palestine

London CND co-chair's speech at the G7/Free Palestine demo

London CND co-chair Carol Turner delivered a speech in support of the Palestinian people at the Resist G7: Justice for Palestine Protest in London on Sat 12 June.

“The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament stands shoulder to shoulder with the people of Palestine against the brutality of the nuclear-armed Israeli state.

Today is a Day of Action for International Justice. What better illustrates that injustice than Israel’s long and violent oppression of the people of Palestine?

There is no equals sign between the military force of Israel and the resistance of the Palestinian people.

* * *

The G7 meeting taking place right now in Cornwall brings together some of the world’s most powerful political leaders. They are planning how to defend a system that creates injustice and inequality on a mammoth scale.

A system that stands aside while the people of Palestine are last in line for Covid vaccines.

A system that stands aside while the people of Palestine are forcibly evicted from their homes, and their children abducted and thrown in jail.

A system that stands aside while the people of Palestine are tortured and murdered every day of every week – year after long year.

* * *

And to protect their privileges and profits of the Global North, the G7 countries are armed to the teeth.

They are responsible for the overwhelming majority of global arms sales. And they account for one third of the world’s nuclear-armed powers.

* * *

CND’s message to the G7 is this:

Stop militarism and war

Use our resources to deal with the climate catastrophe and health pandemics.

Protect the human security of the majority, not the privileges of the few.

We want a world where people and planet come first. And we do not hesitate to say:

Free free Palestine !

Free free Palestine !

Free free Palestine !”

London CND says Free Palestine

CND was prominent on the 29th May Free Palestine demo, one of the biggest for many years. As the G7 is coming to Cornwall, we’re taking to the streets again this Saturday to demand no more complicity with Israeli apartheid. Why? The G7 includes the biggest suppliers of arms and military technology to the Israeli state, which are vital to enforce Israel’s regime of oppression.

London CND Co-Chairs Carol Turner and Hannah Kemp-Welch (left) pictured here in Hyde Park with CND general secretary Kate Hudson.

London CND Co-Chairs Carol Turner and Hannah Kemp-Welch (left) pictured here in Hyde Park with CND general secretary Kate Hudson.

  • Join us outside 10 Downing Street at 1pm this Saturday! Our message: 'Stop militarism and war – use our resources to deal with the climate catastrophe, pandemics and inequality’. CND placards will be there.

  • If you can’t come, CND encourages all its supporters to take a selfie with a note/poster showing why you’re against the G7. Send to web@resistG7.org.

Videos from London CND's 2019 Conference

If you missed our conference in January, no fear - all the sessions were recorded on video and are available now on YouTube. You can watch them all below!

Palestinian Ambassador Dr Hasan Zumlot


Dr Hasam Zumlot Q&A


Catherine West MP and Ann Feltham from CAAT

Video interview with Medea Benjamin of Code Pink USA


Rae Street, former CND Vice Chair, and Carol Turner, London CND


Rebecca Johnson, ICAN, and Bruce Kent, CND

Hannah Kemp-Welch, CND, and Sara Medi Jones, acting CND Vice-Chair


Jonathan Bartley, Green Party Co-Leader, and Nobu Ono, SOAS CND



Trump Is Giving Palestinians a Choice. We’ll Choose Dignity.

By Husam Zomlot

This piece first published in the New York Times, Sept. 25, 2018

RAMALLAH, West Bank — My family and I moved to Washington in April 2017, just a few months after President Trump took office. I’d been sent as the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s general delegation to the United States — effectively the Palestinian ambassador in Washington.

At the time, the new administration said it wanted to forge a comprehensive and lasting peace in the Middle East. This seemed like a long shot given Mr. Trump’s positions and his close association with some of Israel’s most extreme American supporters. Still, we Palestinians wanted to give this effort a chance.

One of my first tasks was preparing for a visit in May by the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas. My team and I began to meet with officials at the White House, the State Department and Congress. We also held encouraging meetings with universities, churches, think tanks and the news media, in which I saw how American opinions are changing on the Palestinian struggle for freedom and independence.

At the same time, my family began to get used to our new home. My son, Saeed, then 6, and my 5- year-old daughter, Alma, began school. My wife, Suzan, who trained as a biomedical scientist, took time off as our children adjusted to their new life and I started my demanding job. In no time, we all made many wonderful American friends. It was a hopeful new beginning.

A few months later, things changed radically. Although our relationships with the American people — including the American Jewish communities — were growing, political ties with the Trump administration deteriorated. In December, President Trump announced the United States’ recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and his intention to move the American Embassy in Israel there. By that point, it had become clear that the White House was fully embracing the right- wing Israeli agenda.

The situation has gotten even worse since. In May, the United States officially moved its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, at which point I was recalled by Mr. Abbas to the occupied West Bank, where I remain. More recently, the Trump administration has taken even more pointless and vindictive steps toward the Palestinian people. In August, the White House decided to defund the United Nations agency that helps Palestinian refugees. The effort to punish the Palestinians continues. The administration appears intent on cutting off all aid, even to hospitals.

I haven’t been spared this vindictiveness. This month, the administration ordered the closing of the Palestinian mission in Washington, my office. And it has announced that it plans to revoke my family’s visas by Oct. 10.

We are in the middle of a political and diplomatic crisis. I resent, of course, the toll this is taking on my family. But as a diplomat, I can see the upside. This situation presents three strategic opportunities.

First, it frees the Palestinians from the shackles of a failed 27-year-old, American-led peace process, unleashing more of our energy to work with the international community. At our invitation, dozens of countries will attend a meeting in New York this week to discuss restarting international peace efforts.

Second, it provides an opportunity to correct the American-Palestinian bilateral relationship. In 1987, Congress designated the P.L.O. as a terrorist organization. This law, among others, contributed to the United States’ failure as a mediator. Despite the American-sponsored Madrid peace conference in 1991, the signing of the Oslo accords at the White House in 1993, the numerous bilateral agreements and generous American aid program, this label was never removed. We know this process drags on — Nelson Mandela was officially classified as a terrorist by the United States until 2008 — but it’s time to do so. Our diplomatic mission in Washington must be reopened only once this law is repealed.

Third, this crisis will help redirect Palestinian attention away from just high-level American officials and toward an equally, if not more, important investment: long-term engagement directly with the American people. American public opinion, especially among young people, is shifting toward supporting peace and Palestinian rights.

My family left the United States a few days ago. While as a father I am dismayed that my children had to change schools three times in one year, as an ambassador I feel a sense of national fulfillment. The Trump administration has given us a choice: Either we lose our rights or we lose our relationship with this administration. We took the choice that any dignified people would have taken.

Peace is never about extortion, coercion or blackmail. It is about vision, leadership, trust and investment. The Trump administration lacks all of those. In seeking liberation from the Israeli occupation, which steals our land and denies us our most basic human rights, we are demanding no more than what Americans would demand for themselves: freedom, liberty and equality.

I’m not sure when I will be back in the United States. I’ll miss all of the great people I met there. But even in my short time there, it was clear that there is much hope for peace and justice. I am confident the United States will one day restore commitment to the legitimate rights and aspirations of the Palestinian people. I hope that day will come soon.

Husam Zomlot (@hzomlot) is the strategic affairs adviser to President Mahmoud Abbas.


Join London CND for our 2019 conference!

We’re really excited to announce the details of this year’s London CND conference - with the theme ‘Trump’s finger on the nuclear button.’

We’ll be exploring themes of global conflict, nuclear escalation and grassroots resistance, with speakers including Catherine West MP, Ambassador Husam Zomlot, and Medea Benjamin from Code Pink USA.

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Tickets are free, and you can book yours here.

We look forward to seeing you!