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Turkmenistan - Turkmen President's visit to France a key opportunity to urge improvements

January 28, 2010 by Anonymous

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France: Press Turkmen Leader to End Rights Abuses

Turkmen President's Visit a Key Opportunity to Urge Improvements

President Nicolas Sarkozy should use the upcoming state visit by his Turkmen counterpart to speak out about Turkmenistan's abysmal human rights record and to press for concrete improvements, the French League for Human Rights, Human Rights Watch, International Federation for Human Rights, and Reporters Without Borders said today. President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov is scheduled to begin a three-day visit to France on February 1, 2010.

Turkmenistan is one of the most repressive countries in the world. Unknown numbers of political prisoners languish in its prisons, and the rights to freedom of expression, association, assembly, movement, and religion are subject to draconian restrictions. Independent civil society and media cannot operate openly, if at all. The government threatens, harasses, and arrests those who question its policies, however modestly.

“Hosting Turkmenistan's president comes with a duty to speak out about abuses there, and to press for concrete improvements,” said Veronika Szente Goldston, advocacy director for Europe and Central Asia at Human Rights Watch. “President Sarkozy needs to send a clear message that respect for human rights is at the core of France's engagement with Turkmenistan.”

Turkmenistan remains closed to independent human rights monitors, including Human Rights Watch and International Federation for Human Rights. In September 2008, the UN special rapporteur on freedom of religion became the first UN special rapporteur to visit the country, but the government has refused to grant invitations to nine other UN monitors despite their longstanding requests for access.

Turkmenistan is rich in natural gas, and is considered an important strategic partner by many governments, including France. A number of French businesses have pursued investment opportunities in Turkmenistan, including most notably the conglomerate Bouygues, and business talks are expected to be a dominant part of the agenda.

The visit comes at a time when the French parliament is considering ratification of a major EU accord with Turkmenistan. The accord – the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement – would significantly upgrade relations between the EU and Turkmenistan. It has been frozen for years over human rights concerns, but a renewed push to move forward with it is currently under way. The agreement requires ratification by the national parliaments of EU member states, and France and the United Kingdom are the only remaining holdouts.

“French parliamentarians have a key opportunity to ensure that upgraded relations with Turkmenistan are linked to concrete human rights improvements,” said Jean-Pierre Dubois, president of the French League for Human Rights.

The agreement contains a clause committing both parties to respect human rights and providing for possible suspension if either party violates this principle.

“Given the appalling state of human rights in Turkmenistan, no sooner would the EU have concluded the agreement than it would be compelled to initiate proceedings to suspend it,” said Jean-François Julliard, secretary general of Reporters Without Borders. “European governments have squandered precious time and leverage by turning a blind eye to Turkmenistan's human rights problems and proceeding with the agreement despite this absurd situation. This needs to change.”

The French League for Human Rights, Human Rights Watch, International Federation for Human Rights, and Reporters Without Borders called on France and other European governments to recognize that Turkmenistan's rights record is at odds with the agreement's human rights clause. They should clearly articulate the specific human rights improvements Turkmenistan needs to make in exchange for enhanced relations, and engage proactively before the agreement is concluded to help secure them.

“The EU's stance to date on human rights in Turkmenistan has been disappointingly weak, but France now has a great chance to rectify this,” said Souhayr Belhassen, president of International Federation for Human Rights.

The French League for Human Rights, Human Rights Watch, International Federation for Human Rights, and Reporters Without Borders called on France and other European governments to press the Turkmen leader to take the following specific steps:

- Free all those imprisoned for political reasons, including the human rights activists Annakurban Amanklychev and Sapardurdy Khajiev and the dissident Gulgeldy Annaniazov;

- Establish a nationwide, transparent process to review all cases of political imprisonment to establish the real number of prisoners held on politically motivated charges, and ensure that victims of abuse are provided redress;

- Lift travel bans on students, activists, and relatives of opposition members, and dismantle the system that allows for interference with citizens' ability to leave and return to Turkmenistan;

- Allow activists, civic groups, and journalists to operate freely and without fear of persecution;

- Ensure access to the country, including to places of detention, for independent human rights monitors and extend invitations to all United Nations monitors who have requested access.

For more information, please contact:

- For Human Rights Watch, Veronika Szente Goldston (French, English, Swedish, Finnish, Hungarian): +1-917-582-1271 (mobile)

- For International Federation for Human Rights, Sacha Koulaeva, (French, English, Russian): +33-6-48-05-94-80 (mobile)

- For Reporters Without Borders, Elsa Vidal (French, English, Russian): +33-1-44 83 84 67; or +33-6-61-82-93-36 (mobile)

(Photo : AFP)

- Threat to online free expression from imminent international accord

January 25, 2010 by Anonymous

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Reporters Without Borders is very concerned about the threat to online free expression from measures to combat digital piracy and copyright violations in an Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) that is currently being negotiated. The next three-day round of talks about the proposed agreement are due to begin tomorrow in Mexico.

A total of 39 countries including Australia, France, Mexico, Morocco and the United States, and the European Union, are participating in the negotiations, which government officials are conducting in secret without consulting NGOs or civil society groups. The European Parliament has not even had access to the negotiating documents.

It is extremely regrettable that democratic debate has been eliminated from talks that could have a major impact on such a fundamental freedom as free expression. Transparency in such matters is a requirement that is neither negotiable nor subject to commercial imperatives.

Reporters Without Borders calls on the members of the European Union and other governments to explain the following measures, which appear to have been included in the draft agreement and which would greatly endanger online freedom of expression:

- Banning mechanisms for circumventing content filtering or blocking, which would prevent citizens in countries such as Iran or China from evading censorship;

- Punishing people who download content illegally by cutting their Internet connections, thereby limiting their access to information, although it does nothing to prevent the actual piracy;

- Automatic content filtering, which limits freedom of expression and is illegal if not approved by a judge.

Read and sign the open letter to the European Parliament that has been signed by Quadrature du Net, Reporters Without Borders, Electric Frontier Foundation and some 30 other NGOs:

ACTA: A Global Threat to Freedoms

Open letter

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) is a broad intergovernmental agreement under negotiation ranging from the key social issue of access to medicine[1] to criminal Internet regulation. We fear it could seriously hinder European innovation in the digital single market while undermining fundamental rights and democracy at large.

The negotiation process itself raises important questions of transparency and due democratic process, given that the content of the draft agreement has been kept secret for more than 18 months, although some details about the proposals recently leaked to the public. More worrying still, while the European Parliament has been denied access to the documents, US industry has been granted access to them, albeit only after signing non-disclosure agreements.

A recent analysis by the European Commission of the ACTA Internet chapter[2] proves that the topics under discussion go far beyond the current body of EU law. Most importantly, the Commission's analysis confirms that the current draft of ACTA would profoundly restrict the fundamental rights and freedoms of European citizens, most notably the freedom of expression and communication privacy. These are very much at risk, since the current draft pushes for the implementation of three-strikes schemes and content filtering policies by seeking to impose civil and criminal liability on technical intermediaries such as internet service providers. The text would also radically erode the exercise of interoperability that is essential for both consumer rights and competitiveness.

Consequently, we urge the Parliament to call on European negotiators to establish transparency in the negotiation process and publish the draft agreement, and not to accept any proposal which would undermine citizens' rights and freedoms. Furthermore, we urge the Parliament to make an unequivocal statement to the Commission and Council that any agreement which does not respect these core principles would force the Parliament to reject the entire text.
P.S.

Eritrea - United Nations asked to investigate the fate of journalists imprisoned in Eritrea

January 11, 2010 by Anonymous

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Reporters Without Borders wrote today, the third anniversary of Eritrean journalist Fessehaye “Joshua” Yohannes' death in detention, to Manfred Nowak, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, asking him to do everything possible to obtain an improvement in the conditions of journalists imprisoned in Eritrea.

“The conditions in which Eritrean detainees are held are among the most disturbing in the world,” the letter said. “The situation is made all the more appalling by the fact President Issaias Afeworki's government, which has become the disgrace of Africa, refuses to provide any information about them. This is why we ask you to do everything possible to obtain news from the authorities and, if possible, to go to Eritrea.”

Voicing great concern about the 26 journalists and two media workers currently held in Eritrea, the letter continued: “We urge you to request access to the imprisoned journalists in order to enquire about their state of health and about prison conditions in Eritrea. We also ask you to put enough pressure on the Eritrean government to ensure that they are tried or released.”

A writer and playwright as well as a journalist with the now-banned weekly Setit, Fessehaye succumbed on 11 January 2007 to the especially harsh conditions in which he had been held in the Eiraeiro detention centre in the desert of Northern Red Sea province for most of the time since his arrest in 2001. His body was never handed over to his family.

He was arrested when he surrendered to the police during the week of 18-23 September 2001, after around 10 other journalists and many members of the political opposition had been arbitrarily arrested and the privately-owned press had been “suspended” by the authorities. A veteran of the independence war against Ethiopia and head of a dance and theatre troupe, he was a leading intellectual figure in political and media circles.

After verifying with credible Eritrean sources in Asmara and abroad, Reporters Without Borders is in a position to say that Fessehaye was the fourth journalist to die in Eiraeiro, following Said Abdulkader, co-founder and editor of the weekly Admas, Medhane Haile, co-founder and deputy editor of the weekly Keste Debena, and Yusuf Mohamed Ali, the editor of the weekly Tsigenay. The other three died in 2005 and 2006. Reporters Without Borders has decided to withdraw these four names from its list of journalists imprisoned worldwide.

Those currently detained in Eritrea include Dawit Isaac, a journalist with Swedish and Eritrean dual nationality who worked for the newspaper Setit and who was one of the three finalists for the 2009 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought. He has health problems, has been transferred several times and was taken to the air force hospital in Asmara last year. According to the latest information obtained by Reporters Without Borders, he was also admitted to Asmara's Habtemariam (St. Mary) Hospital, a psychiatric clinic, twice last year. It is not clear where he is being held now.

The same uncertainty surrounds the current situation of Temesghen Gebreyesus, a sports journalist and member of the board of the biweekly Keste Debena, and Mattewos Habteab, co-founder and editor of the biweekly Meqaleh. Both were transferred to a prison in the Dahlak Islands (located in the Red Sea off Massawa) in December 2008.

Reporters Without Borders regards the sanctions imposed on Eritrea by the UN Security Council on 23 December at Uganda's suggestion as “very positive” and reiterates the recommendation it has been making to the European Union for several years that it should ban senior Eritrean civilian and military officials from entering the EU.

Copies of the Reporters Without Borders letter were sent to:

- Navanethem Pillay, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

- Franck La Rue, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression

Read the letter:

PDF - 174.8 kb

European states must take concrete steps to help close Guantánamo

January 8, 2010 by Anonymous

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Leading human rights organizations today urged more European states to accept detainees held at the US detention centre at Guantánamo who cannot be returned to their countries of origin for fear of torture or other human rights violations.  

On the eighth anniversary of the first transfers to Guantánamo, the organisations urged other countries, including Germany, Finland, Sweden and Luxembourg to do more to aid the transfer of roughly 50 such men who remain trapped after years of unlawful detention.

“Although several countries have already led the way, it is disappointing that only a few European governments have stepped forward to help those in need of protection,” said Sharon Critoph, Campaigner on the US at Amnesty International “Amongst those governments which have failed to assist are those previously most vocal in calling for Guantánamo to be closed.”

Reprieve, the Center for Constitutional Rights and former Guantánamo detainee Moazzam Begg of the organization Cage Prisoners are today beginning a tour across Europe urging more states to offer the men a safe haven. The tour will be hosted by Amnesty International’s national sections.

These men remain detained for the sole reason that they have no safe place to go. They have been essentially abandoned at Guantánamo. The plight of these men poses one of the most significant obstacles to the closure of the detention centre.

A number of European states have already taken the commendable step of offering a safe haven to such detainees, in line with the stated aims of the EU-US joint agreement on the closure of Guantánamo. These include France, Ireland, Portugal, Hungary and Belgium.On this important anniversary, human rights groups are urging others to follow suit.

The men come from countries such as Libya, Tunisia, Syria, China and Russia, where they will be at serious risk of torture or other human rights violations if returned.   

The US government has been seeking safe countries willing to offer these men an opportunity to rebuild their lives and is primarily responsible for finding solutions for all those held at Guantánamo.

The international community which has repeatedly called for the detention centre’s closure can however help in realizing this aim by offering a safe haven to some of these men.

Guantánamo remains a stark symbol of injustice.  Human rights groups have expressed concern that the detention facility will remain open past 22 January 2010, the date by which US President Barack Obama had pledged to close it.  Unless more European countries step forward now to help, some of the most vulnerable detainees remain at serious risk of forcible return to abuse.

''The last decade saw the erosion of the rule of law and international respect for human rights. Guantánamo stands for all that went wrong and it must now be closed’’ said Sophie Weller of the Center for Constitutional Rights.‘‘The men who remain detained because they lack a safe haven continue, every day to pay the human price for delay and inaction in achieving this aim.”

“Many European governments have condemned the ongoing detention of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay. Now they can do something about it,” said Clive Stafford Smith, Director of Reprieve. “Actions really do speak louder than words in this case; its time to turn the rhetoric into reality and get Guantánamo closed as soon as possible.”

Background information
The human rights organisations welcomed the actions of those countries which have already come forward to assist – such as France, Ireland, Portugal, Belgium, Hungary - but expressed disappointment that others had not taken concrete steps in line with the EU-US Joint Statement on the Closure of Guantánamo Bay. The statement, issued on 16 June 2009, expressed the readiness of certain EU Member States to assist with the reception of former detainees on a case-by-case basis.

Nearly seven months since this statement was issued, only seven former detainees have been welcomed into Europe as free men. A further ten have been sent to Palau and Bermuda, and two have been transferred to Italy for possible trial. Approximately 50 more still need protection.  

The tour will include visits to a number of European countries - including Luxembourg, Sweden and Germany - which could provide safe and appropriate reception for detainees from Guantánamo, giving them the chance to rebuild their lives.

The organizations will also be calling on government officials in countries which have already accepted detainees to share expertise, encouragement and examples of good practice with their counterparts in countries which may be considering following suit.

There are 198 prisoners in total still held in Guantánamo.

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