Amnesty Global Round-Up: Latest Human Rights News
(29/11/04)
Amnesty International Welcomes Supreme Court Zaoui
Decision
Amnesty International has welcomed the
Supreme Court's conclusion that further delays in deciding
whether Algerian refugee Ahmed Zaoui should be transferred
from prison or granted bail would be
"oppressive".
"Amnesty International has been calling for Ahmed Zaoui's case to be subjected to a fair process since December 2002, and has been baffled by the Government's reluctance to agree," said the executive director of Amnesty's NZ section, Ced Simpson.
"Mr Zaoui should have been able to have the security risk certificate against him reviewed, with procedures meeting the standards set by the European Court of Human Rights, in the months following the decision recognising him as a genuine refugee in August last year."
"It is not his fault that he has been left languishing in prison for all this time at considerable human and financial cost."
"The courts have clearly questioned the handling of the Zaoui case, and the Supreme Court has now added its voice to those who have called for the whole process to be, and be seen to be, less arbitrary and unfair."
"It has not been acceptable that senior members of the Government have continued to mislead the public by suggesting he has been free to leave at any time, when they know they have a moral as well as international legal obligation to ensure he is not returned to a place of potential danger."
Mr Simpson said that the case
continues to raise the important question of
"What sort
of 'security risk' does the Government consider outweighs
Ahmed Zaoui's right to asylum as a refugee?"
"Does the
Government agree with the Court of Appeal conclusion that
the continued detention or deportation of Ahmed Zaoui can
only be justified 'if there are objectively reasonable
grounds based on credible evidence that Zaoui
constitutes...a danger of substantial threatened harm to the
security of New Zealand' rather than, for example, 'a threat
to international reputation with like-minded
countries'?"
Read the Supreme Court's
decision:
www.courts.govt.nz/judgments/decisions
Take
action! http://www.amnesty.org.nz/AhmedZaoui!OpenForm
Sudan: Briefing for the UN Security Council meeting in Nairobi 18-19
Briefing for the UN Security Council meeting in Nairobi http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGAFR541492004
Jamaica: Protecting the right to defend human
rights
The Government of Jamaica should publicly
reiterate its commitment to protecting and promoting the
legitimate work of human rights defenders in Jamaica.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAMR380192004
United Kingdom: UN Committee calls for effective safeguards
against torture
The United Kingdom Government
should make a formal undertaking that it will not rely on,
or present "evidence" obtained through torture in any
proceedings, the UN Committee against Torture (CAT)
recommended today.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGEUR450302004
Violence against women fuels spread of
HIV/Aids
Significantly more young women than men are
now being infected by HIV/Aids as violence against women and
girls fuels the spread of the virus.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGACT770872004
Mexico: Violence against indigenous women and military injustice Over the last decade, Amnesty International has learned of at least nine cases of indigenous women who filed legal complaints of rape by members of the Mexican army. http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAMR410422004
Jamaica: End the Silence, Stop the Violence - new campaign
to stop domestic violence
On the International Day
to Stop Domestic Violence, Amnesty International is
launching a series of radio public service announcements in
Jamaica.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAMR380182004
EU-Russia Summit: Amnesty International calls on EU to
address growing persecution of human rights defenders in
Chechnya
Amnesty International is presenting the
European Union with detailed testimonies showing that
victims of human rights violations in Chechnya who complain
to European institutions have been killed or "disappeared".
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGEUR460602004
Indonesia: Death threat to campaigner's family
The
family of the deceased human rights campaigner Munir must be
protected, said Amnesty International after his wife
received a death threat at their family home.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGASA210502004
Lebanon: Samir Gea'gea' and Jirjis al-Khouri -- Torture and
unfair trial
The leader of the banned Lebanese
Forces, Samir Gea'gea', and Jirjis al-Khouri, a member of
the LF, have been held at the Ministry of Defence Detention
Centre in Beirut since 1994.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGMDE180032004
Brazil: Violence again unleashed over land
An
attack on an MST (Landless Rural Workers' Movement) campsite
in Minas Gerais state, on Saturday left five people dead and
many more injured.
http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAMR190212004
Burundi: Imminent resumption of executions or summary trials
and executions
Amnesty International is calling on
the National Assembly of Burundi to reject draft legislation
which was adopted by the Council of Ministers on 16 November
2004. http://news.amnesty.org/index/ENGAFR160212004