Monthly Archives: March 2009

Human Rights Today: 3-31-09

Today’s update of human rights events around the world.

GUATEMALA: Threats and Attacks Against Human Rights Defenders Must Be Investigated

Amnesty International today urged the Guatemalan authorities to immediately and thoroughly investigate attacks against those involved in opening the country’s police archives containing information on atrocities committed by the security forces during Guatemala’s internal armed conflict. Common Dreams

WORLD: Number of Chronically Hungry Tops 1 Billion

GlobeThe number of chronically hungry people has surpassed the 1bn mark for the first time as the economic crisis compounds the impact of high food prices, the United Nations’ top agriculture official has warned. Common Dreams

SPAIN: Spanish court mulls US torture case

A Spanish court has agreed to consider charging six former members of the US administration over alleged torture at Guantanamo Bay, The New York Times has reported. al Jazeera

ISRAEL: Settlers attack police dressed as Arabs

israeli flagPolice officers disguised as Palestinians were attacked by Jewish settlers in the West Bank, media and police reported Saturday. Jerusalem Post

A Sparkle on Your Finger, a Dead Stonecutter in China

Earlier this month Tan Ee Lyn, a Health Correspondent writing for Reuters in Asia, reported that in China’s southern Guangdong province, thousands of stonecutters are dying from silicosis, an incurable lung disease caused by inhaling silica dust while drilling, cutting, crushing, grinding or blasting slabs of gemstones. Silicosis, also known as Grinder’s disease and Potter’s rot, is marked by inflammation and scarring in the upper lobes of the lungs.

Is it preventable? Absolutely, masks and properly ventilated rooms would do a great deal to mitigate the risks. Are these safety conditions in place? Generally speaking, no. Are the stonecutters concerned about silicosis? Probably not as concerned as they are about feeding their children day by day. Do consumers need to put on the pressure to force employers to provide safe working conditions? Hell YES!

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The Law of God: Human Rights be Damned

Forgive the Rapists but Send the Suffering Children to Hell

In a recent New York Times article, it was reported that a 9-year-old girl in Alagoinha, Brazil was raped by her step-father. Though horrific in and of itself, what happened next was even more shocking:

The 9-year-old girl underwent an abortion when she was 15 weeks pregnant at one of the 55 centers authorized to perform the procedure in Brazil. Abortion is legal here only in cases of rape or when the mother’s life is at risk. The doctors’ actions set off a swirl of controversy. A Brazilian archbishop summarily excommunicated everyone involved – the doctors for performing the abortion and the girl’s mother for allowing it – except for the stepfather, who stands accused of raping the girl over a number of years. “The law of God is above any human law,” said José Cardoso Sobrinho, the archbishop, who argued that while rape was bad, abortion was even worse.

Really.

Apparently the Catholic Church is only concerned with children up to the age of, say, conception. Screw the nine years olds, literally. On their website, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops notes that “since that time [the 19th century], science has only further confirmed the humanity of the child growing in the womb. Official Church teaching insists, to the present day, that a just society protects life before as well as after birth. ”

Herein lies the flaw in the ointment: the “life at conception” fallacy. While one could debate this question ad nauseam, the duplicity of church doctrine is a necessary evil that arises out of the need for a coalescing cause around which the church can unite is faithful. Abortion is the 21st century equivalent of the witches of Salem, the heretic visionaries (think Joan of Arc) and others who both posed a threat to conventional church power and presented an opportunity for rallying the Christian soldiers to the cause of Catholicism.

It’s worth noting that in his June 29, 1995 Letter to Women, the Pope noted that “women’s dignity has often been unacknowledged and . . . they have often been relegated to the margins of society and even reduced to servitude”. He wrote, “The time has come to condemn vigorously the types of sexual violence which frequently have women for their object and to pass laws which effectively defend them from such violence”

As we have seen in Brazil, this notion of extending dignity to women and children and opposing sexual violence against them plays second fiddle to the realities of an antiquated religious dogma seated in the male psyche. Archbishop Sobrinho tells us it is God’s law so it must be so.

Human Rights Today: 3-30-09

Today’s update of human rights events around the world.

US: Freezing Out Hamas No Longer Viable, Say Policy Heavyweights

Hamas MilitiaA new report from a New York-based think tank and delivered to U.S. President Barack Obama by a signatory who is also a current adviser recommends that Washington forcefully reinsert itself into the Palestinian-Israeli peace process, calling for “a more pragmatic approach to Hamas.” IPS

NETHERLANDS: Dutch Police Get Tasers

Today, Holland starts a one-year trial of arming police with Tasers. This sounds like a familiar story, but here’s the twist: The Dutch police don’t want the them. According to Dutch Public TV, the Federal Police issued a statement documenting their objections to using a weapon so rife with problems. AmnestyUSA

MIDDLE EAST: Press Sudan on Darfur Aid

Sudan flagThe League of Arab States should call on Sudan to urgently readmit humanitarian aid groups to Darfur, Human Rights Watch said in a letter released today. Arab League foreign ministers will discuss the situation in Sudan when they meet on March 30, 2009, at their annual summit in Doha, Qatar. Human Rights Watch

BOLIVIA: Will the Rule of Law Apply to All Bolivians?

On March 7, a mob of Bolivians occupied the home of Victor Hugo Cardenas, an indigenous politician who served as vice president under former president Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada. The group, which justified the action as an expropriation based on a provision of the new constitution requiring that land holdings serve a social function, also acted roughly with Cardenas’ wife and children. The mob explicitly stated that they specifically targeted Cardenas due to his opposition to the new constitution. The responses of government officials to this seizure have been contradictory and unclear thus far. High-level officials including Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera and Deputy Interior Minister Marcos Farfan, however, have implied or stated outright their support for the action. Unfortunately, the incident is but one in a series of occurrences that have observers – even those sympathetic to the Morales administration – scratching their heads regarding the government’s relationship with the rule of law. Freedom House

Israeli War Crimes: Talking Heads Time

As the stories continue to spill out of Israel and Gaza about the abuses committed by the IDF in the war in Gaza earlier this year, debates are erupting about the scope of the events committed. In this video from al Jazeera, the debate seems focused on whether such events actually occurred (the extremist Israeli view) and whether it is in fact an anti-Semitic attack on all Jews. This appears to be the tack taken by the Israeli government PR flaks in recent days in response to the volume of evidence of these human rights abuses. This segment is an interesting look at both the problem and the propaganda machine that seems to be ramping up.