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:: Thursday, March 17, 2005 ::

 
    Milford Daily News Article on March 16th demonstration
    Activists protest CAT bulldozer use by Israel: Firm claims no legal right to police use of equipment
    By Sara Withee / Daily News Staff
    Thursday, March 17, 2005

    MILFORD -- Activists protesting the death of a young woman who lost her life
    while trying to stop the Israeli military from bulldozing a Palestinian home
    brought their message to Quarry Drive yesterday.

    The group of 40 staged a two-hour rally near the entrance of Milton
    CAT, which sells products by Caterpillar, the Illinois-based maker of the
    bulldozers the Israeli military uses to level homes.

    The group handed a Milton CAT representative a letter at the end of the
    company's driveway yesterday while Police Chief Thomas O'Loughlin and
    several officers stood by. No problems were reported.

    The Milton CAT representative released a statement from Caterpillar
    that said the company shares the world's concern about the Middle East
    situation, but that it has neither the legal right nor the means to police
    use of its equipment.

    The members of the BootCat Chapter of the Boston Committee for
    Palestinian Rights and Boston to Palestine support group for the
    International Solidarity Movement vowed to return each Saturday until April
    13, when Caterpillar holds its annual meeting in Chicago. Shareholders are
    expected to consider a resolution stating Caterpillar is violating its code
    of ethics with sales to Israel for demolitions.

    Yesterday's rally marked the second anniversary of Rachel Corrie's
    death. The 23-year-old human rights worker from Washington state was killed
    when she stood in front of a Palestinian home and tried to block the Israeli
    military from demolishing it with a Caterpillar D9 bulldozer.

    Activists have long called for a U.S. investigation into Corrie's death
    and earlier this week, a lawsuit was filed against Caterpillar on her
    parents' behalf in U.S. District Court.

    Yesterday, Jeff Halper, of the Israeli Committee Against House
    Demolitions, told the group the Caterpillar's D9 bulldozers are larger than
    those commonly seen on United States soil.

    "It's a powerful machine that's specifically designed to demolish
    Palestinian homes," Halper said. "That's its only function."

    Halper said Corrie believed peace overseas is as important as peace at
    home and wondered why the United States didn't intervene.

    "This wasn't a conflict far away, but in a part of the world she lived
    in and simply as a part of the world, she felt the need to act," Halper
    said.

    The group shared some of Corrie's writings and Halper said Corrie was
    right to call the Israeli government's action "genocide," because
    demolishing homes strips the Palestinian people of themselves.

    "It also talks about destroying their identity and their cultural
    heritage," Halper said. "In other words, the whole point of human rights is
    based on human dignity."

    Israel has knocked down at least 12,000 homes since 1967, according to
    Halper's organization. Building permits are hard for Palestinians to obtain,
    making the ongoing destruction even more painful, said Ridgely Fuller, 55,
    of Sherborn.

    "It's the destruction of someone's home and to have to sit there and
    watch it, it's very painful," she said.

    Kathy Roberts, 65, of Cambridge, said visiting Palestinian refugee
    camps in Lebanon shows the toll of the decades of war -- and even acceptance
    from the Palestinian people.

    "All I had heard about was the violence before," Roberts said. "What I
    came away with was how peaceful these people are to be living with these
    conditions."

    Roberts said Corrie's story adds to an already desperate situation.

    "I was an activist at her age and I brought up my children to be
    activists and it really brought it home," Roberts said. "I was really shaken
    and knew that I had to do more than just sign petitions."

    http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=93293

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