HRF'S E-NEWSLETTER | March 22nd, 2011 | EMAIL TO A FRIEND» | DONATE» |
Some are women's rights activists; most are human rights activists who happen to be women. As women, they face unique challenges, from sexism to cultural bias to repression, which often takes the form of gender-based violence. But time and again, women activists refuse to be silenced. At Human Rights First, we're privileged to work with an array of courageous women leaders. We support their work, highlight their struggles, and amplify their voices. And we partner with them to press the U.S. government, American businesses, and international organizations to support human rights. For example, we teamed up Pakistani activist Shehrbano Taseer to block a proposed blasphemy code at the United Nations, and we brought Esraa Abdel Fattah, a leader in Egypt's revolution, to the United States so that together we could urge policy makers and tech companies to protect the ability of activists to use the Internet without fear of persecution. To commemorate Women's History Month, we're honoring the heroism of women fighting for human rights around the world. Please read their stories and support their efforts. Sincerely, Elisa Massimino President and CEO Human Rights First Russia is Syria's top supplier of arms, and Russian weapons have been found at the scene of atrocities. In January, Rosoboronexport signed a deal with Syria to sell 36 combat jets capable of hitting ground targets, and the company's spokesperson says it has no plans to stop. At the same time Rosoboronexport benefits from a nearly $1 billion contract with the U.S. Department of Defense—signed on May 26, 2011, months after the crackdown began. The U.S. should cancel the contract immediately. Brian Dooley of Human Rights First—who has done groundbreaking reporting on the abuses of the Bahraini regime—had been denied access to the country during February. But he's back in Bahrain, where he is reporting from the appeal hearing of 20 medics who were detained, tortured, and sentenced to long prison terms in sham military trials. The regime took them into custody last year after they provided medical care to protestors. We've documented the human rights problems at Bagram, where many suspects are detained indefinitely based on secret evidence and have no access to lawyers. The transfer agreement threatens to exacerbate these problems and raises concerns about the potential for widespread abuse. The agreement contains no mechanism to ensure due process or humane treatment. As Daphne Eviatar of Human Rights First told CBS news, "Afghan security services have a history of using torture to elicit confessions, and that was found just within the past year by the United Nations, so it's not clear from this agreement how the United States will make sure that's not happening." The deal may be in the best interest of both the government and Khan, but it's not in the best interest of justice. As Melina Milazzo of Human Rights First points out in the Washington Post, Khan was charged with terrorism and conspiracy, which are not war crimes under international law and were not originally crimes in the military commission system. "Prosecuting people for conduct that was not a crime when they committed the act violates the ex post facto prohibition enshrined in the Constitution and the international legal principle of legality," Milazzo says. That's not the example we should be setting. This was only the seventh conviction in the military commission system and the first of a so-called "high-value detainee." Federal courts, by contrast, have secured more than 400 convictions of terrorists since 9-11 while protecting the rights of suspects. The military commission system is a risky strategy for cases of such importance. The United States should recommit itself to trying terrorism cases in the federal courts, where there is a wealth of experience and a solid track record. U.S. Prepares to Continue Egypt Military Aid Amid Dispute Nicole Gaouette, Bloomberg, March 18, 2012 Detention for Immigrants That Looks Less Like Prison Kirk Semple and Tim Eaton, New York Times, March 13, 2012 U.S. must aid Afghan judicial system Daphne Eviatar, Politico: Opinion, March 13, 2012 War's Strange Bedfellows Mark Thompson, Time, March 12, 2012
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