in Washington DC
The Global Pan African Movement, North America, has always been a movement of peace. Throughout multiple historical junctures, our movement has promoted peace and stood
GPAM condemns the killing of Manuel Esteban, Paez Teran, Tyre Nichols and Anthony Lowe Jr.
The Global Pan African Movement (GPAM) North America condemns the brutal killing of Tyre Nichols by the former members of the Memphis Police Department. This
GPAM Resolutions on Libya
The following resolutions were agreed upon during the Global Pan African Movement, North America, January, 2023 Internal Education:
GPAM Statement on Mali and Burkina Faso Federation
Mali and Burkina Faso have been locked in an anti-imperialist struggle against France. Both societies have long histories of mobilizing popular forces for African self-rule.