Monday, April 25, 2011

Power to the People (Re-Inventing Amnesty)

“I feel uneasy at the idea of a movement. I see every insight degenerating into dogma, and fresh thoughts freezing into lifeless party lines. Those who set out nobly to be their brother’s keeper sometimes end up becoming his jailer. Every emancipation has in it the seeds of a new slavery and every truth becomes a lie.” - I. F. Stone

When Peter Benenson founded Amnesty International in 1961 the liberal class was undergoing a transformation, from a group that pushed forward social progress and held back the privileged classes, to one that succumbed to opportunism and finally to fear. At 50 years old Amnesty has become the old man of liberal movements, one of the last great defences against the worst excesses of power. In the last two decades the pillars of the Irish liberal class - the press, universities, labour movement – have collapsed as effective counterweights to the corporate Irish state.  
An organisation such as Amnesty cannot expect to stand still and remain relevant when power and influence are moving from governments to federal institutions and corporations.  Amnesty must examine and implement new ways of influencing change in a world where decisions are driven by a desire to accumulate wealth, often at the expense of human rights and human life. A recent harrowing example of this is banks decision to bet on world food supplies, which has directly let to food riots and starvation in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh to name but a few. We can write letters to target individuals, but the amounts of money to be made gambling on food supplies of the poor is worth too much for unregulated banking elite to cease trading. That is not to say letter writing has become redundant, not at all, but that as the way governments and companies subvert and disempower individuals change, our response repertoire must change too.
As corporations and governments retreat away from their populace, submerging themselves in hi-tech security apparatus, internet surveillance and bureaucracy, Amnesty must move towards those people and engage with them on the frontline. This can be achieved by ‘Active Participation’, an empowering and enabling process through which rights holders participate in and influence the processes and decisions which affect their lives in order to gain recognition and attainment of their Human Rights.

Amnesty Ireland was one of the first sections
to use Active Participation in a campaign

Amnesty Ireland has been one of the first AI sections to use this concept in its recent Mental Health campaign. October 2008 AI established an ‘experts by experience’ group. The members have been at the forefront of the mental health movement in Ireland, having founded support organizations, advocated for change and supported peers. Amnesty worked with this group and together, the goals of the campaign were devised and strategic objectives listed. In addition to work with the experts by experience group, AI Ireland also consulted with over 130 people who have been affected by mental health difficulties, refining the campaign objectives. Instead of telling rights holders what rights they were entitled too and unilaterally demanding change for them, we brought them in and worked with them to achieve common goals.
The success of the Mental Health campaign shows the power active participation with rights holders can have. If we do not actively participate with those without power, those who suffer discrimination and abuse, those who struggle for justice, we are in danger of parroting the manufactured myths that serve the interests of the privileged. That is why at AI@50 we must not be afraid to embrace change within the movement and continue to push forward human rights and the empowerment of rights holders.



Sunday, March 13, 2011

Women Betrayed by Men they Supported

"STAY HOME, DON'T GET INVOLVED IN POLITICS"
Watching the scenes of uprising across the Middle East and North Africa in recent weeks it is impossible to deny that women have played a crucial role in the struggle for freedom and democracy. Despite their heroic role in Egypt, the post-revolution committee appointed to revise the constitution was all male, as human rights activist El-Saadawi put it “The blood of the women killed in the revolution is still wet, and we were being betrayed”.

Egyptian women try to head to Tahrir Square to commemorate International Women's Day
When women turned up in Tahrir Square, Cairo last week to celebrate International Women’s Day it didn’t go down well with the men. The women were harassed, jostled, sexually assaulted and told to go back home “where they belonged”. In Egypt women are routinely harassed for walking the streets and expected to “stay at home and raise presidents, not run for president” says journalist Fairda Helmy.

If the dramatic uprisings in the Arab world are to mean true change for the region then women’s rights could well be the barometer of a nations new freedom. Naomi Wolf said last week: “What is true for Egypt is true, to a greater or lesser extent, throughout the Arab world. When women change, everything changes, and women in the Muslim world are changing radically”.
We cannot be blind to the risks Muslim and Arab women take every day to uphold their beliefs in equality and justice.  A democratically elected female President in the Arab world is a revolution we should all be fighting for.

Sign the Petition.....

Take Action: http://amnesty.org/en/appeals-for-action/creating-new-egypt-must-include-women

Maynooth boys participate in 'Walk a Mile In Her Shoes'

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Violent and Deplorable Conditions at Psychiatric Hospitals

Earlier this month as part of our Mental Health Campaign MSU Amnesty went to see the Drama Society put on a magnificent production of ‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’. In the play, a rebellious patient McMurphy violently fights Nurse Ratched's rule which costs him his freedom, his health and, ultimately, his life. The novel is set in 1950s America, but could the same thing have happened to McMurphy today in Ireland?
 
St. Brendan’s Hospital
This week significant levels of violence at St. Brendan’s and St. Ita’s psychiatric hospitals has been reported by a European watchdog. At St. Brendan’s Hospital, the death by strangulation of a staff member by a female patient with a billiard cue was only avoided by a last minute by the security office. Meanwhile, an incident of similar nature has taken place in the female unit at St Ita’s hospital, when an elderly patient attempted to choke and other patient during her sleep, the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment has found.

The report found “poor material conditions” in many of the units visited, and that large scale dormitories combined with a lack of experienced staff contributed to a “volatile atmosphere”. In such an environment that staff’s role was downgraded from providing care and treatment to maintaining order. The living conditions were described by the delegation as being “scarcely compatible with the norms of modern psychiatry”.

MSU Amnesty society has welcomed this publication which criticises the way in which people detained in mental health facilities in Ireland are treated and demands the next government review the Mental Health Act 2001 and initiates legislation to drive towards comprehensive community care to ensure the human rights of all citizens detained by the state are upheld.
“One flew East
  One flew West
  And one flew over the cuckoo's nest.”


RP McMurphy





Monday, January 17, 2011

Iran reduce Ashtiani sentence, but execute a person every 8 hours!

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani has been sentenced to 10 years in jail instead of hanging, according to officials. This ‘pardon’ is certainly due to international pressure as the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said 47 prisoners, or an average of about one person every eight hours, have been put to death since the beginning of the new year.

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani
Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani: has been sentenced to 10 years in jail instead of hanging, according to officials

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a 43-year-old woman had been sentenced to death by stoning for adultery but Iran did not expect such an strong international outcry led by human rights organizations such as Amnesty International.

The reduction in sentence is certainly good news, however, Drewery Dyke, of Amnesty International, said: "Issuing old news about the fate of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, by way of a letter from a parliamentarian to the president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, is being used to distract from the more pressing news about the rate of executions in the country."

According to the International Campaign for Human Rights, Iran executes more people per capita than any other country, and in absolute numbers is second only to China. Iran executed at least 179 people in 2010 and 388 in 2009.

So while we can celebrate Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani’s sentence reduction we must not forget the hundreds being executed around the world who have not been lucky enough to have the same international outcry and continue our fight for their right to life.

“Government can’t be trusted to control its own bureaucrats or collect taxes equitably or fill a pothole, much less decide which of its citizens to kill.”
HELEN PREJEAN, Dead Man Walking




End it




Thursday, January 6, 2011

JAILBREAK!!!! (it's on like Donkey Kong)

It's second semester so by now your committee staged a battle of the bands, won the bake off, run out of petitions for people to sign and ended poverty and world hunger......twiddling your thumbs thinking of something to do you think....JAILBREAK!!!!

You've fund raised your butt off so you have the $$$$ and your international rep speaks 10 languages so you have skilled personal....the only question remains, who will you free??.......

The old Helicopter escape trick being performed in Brisbane
(if your group has a helicopter pilot you might consider this method)

Zhao Lianhai
Country: China
Guilty of: inciting social disorder
Saved babies lives so they stuck
him in prison
What was he really at?: Your not going to believe this....in 2008 eight babies died and 860 were hospitalised after a chemical was added to milk in order to cause it to appear to have a higher protein content. Zhao became a leader in the movement of parents to get restitution and treatment for their children. He called for a national memorial day for the victims. He also held a memorial ceremony in his home for parents of harmed children.
And they imprisoned him for 2.5 years for that?: Yep
Jailbreak rating: ***** (get Thin Lizzy ready!)



Liu Xiaobo
Country: China (again?...stop picking on the Chinese)
Guilty of: Inciting subversion of state power

A chair wins the Nobel Peace Prize
(the chair promised to hand over
the prize to Liu Xiaobo when it saw him)

What was he really at?: Democracy Lover....tut tut tut. Liu wrote the Charter 08 manifesto published on 10 December 2008, the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Since its release, more than 10,000 people inside and outside of China have signed the charter.
Didn't he win a prize?: The Nobel Peace Price 2010
Does he know he won it?: Probably not
Jailbreak rating: **** (but you can forget about your career in the Chinese Communist party if you break him out)




Binayak Sen

Country: India

Sedition: Who hasn't done it?

Guilty of: Sedition (isn't that what Gandhi was in prison for?...how ironic)
What was he really at?: A Doctor extending health care to poor people in the rural-tribal areas of India, he has also strongly criticized the government on human rights violations during anti-rebel operations, while advocating non-violent political engagement.
Jailbreak rating: **** (visit the Taj Mahal while we're there)



And finally......

Mordechai Vanunu
Country: Israel
Guilty of: Treason
If a female Mossad agent invites
you to Italy....think really hard about it.
What was he really at?: Trying to stop nuclear apocalypse. Citing his opposition to weapons of mass destruction, revealed details of Israel's nuclear weapons program to the British press in 1986. He was subsequently lured to Italy by a female Mossad agent (happens to the best of us), where he was drugged and kidnapped by Israeli intelligence agents
Jailbreak rating: *** (can be found wandering Jerusalem streets so might be the easiest)






Well that's your lot....pick one and get tunnelling!