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AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
PRESS RELEASE
25 May 2005 10:00
GMT
Report 2005: A dangerous new agenda
(London) Governments are betraying their promise of a world order
based on human rights and are pursuing a dangerous new agenda, said
Amnesty International today as it launched its annual assessment of
global human rights.
Speaking at the launch of the
Amnesty International
Report 2005, the organization's Secretary General Irene Khan
said that governments had failed to show principled leadership and must
be held to account.
"Governments are betraying their promises on human rights. A new agenda
is in the making with the language of freedom and justice being used to
pursue policies of fear and insecurity. This includes cynical attempts
to redefine and sanitise torture," said Irene Khan.
This new agenda, combined with the indifference and paralysis of the
international community, failed countless thousands of people in
humanitarian crises and forgotten conflicts throughout 2004.
In Darfur, the Sudanese government generated a human rights catastrophe
and the international community did too little too late to address the
crisis, betraying hundreds of thousands of people.
In Haiti, individuals responsible for serious human rights violations
were allowed to regain positions of power. In the eastern Democratic
Republic of Congo there was no effective response to the systematic rape
of tens of thousands of women, children and even babies. Despite the
holding of elections, Afghanistan slipped into a downward spiral of
lawlessness and instability. Violence was endemic in Iraq.
At a national level governments betrayed human rights at terrible cost
to ordinary people. Russian soldiers reportedly tortured, raped and
sexually abused Chechen women with impunity. Zimbabwe’s
government manipulated food shortages for political reasons.
The betrayal of human rights by governments was accompanied by
increasingly horrific acts of terrorism as armed groups stooped to new
levels of brutality.
"The televised beheading of captives in Iraq, the taking of over a
thousand people hostage including hundreds of children in a school in
Beslan and the massacre of hundreds of commuters in Madrid shocked the
world. Yet governments are failing to confront their lack of success in
addressing terrorism, persisting with failed but politically-convenient
strategies. Four years after 9/11, the promise to make the world a safer
place remains hollow," said Ms Khan.
The US administration’s attempts to dilute the absolute ban on torture
through new policies and quasi-management speak such as "environmental
manipulation", "stress positions" and "sensory manipulation", was one of
the most damaging assaults on global values.
Despite the US administration’s repeated use of the language of justice
and freedom there was a huge gap between rhetoric and reality. This was
starkly illustrated by the failure to conduct a full and independent
investigation into the appalling torture and ill-treatment of detainees
by US soldiers in Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison and the failure to hold
senior individuals to account.
"The USA, as the unrivalled political, military and economic
hyper-power, sets the tone for governmental behaviour worldwide. When
the most powerful country in the world thumbs its nose at the rule of
law and human rights, it grants a licence to others to commit abuse with
impunity," said Irene Khan.
Many governments showed a shocking contempt for the rule of law. Nigeria
granted Charles Taylor, former President of Liberia, refugee status
despite his indictment for killings, mutilations and rape. Israel’s
construction of a barrier inside the occupied West Bank ignored the
International Court of Justice opinion that this violated international
human rights and humanitarian law. Arbitrary detentions and unfair
trials took place under security legislation in a number of countries.
There were also signs of hope in 2004 said Ms Khan.
Legal challenges to the new agenda included US Supreme Court judgements
on Guantánamo detainees and the ruling by the UK Law Lords on indefinite
detention without charge or trial of "terrorist suspects". Public
pressure included the spontaneous turnout of millions of people in Spain
protesting against the Madrid bombings, popular uprisings in Georgia and
Ukraine and the growing debate on political change in the Middle East.
"Increasingly, the duplicity of governments and the brutality of armed
groups are being challenged - by judicial decisions, popular resistance,
public pressure and UN reform initiatives. The challenge for the human
rights movement is to harness the power of civil society and push
governments to deliver on their human rights promises," said Irene Khan.
For a full copy of the Amnesty International Report 2005: the state
of the world's human rights please go to:
http://www.amnesty.org/report2005
Reference:
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGPOL100062005
Public Document
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office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566
Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW. web:
http://www.amnesty.org
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