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New Honduras President must order investigation into rights abuses

January 25, 2010 by Anonymous

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Amnesty International today urged the new Honduran President to order a full investigation into abuses committed by the security forces following June’s coup d’etat, bring those responsible to justice and provide reparations to the victims.

Honduran President Porfirio Lobo, who is set to take office on 27 January, was elected in November last year amidst a political crisis that saw President Manuel Zelaya ousted by military-backed right wing politicians in June.

Hundreds of people opposed to the coup d’état were beaten and detained by the security forces as protests erupted during the following months. More than 10 were killed during the unrest, according to reports.

“President Lobo must ensure a fresh start on human rights in Honduras by ensuring abuses committed since the coup d’état are not forgotten and do not go unpunished,” said Kerrie Howard, Americas Deputy Director at Amnesty International.

The organisation also called on Honduran security forces to co-operate with any investigations into alleged abuses.

Since the presidential elections, the Honduran Congress has discussed the possible introduction of an amnesty law that would reduce or deny punishment for those responsible for human rights violations.

“Proposals to introduce amnesty measures for human rights violations are simply unacceptable,” said Kerrie Howard. “Failure to sanction abuses that took place during the coup d’etat could give a green light to further violations in Honduras.”

According to dozens of testimonies collected by Amnesty International’s researchers in Honduras during two visits to the country, human rights abuses spiralled following the June coup d'etat.

Following the coup d'etat people who took to the streets to demonstrate their opposition were targets of widespread excessive use of force by the security forces, including unlawful killings,  torture and ill-treatment, as well as hundreds of arbitrary arrests. The police and military also widely misused tear gas and other crowd control equipment.

Human rights activists, opposition leaders and judges suffered threats and intimidation, media outlets closed and journalists were censored. There were also reports of security force personnel committing acts of sexual violence against women and girls.

Noone has been held to account for these abuses and few investigations have been opened as yet.

On 27 November 2009, 32-year-old Angel Salgado was driving home in the capital Tegucigalpa with three friends when, according to eye witnesses military, officials fired shots at their car as it drove by an unmarked check point.

Angel Salgado was hit in the head by a bullet. He lost control of the vehicle, which then crashed and injured several bystanders.

According to eye witnesses, military personnel began cleaning the scene of evidence immediately after the incident took place. After passing five days in a coma, Angel Salgado died in hospital on 2 December.

On 14 August 2009, a police officer sprayed lawyer Nicolás Ramiro Aguilar Fajardo directly in the face with an unknown chemical spray, temporarily blinding him. At the time, Nicolás was trying to stop the police officer from beating a colleague.

Background Information
Honduran President Manuel Zelaya Rosales was forced from power on 28 June 2009 and expelled from the country by a military backed group of right-wing politicians led by Roberto Micheletti, former president of the national Congress.

A de facto government headed by Roberto Micheletti remained in power until the end of the year. President Zelaya returned clandestinely to the country and took up residency in the Brazilian Embassy in September.

Despite the failure of political negotiations mediated by the Organization of American States to restore the elected government, in November the de facto authorities proceeded with elections, Porfirio Lobo of the National Party won 88% of the vote and takes office on 27 January 2010.

China - Google rebels against China's Internet censors

January 13, 2010 by Anonymous

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Reporters Without Borders hails US Internet giant Google's announcement yesterday that it will stop censoring the Chinese version of its search engine, Google.cn – a move that could lead to Google.cn's closure and Google's withdrawal from the Chinese market. The company said it took the decision following sophisticated cyber-attacks on Gmail accounts coming from China.

“We can only welcome the courage shown by Google's executives,” Reporters Without Borders said. “A foreign IT company has finally accepted its responsibilities towards Chinese users and is standing up to the Chinese authorities, who keep clamping down more and more on the Internet.

“In the face of repeated and increasingly sophisticated cyber-attacks and humiliating treatment by the Chinese authorities, who accuse them of not doing enough to block sensitive information, Google has decided to take a tougher line and is setting its own conditions for continuing to operate in China.

“We call on other IT companies to form a common front and we urge the Chinese authorities to reconsider their position. Google seems to have opened a breach – the cooperation of western companies in the control of news and information is no longer systematic.”

Reporters Without Borders also welcomed the transparency displayed by Google. “By making these cyber-attacks public, Google is clearly showing that its priority is to protect the personal data of its clients, including the most vulnerable ones. It is refusing to be an accomplice of the Chinese authorities in their pursuit of dissidents online.”

Google's U-turn follows attacks launched from China on the Gmail accounts of several dozen human rights activists. Reporters Without Borders has itself been the target of cyber-attacks from China. A score of companies in the media, technology, finance and chemical sectors were also reportedly affected by these hacker attacks and by the theft of intellectual property.

Google senior vice-president David Drummond yesterday posted this explanation on Google's official blog: “We have taken the unusual step of sharing information about these attacks with a broad audience not just because of the security and human rights implications of what we have unearthed, but also because this information goes to the heart of a much bigger global debate about freedom of speech.”

The US authorities immediately called for an explanation from the Chinese government. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Google's allegations “raise very serious concerns and questions.” She added: “The ability to operate with confidence in cyberspace is critical in a modern society and economy.”

Google and Yahoo! have for years been censoring their Chinese search engines, blocking results about subjects considered sensitive by the Chinese authorities. Microsoft also censors its blog tool Windows Live Spaces. The censorship blocks not only criticism of the government but also information about such topics as democracy, human rights, the Dalai Lama, the Falun Gong spiritual movement and the Tiananmen Square massacre.

Google's announcement comes amid an increase in online repression in China. New regulations aimed at reinforcing Internet control took effect last month. The ministry of industry and information technology wants to force all websites, including foreign ones, to register on a “white-list” if they want to avoid being blacklisted and rendered inaccessible to Chinese Internet users.

At the same time, Chinese domain names with the .cn suffix are now only available to companies and organisations. Individuals can no longer obtain one. The government's vaunted efforts to combat online porn, which have resulted in more than 5,000 arrests and the closure of 9,000 websites in the past year, have also blocked sites that are unrelated to pornography. The Wired.com and IDMB.com sites were among those recently blocked.

China, which is on the list of countries identified by Reporters Without Borders as “Enemies of the Internet,” has for years had the world's most sophisticated system of online censorship and surveillance. It is also the world's biggest prison for netizens, with a total of 66 bloggers and cyberdissidents detained.

The dissident intellectual Liu Xiaobo was sentenced on 25 December to 11 years in prison for helping to draft Charter 08, an appeal for more freedom and an end to online censorship. Human rights activist and cyberdissident Hu Jia has spent more than two years in prison.

Salvador - After three environmentalists murdered, community radio threatened over its support for their cause

January 8, 2010 by Anonymous

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Reporters Without Borders is disturbed to learn that Radio Victoria, a community radio station in the northern department of Cabañas that has been supporting environmental activists in their opposition to a Canadian company's local gold-mining operations, has received renewed threats just days after two more activists were murdered at the end of last month.

“We support the call by the people of Cabañas and we request a thorough and independent investigation aimed at identifying those responsible for these threats,” Reporters Without Borders said. “It is vital that Radio Victoria's journalists, who are playing an essential reporting role for both the local population and the international community, are given protection.”

The threats first began last July when Radio Victoria's journalists condemned the abduction, torture and murder of environmental activist Gustavo Marcelo Rivera. The police quickly concluded that his death was a routine murder despite overwhelming evidence that it was linked to his leading role in opposing the Cabañas operations of Vancouver-based Pacific Rim Mining Corp.

Ades Santa Marta (http://adessantamarta.codigosur.net), an NGO that defends the rights of the population in Cabañas, made a video at the time in which Radio Victoria's journalists talked about the frequent attempts to intimidate them.

The threats against Radio Victoria resumed just a few days after the 20 December murder of Ramiro Rivera Gómez, a member of the Cabañas Environmental Committee (Comité Ambiental de Cabañas), who had survived an earlier attack in July, when he was shot eight times. The person who was arrested and jailed for the August attack had already been convicted of violence against environmental protesters and is reported to be a former Pacific Rim employee.

Another member of the same committee, Dora “Alicia” Recinos Sorto, was gunned down on 26 December. She was eight months pregnant and, at the time of the shooting, was carrying her two-year-old son, who was injured in the leg.

An anonymous email was sent to several Radio Victoria employees claiming responsibility for Rivera Gómez's murder and announcing that the next victim could be “a presenter, a reporter or anyone else working for this damned radio station.”

A politically committed station, Radio Victoria has condemned both the murders and shortcomings of the police investigations. The National Civilian Police (PNC) insists that the three murders are not linked and are all just cases of routine criminal activity. The police still have not conducted a proper investigation into the threats against Radio Victoria either.

Reporters Without Borders interviewed Radio Victoria journalist Ludwin Iraheta.

Why has Radio Victoria been the target of threats?

Radio Victoria has adopted a position of support for the environmental activists and has allowed the acknowledged leaders of the opposition to the mine to speak on the air. Community radio stations defend the community. We have been getting threats for six years for criticising fraud and corruption.

What has been the authorities' response to these threats?

The station's staff has been reporting these threats to the police for months. The authorities say have no clues as to their origin. They tell us they are investigating, but in our view there has not been any investigation.

The authorities said Alicia Recinos was not an environmentalist. We find that outrageous. She and her husband were among the acknowledged leaders of the struggle against the mine. A few months ago, her husband was attacked by the man who attacked Ramiro Rivera the first time, in July, and who is now in prison.

Are you being given any protection?

Some journalists are given protection but it is not common. At night, there are policemen on the premises but the threats continue.

Do you have any idea who is responsible? What interests are at state?

There is a lot of gold in the department of Cabañas. We do not know who is responsible for these threats, but there are a lot of interests at stake in the mine – political and business interests. A few years ago, Pacific Rim offered us 8,000 dollars to shut up, but we refused.

What impact would the mine have on the community?

The main problem in Cabañas is water. The mine uses powerful chemical products. And 32 per cent of the country's water is already polluted. The water had been polluted here too ever since there have been mines. Thanks to the campaign waged by the community, the mining activities have stopped for the time being. But the people want a law banning mining.

What are you going to do? Are you thinking of suspending your activities?

Many national and international organisations support us, and that motivates us to continue working. They will have to think twice before attacking us, because many organisations are on the alert and are monitoring what is happening. We are part of the people and we will continue to cover its struggles.

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