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World March for Peace and Nonviolence

Awareness March for nonviolence From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

World March for Peace and Nonviolence
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The World March for Peace and Nonviolence is an initiative of World without Wars, an international organization which has worked for peace and nonviolence since 1995 and was created by the Humanist Movement.[1]

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Logo of World March for Peace and Nonviolence

The project of the World March was launched in 2008.[citation needed]

The March started October 2 (Gandhi's birthday), 2009 in Wellington, New Zealand and finished on January 2, 2010 in Punta de Vacas, Mendoza, Argentina. The March was intended to rise worldwide awareness for nonviolence. Concrete demands of the March are: abolition of nuclear weapons; withdrawal of invading troops from occupied territories; the progressive and proportional reduction of conventional weapons; the signing of non-aggression treaties among nations and the renunciation by governments of war as a way to resolve conflicts.[2]

The World March for Peace and Nonviolence includes millions of individuals, on six continents in 90 countries, traveling some 160,000 kilometers.[3][4]

A second March was held on October 2, 2019 in Madrid and circles back to the same location and finished on March 8, 2020. [5][6]

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Demands put forward by world march

  • Nuclear disarmament at a global level.[7]
  • The immediate withdrawal of invading troops from occupied territories.[citation needed]
  • The progressive and proportional reduction of conventional weapons.[citation needed]
  • The signing of non-aggression treaties between countries.[citation needed]
  • The renunciation by governments of the use of war as a means to resolve conflicts.[citation needed]

Notable endorsers

One of the key strategies to promote the March is to receive endorsements from personalities and organizations in a variety of fields.[citation needed]

References

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