Tuesday, November 30, 2010

SexconUrgent Action 11-30-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
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For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa24610.pdf


30 November 2010

UA 246/10 Death Penalty/ Risk of Imminent Execution/ Legal Concern

IRAQ

Sa'doun Shakir
Mizban Khuder Hadi
‘Aziz Salih al-Noaman


A former Minister of Interior and two former top officials under Saddam Hussein were sentenced to death on 29 November and could be executed within 30 days if their sentences are confirmed by the appeal court. Amnesty International has stressed that the death penalty is the ultimate denial of human rights and should never be used, whatever the gravity of the crime.

Sa'doun Shakir, former Interior Minister of Iraq in the 1980's, was sentenced to death on 29 November by the Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal (SICT), together with Mizban Khuder Hadi and ‘Aziz Salih al-Noaman formerly senior officials under Saddam Hussain and members of regional Ba'ath party commands. All three were convicted of participating in the killings and displacement of Faili Kurds (Shi'a Kurds) during the Iran –Iraq war between 1980 and 1988. If their sentences are confirmed on appeal, they are likely to be executed by hanging within 30 days.

Sa'doun Shakir was previously sentenced to death by the SICT on 26 October, after he and Tariq Aziz were convicted in another trial of participating in the elimination of Shi'a religious parties under Saddam Hussain. Mizban Khuder Hadi was also previously sentenced to death on 1 August after the SICT convicted him on charges related to the deliberate drying of the southern marshes area and other offenses.

Sa'adoun Shakir was arrested by US forces in April 2003 and has been imprisoned since then. Before being made Minister of Interior he headed Iraq's Intelligence Service. He left politics in 1990 due to deteriorating health.

Amnesty International has previously questioned the fairness of trials before the SICT, which was established to try Saddam Hussain and others accused of responsibility for the crimes committed during his rule. In particular, the SICT has been subject to political interference, undermining its independence.

The death penalty was suspended for a time after the US-led invasion of Iraq but restored in August 2004. Since then, hundreds of people have been sentenced to death and many have been executed. Amnesty International considers the death penalty to be a violation of the right to life and the ultimate form of cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Urging that the death sentences imposed on Sa'doun Shakir, Mizban Khuder Hadi, and ‘Aziz Salih al-Noaman are commuted if they are confirmed by the appeal court;
- Recognizing that governments have an obligation to bring to justice those responsible for serious crimes but insisting that the death penalty is a violation of the right to life and the ultimate form of cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment, and should not be applied even for crimes of the greatest magnitude;
- Calling on the authorities to commute all death sentences and declare a moratorium on executions.

APPEALS TO:

President
His Excellency Jalal TalabaniPresident of the Republic of Iraq
Convention Centre (Qasr al-Ma'aridh)
Baghdad,
IRAQ
Salutation: His Excellency

Prime Minister

His Excellency Nuri Kamil al-Maliki Prime Minister
Convention Centre (Qasr al-Ma'aridh)
Baghdad,
IRAQ
Salutation: His Excellency

COPIES TO:

Minister of Foreign Affairs
His Excellency Hoshyar Zebari
Minister
of Foreign Affairs
Convention Center (Qasr al-Ma'aridh)
Baghdad,
IRAQ

Ambassador Samir Shakir Mahmood Sumaida'ie
Embassy of the Republic of Iraq
3421 Massachusetts Ave NW
Washington DC 20007

Email: amboffice@iraqiembassy.org
Fax: 1 202 333 1129
Phone: 1 202 742 1600 EXT 136

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 11 January 2011.


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END OF URGENT ACTION APPEAL
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Urgent Action 11-30-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa24510.pdf

26 November 2010

UA 245/10 - Fear for Safety

ARGENTINA Members of Toba Qom indigenous community

On 23 November, police violently dispersed a roadblock by members of the Toba Qom indigenous community of La Primavera, in Northern-East Argentina, leaving two people dead and several injured. Police also burned temporary housing built by the community.

Around 100 members of the Toba Qom indigenous community have been blocking national highway (Ruta Nacional) 86 for 4 months claiming for their land and. in protest against construction of the National University Institute by the Government of Formosa Province on land the community claim as part of their ancestral territory. According to the community, between 400 and 500 heavily armed police officers demanded that they move out of the road, without showing an eviction order (orden de desalojo). The community refused to leave and were forcibly evicted by police.

During the eviction, at least one community member and one police officer were shot dead and at least five community members are in a serious condition in hospital. All temporary houses built by the communities alongside the highway were burned by the police. Around 30 community members were detained, including children. They have all been released except for Eugenio Fernandez, a young community member, who remains in detention. Felix Diaz, the leader of the community, was personally threatened by officers and called an "agitator".

Earlier on the same day, five members of a non-indigenous (criollo) family who claim property on the same piece of land arrived on horses, carrying arms. They were accompanied by around 18 police officers. When Felix Diaz approached them, they shot at him twice, missing both times. Coming to his aid, other members of the community threw stones at the horses to make them bolt. The family left, firing shots in the air. Terrified community members confronted the police who did nothing to protect them. According to members of the community, police officers told them "you deserve it; you have been looking for trouble" ("se lo tenian merecodp, ustedes se lo buscaron").

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
La Primavera community has been claiming the land alongside the National Highway 84 as part of their ancestral territory for years. The community claims that during the blockade, no state officials tried to start a dialogue or a negotiation with them, nor were their claims heard. Instead, the government is trying to go ahead with their plans to build a University Institute on the land, despite a precautionary measure the community secured against those plans and the fact that the ownership of the land is disputed.

This attitude is part of a pattern Amnesty International has been documenting in Formosa, where the state is failing to comply with its obligation to hold consultations and to seek free, prior and informed consent from indigenous communities before undertaking any development plan that may affect them. Authorities have also failed to solve land disputes and respect indigenous communities' right to their ancestral territories. In Formosa, the government refuses to engage in constructive dialogue with indigenous communities and instead imposes development and other plans on them without their consent. There have been also serious allegations of harassment and attempts of co-opting community leaders and their legal representatives to dissuade them from continuing with their claims.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Demanding that Felix Diaz and the Toba Indigenous Community of La Primavera are provided with the protection they need, according to their wishes.
- Calling on authorities to urgently solve the land claim of La Primavera and other Indigenous People in Formosa and in Argentina, so they can live on their ancestral lands without fear of attack or illegal eviction.
- Calling on them to order a full and impartial investigation into the killings and threats, and bring those responsible to justice.
- Calling on them to comply fully with the UN Declaration on the Indigenous Peoples and the International Labor Organization's Convention 169 and enshrine in law Indigenous People's rights to their ancestral lands and establish mechanisms whereby these rights can be recognized and exercised with their full participation.


APPEALS TO:

Minister of Justice, Security and Human Rights
Julio Cesar Alak
Ministro Ministerio de Justicia, Seguridad y Derechos Humanos
Presidencia de la Nacion
Sarmiento 329 - C1041AAG
Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires
ARGENTINA
Email: privada@jus.gov.ar
Salutation: Estimado Sr Ministro

Governor of Formosa
Dr. Gildo Insfran
Gobernador de Formosa
Belgrano No 878 - Casa de Gobierno - Formosa (3600)
ARGENTINA
Tel: 011 54 3717 4 26000/1
Fax: 011 54-3717-430872
Email: gobernador@formosa.gov.ar
Salutation: Estimado Sr. Gobernador

COPIES TO:

Hermanas de la Caridad,
Barrio 15 Viviendas, Casa Numero 3, Calle Nicolas Avellaneda
LAGUNA NAINECH, 3611, Formosa
ARGENTINA
Tel: 011 54 3718/ 49 10 62,
E-mail: paolagiolo@clorinda-fsa.com.ar

Ambassador D. Alfredo Vicente Chiadaria
Embassy of the Argentine Republic
1600 New Hampshire Ave. NW
Washington DC 20009
Fax: 1 202 332 3171
Email: politicainterna@embassyofargentina.us (Human Rights Section)


PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 7 January 2011.



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Phone: 202.509.8193
Fax: 202.675.8566
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END OF URGENT ACTION APPEAL
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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Two Separate Urgent Actions 11-24-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa24410.pdf

24 November 2010

UA 244/10 Fear for Safety

BRAZIL Manoel Santana Costa (m)
20 other members of the Charco community

Flaviano Pinto Neto, a leader of the Charco community in Maranhão state, north-east Brazil, was shot dead on 30 October. Manoel Santana Costa, another leader of the community, along with over twenty other members of the community, have received a series of death threats and now fear for their lives. Manoel Santana Costa has gone into hiding and is seeking police protection.

The community is being targeted due to their fight to be officially recognized as a quilombo – an afro-descendent community – against the interests of powerful local farmers. In spite of the fact that the community has existed for almost 200 years, it has been threatened by eviction orders. They are now going through the administrative process of gaining official recognition as a quilombo community, which would give them secure land title.

On 30 October, Flaviano Pinto Neto, a leader of the community and the president of the Association of Rural Small Producers of the Charco Community (Associação dos Pequenos Produtores Rurais do Povoado do Charco), was killed with seven shots to the head. According to members of the community the police are currently investigating the case.


Manoel Santana Costa, also known as Manoel do Charco, is the treasurer and union officer of the local rural workers union. He is now hiding in fear for his life and has requested police protection from the State Secretary of Public Security for himself and other members of the community also under threat. Although the National Human Rights Defenders’ Program does not yet have coordinators working in Maranhão state, Manoel could still be included in the program directly through the national office in Brasília.

In August 2009, Manoel received an anonymous call in which he was asked if he was afraid of being burned to death (“tu não tem medo de morrer queimado?”). A few days later, the community association building was set on fire. In the same year, when Manoel was at the Court House gathering information about the status of the land dispute, he received another anonymous phone call asking the same question.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Quilombos are Afro-Brazilian settlements, which were first established at the end of the 16th century in remote rural areas in Brazil, by escaped and free slaves that resisted slavery. The 1988 Brazilian Constitution (Articles. 215 and 216) acknowledges the right of descendant communities to the lands historically occupied by quilombos. In particular, Article 68 of the Transitory Dispositions states that ‘Final ownership shall be recognized for the remaining members of the quilombo communities who are occupying their lands and the state shall grant them the respective land titles’. ("Aos remanescentes das comunidades dos quilombos que estejam ocupando suas terras é reconhecida a propriedade definitiva, devendo o Estado emitir-lhes os títulos respectivos.”). A series of federal and state laws has been issued to regulate how the quilombos’ lands are identified and how titles are to be given to the remaining communities.

In 2003, a new Decree (No. 4887) issued by the President, made several changes to the titling process and removed it from the competence of the Palmares Cultural Foundation (FCP) under the Ministry of Culture to the National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (INCRA) under the Ministry of Agrarian Development. Under this new procedure, the FCP has the authority only to issue quilombos certification of self-identification, which is a pre-requisite to initiate the titling process under Decree No. 4887.
In October 2009, INCRA published the Normative Regulation No.57/2009 establishing the various steps of the administrative procedure to give the remaining quilombo communities the title to their lands i.e. identification, recognition, delimitation, demarcation, removal of illegal occupants, titling and land registration.

In addition to the national legislation, Brazil is also a party to the International Labor Organization’s Convention 169, the American Convention on Human Rights and the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, which reaffirm the rights of Afro-descendant groups to cultural and land rights as well as the principles of non-discrimination and equality before the law.
There are over 3000 quilombo communities in Brazil, hundreds of administrative procedures have been initiated before the INCRA but to date less than 10 per cent of the communities have received their land titles. The Charco community, with over 70 families, has been fighting for their land rights for more than 60 years and has been previously threatened with various eviction orders. In 2009, the community initiated the administrative process to have their land recognized as the remaining of a quilombo settlement.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Urging the authorities to include Manoel Santana Costa on the Human Rights Defenders’ Program and immediately provide him with full protection, and fully investigate all threats against him and members of the community;
- Urging the authorities to thoroughly investigate the killing of Flaviano Pinto Neto and bring perpetrators to justice;
- Urging the authorities to carry out, as quickly as possible, the administrative processes which would give the community the title of the land they have lived on for almost two centuries, so as not to place the families at risk of violence and intimidation.


APPEALS TO:

Federal Minister of Justice
Exmo. Ministro
Sr. Luiz Paulo Teles Ferreira Barreto
Esplanada dos Ministérios,
Bloco "T"
70712-902 - Brasília/DF
BRASIL
Fax: 011 55 61 3322 6817 OR 011 55 61 3224 3398
Salutation: Dear Minister

National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (Instituto Nacional de Colonização e Reforma Agrária)
Exmo. Presidente Rolf Hackbart
SBN Qd. 01 Bloco D - Edifício Palácio do Desenvolvimento
CEP: 70.057-900 – Brasília/DF
BRASIL
PABX: 011 55 61 3411-7474
Salutation: Dear President


COPIES TO:

Federal Human Rights Secretary
Secretaria Especial de Direitos Humanos
Exmo. Secretário Especial
Sr. Paulo de Tarso Vannuchi Esplanada dos Ministérios- Bloco "T" - 4º andar, 70064-900 Brasília/DF –
BRASIL
Fax: 011 55 61 3226 7980
Salutation: Dear Secretary

Ambassador Mauro Vieira
Brazilian Embassy
3006 Massachusetts Ave. NW
Washington DC 20008

Fax: 1 202 238 2827
Email: ambassador@brasilemb.org


PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 5 January 2011.


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Email: uan@aiusa.org
http://www.amnestyusa.org/urgent/
Phone: 202.509.8193
Fax: 202.675.8566
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END OF URGENT ACTION APPEAL
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++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa23610.pdf

Note: Please write on behalf of these persons even though you may not have received the original UA when issued on November 12, 2010. Thanks!

24 November 2010

Further information on UA 236/10 (12 November 2010)- Risk of Forced Eviction/Fear for safety

ISRAEL 250 Residents, including 1/3 children


On 22 November, Israeli authorities demolished approximately 30 structures in the Bedouin village of al-‘Araqib in the Negev in southern Israel for the seventh time since July. The residents – citizens of Israel with a long-established claim to the area – are trying to rebuild their homes yet again but face increasing hardship as winter approaches.

At around 7am, Israel Lands Administration officials with bulldozers, accompanied by dozens of police officers equipped with riot gear, arrived at al-‘Araqib village and quickly destroyed the shacks, tents and other structures that villagers had managed to erect following the previous demolition on 13 October. As in previous demolitions, no eviction or demolition order was presented to the inhabitants.

Some 30 structures were destroyed, including tents and shacks where the residents slept and cooked, and makeshift toilets and chicken pens. In addition, approximately 1,600 olive trees located some 2km from the village and belonging to relatives of al-‘Araqib residents were uprooted by the Israeli authorities. The villagers have already started rebuilding some of the tents and shacks so that they have some protection, as the Negev desert gets very cold at night during the winter months.

This is the seventh time that al-‘Araqib, one of the more than 40 “unrecognized” villages in Israel whose residents lack security of tenure and government services, has been destroyed since July. Some of al-‘Araqib’s 250 residents are camping out in makeshift shacks and tents in the village cemetery, while others are temporarily staying with relatives in the nearby town of Rahat or in Kafr Qassem, near Tel Aviv. However, at least 50 people, including at least 30 children, decided to rebuild their homes in the village in order to remain on their land, and are living in the remains of structures that were demolished.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
On 27 July, at least 46 homes and other structures in al-‘Araqib, including animal pens and water tanks, were destroyed by officials of the Israel Lands Administration accompanied by over 1,000 police officers. The entire village was razed by bulldozers, and thousands of olive and other trees were uprooted, destroying the villagers’ livelihood. Possessions including electricity generators, refrigerators and vehicles were confiscated by the police. On 4 and 10 August, makeshift shelters that the villagers had built were demolished and buried by bulldozers, supported by a large police force in riot gear equipped with a water cannon. Building materials and water tanks were seized; seven residents were arrested but later released, four on condition that they not enter al-‘Araqib. Then on 17 August, the authorities recommenced demolitions at dawn during Ramadan, while the villagers were fasting. On 12 September at dawn, dozens of police arrived again at al-‘Araqib with bulldozers and destroyed newly erected tents and other structures. The sixth and latest demolition was on 13 October, when the entire village was razed to the ground, and the director of the Negev Coexistence Forum, a group supporting the villagers, was arrested by police and banned from entering al-‘Araqib for 10 days.

In its concluding observations in July 2010, the UN Human Rights Committee stated its concern about “allegations of forced evictions of the Bedouin population based on the Public Land Law (Expulsion of Invaders) of 1981 as amended in 2005” and about what it described as the Israeli authorities “inadequate consideration” of the agricultural and other traditional needs of the Bedouin population of the Negev and the difficulties that the Bedouin face in accessing “health structures, education, water and electricity” due to Israeli policies. The Committee called for the Israeli authorities to “respect the Bedouin population’s right to their ancestral land and their traditional livelihood based on agriculture” and to “guarantee the Bedouin population's access to health structures, education, water and electricity, irrespective of their whereabouts” in Israel. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has also expressed concern about Israel’s relocation of Bedouin residents of “unrecognized” villages to towns and called for their villages to be officially recognized, and for Israel to “enhance its efforts to consult” the villagers and seek their agreement or consent in advance of any process of relocation.

Despite an apparent governmental plan to regularize the status of some of the “unrecognized” villages, it was reported in the Israeli media in early 2010 that the Interior Ministry, the Israel Lands Administration and the police had decided to triple the demolition rate of Bedouin construction in the Negev, and the marked increase in the number of demolitions and demolition orders this year accords with such reports.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Condemning the latest destruction of al-‘Araqib and urging the Israeli authorities to allow the villagers to rebuild their homes;
- Urging the Israeli authorities to respect the Bedouin population’s right to their ancestral land by ending the policy of home demolitions in al-‘Araqib and other “unrecognized” villages in Israel, and to take steps to officially recognize al-‘Araqib and other “unrecognized” villages so as to allow residents security of tenure and the possibility of developing their villages without threat to their homes and livelihoods;
- Urging the Israeli authorities to take immediate steps in line with the UN Human Rights Committee’s recommendations of July 2010 to guarantee access to health structures, education, water and electricity for residents of these villages.

APPEALS TO:

Director-General of the Israel Lands Administration (ILA)
Yaron Bibi
Israel Lands Administration
6 Shamai Street
P.O. Box 2600
Jerusalem 94631,
ISRAEL
Fax: 011 972 2 620 8427
Email: natalil@mmi.gov.il
Salutation: Dear Director-General, ILA


Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior
Eliyahu Yishai
2 Kaplan Street
PO Box 6158
Kiryat Ben Gurion
Jerusalem 91061,
ISRAEL
Fax: 011 972 2 666 2909
Email: sar@moin.gov.il
Salutation: Dear Minister


COPIES TO:

Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu
Office of the Prime Minister
3 Kaplan Street
Kiryat Ben-Gurion, Hakirya
PO Box 187, Jerusalem,
ISRAEL

Fax: 011 972 2 566 4838
Email: pm_eng@pmo.gov.i



Ambassador Michael Oren
Embassy of Israel
3514 International Dr. NW
Washington DC 20008

Fax: 1 202 364 5607
Email: info@israelemb.org OR info@washington.mfa.gov.il


PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 5 January 2011.


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Email: uan@aiusa.org
http://www.amnestyusa.org/urgent/
Phone: 202.509.8193
Fax: 202.675.8566
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END OF URGENT ACTION APPEAL
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Friday, November 19, 2010

Urgent Action 11-19-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa24110.pdf

18 November 2010

UA 241/10 - Death Penalty

PAKISTAN Aasia Bibi (f)


Aasia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian woman, has been sentenced to death under the country's blasphemy laws.

On 8 November, the 45-year-old mother of five children was found guilty of blasphemy and sentenced to death under Section 295B and 295C of Pakistan's Penal Code, for insulting the Prophet Muhammad, by a court in Nankana, around 75km (45 miles) west of the city of Lahore in Punjab province.

Aasia Bibi, a resident of Ittanwali, was arrested in June 2009. She was working as a farm laborer and was asked by a village elder's wife to fetch drinking water. Some other female Muslim farmhands reportedly refused to drink the water, saying it was sacrilegious and "unclean" to accept water from Aasia Bibi, as a non-Muslim. Aasia Bibi took offense, reportedly saying: "are we not human?" which led to an argument between them. The women allegedly complained to Qari Salim, the local cleric, that Aasia Bibi had made derogatory remarks about the Prophet Muhammad. The cleric informed local police who arrested and charged her with insulting the Prophet Muhammad.

Aasia Bibi denies the allegations and her husband, Ashiq Masih, claims her conviction was based on "false accusations". However, the trial judge, Naveed Iqbal, "totally ruled out" the possibility of false charges and said that there were "no mitigating circumstances". Aasia Bibi has now filed an appeal against the judgment in the Lahore High Court. She has been detained in prison and held in isolation since June 2009. She has claimed that she has not had access to a lawyer during her detention and the final day of her trial.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The blasphemy laws introduced in 1982 and 1986, while purporting to protect Islam and religious sensitivities of the Muslim majority, are vaguely formulated and arbitrarily enforced by the police and judiciary in a way which amounts to harassment and persecution of religious minorities and Muslims alike. Accusations of blasphemy have sometimes resulted in the murder of both Muslims and members of religious minorities.

Evidence from Amnesty International and other human rights groups suggests that charges brought against individuals under the blasphemy laws are founded solely on the individuals' minority religious beliefs or unfounded malicious accusations stemming from personal enmity, often with the motivation to imprison people to gain advantage in business or land disputes. Police frequently fail to record and investigate complaints and justice is impeded by the biased attitude of some judges against religious minorities.

Many of those accused or suspected of blasphemy have been assaulted or tortured. Some people detained on blasphemy charges in prisons have been killed by fellow detainees or prison wardens. Others suspected of blasphemy, but not under arrest, have been unlawfully killed without police taking any action to protect them.

"Defiling the name of the Prophet Mohammed" is a capital offense under Section 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code, which states, "Whoever by words, either spoken or written or by visible representation, or by any imputation, innuendo, or insinuation, directly or indirectly, defiles the sacred name of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) shall be punished with death, or imprisonment for life, and shall also be liable to a fine". The Federal Shariat Court, whose tasks include reviewing laws to ensure they conform with Islamic doctrine, ruled in 1991 that anyone convicted of blasphemy should face the death penalty, not life imprisonment.

Articles 18 and 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights set out that everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience, religion, opinion and expression. International human rights law provides that any limitations placed on these freedoms should be only such as are prescribed by law as well as being necessary and proportionate for, among other things, the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Calling on President Zardari to commute the death sentence use his powers under Article 45 of the Constitution;
- Calling for the immediate release of Aasia Bibi, unless she is charged with internationally regognizable offenses and tried in proceedings and under laws that meet international human rights standards;
- Calling on the authorities to take immediate measures to guarantee the safety of Aasia Bibi and her family;
- Expressing concern that the blasphemy laws are used indiscriminately against religious minorities and Muslims alike, and urging the government to amend or abolish laws, particularly section 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code which carries the death penalty for anyone found guilty of blasphemy; and
- Calling on the Supreme Court of Pakistan to take Suo Moto notice of the case;
- Urging the government to fulfill its pledge to review and improve "laws detrimental to religious harmony", announced by Prime Minister Giliani in August 2009;
- Calling for an immediate moratorium on all executions in the country, in line with the worldwide trends to abolish the death penalty with a view to an eventual abolition of the death penalty.

APPEALS TO:

President Zardari
Pakistan Secretariat, Islamabad
PAKISTAN
Fax: 011 92-51-9207458
E-mail: publicmail@president.gov.pk
Salutation: Dear President Zardari


Dr. Zaheeruddin Babar Awan
Federal Minister
Ministry of Law, Justice & Parliamentary Affairs
Room 305, S-Block,
Pakistan Secretariat, Islamabad
PAKISTAN
Fax: 011 92 51 9202628
E-Mail: minister@molaw.gov.pk
Salutation: Dear Minister


COPIES TO:

Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry
Chief Justice of Pakistan

Supreme Court of Pakistan
Islamabad
PAKISTAN

Fax: 011 92-51-9213452
Salutation: Dear Chief Justice Chaudhry


Ambassador Hussain Haqqani
Embassy of The Islamic Republic of Pakistan
3517 International Ct NW
Washington DC 20008

Fax: 1 202 686 1534
Email: info@embassyofpakistanusa.org
ambassador@embassyofpakistanusa.org

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 29 December 2010.


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Amnesty International is a worldwide grassroots movement that promotes and defends human rights.

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http://www.amnestyusa.org/urgent/
Phone: 202.509.8193
Fax: 202.675.8566
----------------------------------
END OF URGENT ACTION APPEAL
----------------------------------

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Urgent Action 11-18-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa24110.pdf

18 November 2010

UA 241/10 - Death Penalty

PAKISTAN Aasia Bibi (f)


Aasia Bibi, a Pakistani Christian woman, has been sentenced to death under the country's blasphemy laws.

On 8 November, the 45-year-old mother of five children was found guilty of blasphemy and sentenced to death under Section 295B and 295C of Pakistan's Penal Code, for insulting the Prophet Muhammad, by a court in Nankana, around 75km (45 miles) west of the city of Lahore in Punjab province.

Aasia Bibi, a resident of Ittanwali, was arrested in June 2009. She was working as a farm laborer and was asked by a village elder's wife to fetch drinking water. Some other female Muslim farmhands reportedly refused to drink the water, saying it was sacrilegious and "unclean" to accept water from Aasia Bibi, as a non-Muslim. Aasia Bibi took offense, reportedly saying: "are we not human?" which led to an argument between them. The women allegedly complained to Qari Salim, the local cleric, that Aasia Bibi had made derogatory remarks about the Prophet Muhammad. The cleric informed local police who arrested and charged her with insulting the Prophet Muhammad.

Aasia Bibi denies the allegations and her husband, Ashiq Masih, claims her conviction was based on "false accusations". However, the trial judge, Naveed Iqbal, "totally ruled out" the possibility of false charges and said that there were "no mitigating circumstances". Aasia Bibi has now filed an appeal against the judgment in the Lahore High Court. She has been detained in prison and held in isolation since June 2009. She has claimed that she has not had access to a lawyer during her detention and the final day of her trial.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The blasphemy laws introduced in 1982 and 1986, while purporting to protect Islam and religious sensitivities of the Muslim majority, are vaguely formulated and arbitrarily enforced by the police and judiciary in a way which amounts to harassment and persecution of religious minorities and Muslims alike. Accusations of blasphemy have sometimes resulted in the murder of both Muslims and members of religious minorities.

Evidence from Amnesty International and other human rights groups suggests that charges brought against individuals under the blasphemy laws are founded solely on the individuals' minority religious beliefs or unfounded malicious accusations stemming from personal enmity, often with the motivation to imprison people to gain advantage in business or land disputes. Police frequently fail to record and investigate complaints and justice is impeded by the biased attitude of some judges against religious minorities.

Many of those accused or suspected of blasphemy have been assaulted or tortured. Some people detained on blasphemy charges in prisons have been killed by fellow detainees or prison wardens. Others suspected of blasphemy, but not under arrest, have been unlawfully killed without police taking any action to protect them.

"Defiling the name of the Prophet Mohammed" is a capital offense under Section 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code, which states, "Whoever by words, either spoken or written or by visible representation, or by any imputation, innuendo, or insinuation, directly or indirectly, defiles the sacred name of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) shall be punished with death, or imprisonment for life, and shall also be liable to a fine". The Federal Shariat Court, whose tasks include reviewing laws to ensure they conform with Islamic doctrine, ruled in 1991 that anyone convicted of blasphemy should face the death penalty, not life imprisonment.

Articles 18 and 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights set out that everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience, religion, opinion and expression. International human rights law provides that any limitations placed on these freedoms should be only such as are prescribed by law as well as being necessary and proportionate for, among other things, the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Calling on President Zardari to commute the death sentence use his powers under Article 45 of the Constitution;
- Calling for the immediate release of Aasia Bibi, unless she is charged with internationally regognizable offenses and tried in proceedings and under laws that meet international human rights standards;
- Calling on the authorities to take immediate measures to guarantee the safety of Aasia Bibi and her family;
- Expressing concern that the blasphemy laws are used indiscriminately against religious minorities and Muslims alike, and urging the government to amend or abolish laws, particularly section 295C of the Pakistan Penal Code which carries the death penalty for anyone found guilty of blasphemy; and
- Calling on the Supreme Court of Pakistan to take Suo Moto notice of the case;
- Urging the government to fulfill its pledge to review and improve "laws detrimental to religious harmony", announced by Prime Minister Giliani in August 2009;
- Calling for an immediate moratorium on all executions in the country, in line with the worldwide trends to abolish the death penalty with a view to an eventual abolition of the death penalty.

APPEALS TO:

President Zardari
Pakistan Secretariat, Islamabad
PAKISTAN
Fax: 011 92-51-9207458
E-mail: publicmail@president.gov.pk
Salutation: Dear President Zardari


Dr. Zaheeruddin Babar Awan
Federal Minister
Ministry of Law, Justice & Parliamentary Affairs
Room 305, S-Block,
Pakistan Secretariat, Islamabad
PAKISTAN
Fax: 011 92 51 9202628
E-Mail: minister@molaw.gov.pk
Salutation: Dear Minister


COPIES TO:

Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry
Chief Justice of Pakistan

Supreme Court of Pakistan
Islamabad
PAKISTAN

Fax: 011 92-51-9213452
Salutation: Dear Chief Justice Chaudhry


Ambassador Hussain Haqqani
Embassy of The Islamic Republic of Pakistan
3517 International Ct NW
Washington DC 20008

Fax: 1 202 686 1534
Email: info@embassyofpakistanusa.org
ambassador@embassyofpakistanusa.org

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 29 December 2010.


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Amnesty International is a worldwide grassroots movement that promotes and defends human rights.

This Urgent Action may be reposted if kept intact, including contact information and stop action date (if applicable).
Thank you for your help with this appeal.

Urgent Action Network
Amnesty International USA
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http://www.amnestyusa.org/urgent/
Phone: 202.509.8193
Fax: 202.675.8566
----------------------------------
END OF URGENT ACTION APPEAL
----------------------------------

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Urgent Action 11-17-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa24010.pdf

16 November 2010

UA 240/10 Fear for Safety

MEXICO José Alberto Donis Rodríguez (m)


Migrants' rights defender José Alberto Donis Rodríguez was assaulted and threatened with death on 11 November by a suspected gang member in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Local sources believe the gang member is part of a migrant trafficking ring operating in the area. José Alberto Donis and his colleagues are at risk.

José Alberto Donis is a staff member at the "Brothers on the road" ("Hermanos en el camino") migrants' shelter in Ixtepec city, Oaxaca state. He is a Guatemalan migrant himself who arrived at the shelter in 2008 and decided to stay to support the work of the other staff and volunteers.

On 11 November at around 11am, José Alberto Donis approached a man who was standing at the entrance of the migrants' shelter. As José Alberto Donis had seen the man wandering near the shelter for several days, he told the man that all those who stay at the shelter or who regularly visit the shelter have to be photographed and have their personal details recorded for security reasons. The man refused, and José Alberto Donis asked him to leave the shelter. An argument began and the man attempted to punch José Alberto Donis, threatened to kill him, and left the shelter. At around 2pm a colleague of José Alberto Donis ran into the man at the local train station and overheard him telling others that he was going to kill José Alberto Donis.

The man, who is in his late twenties, could be part of a trafficking ring which operates in the area. The gang has tried to lure migrants with the promise of taking them to the US border. Hundreds of migrants are kidnapped every year in Mexico, and many of them are eventually killed after they fall prey to these trafficking rings.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Defending human rights can be a life-threatening job in Mexico. Scores of activists have suffered death threats, intimidation, and harassment in the last few years. Some of them have been killed for doing their job. The authorities have recognized that adopting and implementing an effective and comprehensive protection programme (mecanismo de protección), as requested by human rights defenders, is paramount. However, they have not fulfilled their promises yet.

Father Alejandro Solalinde, the director of the “Brothers on the road” shelter, has suffered arbitrary arrest and intimidation at the hands of local authorities and members of the community. On 10 January 2007, Father Solalinde was arrested and detained for several hours by police while carrying out human rights work. On 24 June 2008, a group of about 50 residents of Ciudad Ixtepec led by municipal officials, including the mayor and 14 municipal police, broke into the shelter and threatened to set the building on fire if it was not shut down within 48 hours.

Following further acts of intimidation in late 2009, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights ordered the Mexican authorities to provide Father Solalinde and his colleagues with adequate protection. Since 23 April 2010, when the request was issued, Father Solalinde has held meetings with representatives of the Ministry of the Interior and they have agreed on a plan to implement specific protection measures. To date, very few of these measures have been put into practice.

Every year, thousands of undocumented migrants from Central America travel across Mexico in order to reach the US border. Many of them suffer beatings, kidnapping, rape, and even murder. In most of the cases the attacks are carried out by criminal gangs, but officials are known to have been complicit or acquiescent in many of the attacks. By and large, the authorities fail to investigate attacks against migrants and to bring those responsible to justice.

On 8 November Amnesty International and Mexican actor and director Gael García Bernal launched a series of films on the situation of undocumented migrants in Mexico. The films are available on: http://www.youtube.com/invisiblesfilms

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Expressing concern at the assault and death threat suffered by human rights defender José Alberto Donis on 11 November;
- Urging the authorities to provide José Alberto Donis and his colleagues with effective protection, in strict accordance with their wishes and in compliance with the request issued by Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on 23 April 2010;
- Calling on the authorities to carry out a full and prompt investigation into the operations of trafficking rings around the migrants’ shelter;
- Reminding the authorities of their duties to guarantee that human rights defenders can carry out their work without fear of reprisals as established in the 1998 UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders.


APPEALS TO:

Minister of the Interior
Lic. José Francisco Blake Mora
Secretaría de Gobernación
Bucareli 99, 1er. piso, Col. Juárez
Delegación Cuauhtémoc
México D.F., C.P.06600,
MÉXICO
Fax: 011 52 55 5093 3414
Email: secretario@segob.gob.mx
Salutation: Dear Minister/Estimado Señor Secretario


Governor-elect of Oaxaca state (takes office on 1 December)
Lic. Gabino Cué Monteagudo
Gobernador electo del Estado
Representación del Estado de Oaxaca en la Ciudad de México
Shakespeare 68, Col. Nueva Anzures, Del. Miguel Hidalgo,
México
, D.F., C.P. 11590,
MÉXICO
Fax: 011 52 55 5531 4041 OR 011 52 55 5545 7362
Email: goboaxdf@prodigy.net.mx



COPIES TO:

President of the National Human Rights Commission
Dr. Raúl Plascencia Villanueva
Presidente, Comisión Nacional de Derechos Humanos (CNDH)
Blvd. Adolfo López Mateos 1922, 6° piso,
Col. Tlacopac San Ángel, Del. Álvaro Obregón,
México D.F., C.P. 01040,
MÉXICO
Fax: 011 52 55 5668 0767
Email: secpartpresidencia@cndh.org.mx


Ambassador Arturo Sarukhan Casamitjana
Embassy of Mexico
1911 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington DC 20006

Fax: 1 202 728 1698
Email: mexembusa@sre.gob.mx



PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 28 December 2010.




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Monday, November 15, 2010

Urgent Action 11-15-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
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15 November 2010

UA 238/10 - Risk of torture/ Legal concern

TAJIKISTAN Ilkhom Ismanov (m) Russian national

Ilkhom Ismanov, a Russian citizen, has reportedly been tortured by police in the northern Soghd region of Tajikistan and continues to be at risk. His lawyer has been denied access to him.

According to the NGO Center for Human Rights of Soghd region, on 3 November, Ilkhom Ismanov disappeared and his family was not told his whereabouts. On 4 November two men came to his family's house and made an inventory of his possessions without presenting any official documents. They told Ilkhom Ismanov's wife that he was being held at the Department for the Fight against Organized Crime (6th Department) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the city of Khudzhand in the Soghd region.

On 4 November Ilkhom Ismanov's wife hired a lawyer, but despite several attempts the she has reportedly only seen her client in court on 12 November, when the judge authorized his further detention. On 5 November a representative of the Center for Human Rights of Soghd region tried to meet with him, but was also denied access.

On 5 November, when Ilkhom Ismanov's wife and brother went to the detention facility in Khudzhand to provide him with food and clothing, a policeman reportedly asked them to bring some ointment for injuries and pain killers. Ilkhom Ismanov's relatives have been denied access to him many times, but they were able to see him twice. They said that he was unable to walk, had several cuts on his neck, his hands were bruised, his whole body was wet and there was water on the floor. His wife reported that when she asked to look at his feet police stopped the visit and escorted them out. When she asked the police what they had done to her husband they reportedly made fun of her and said: "You should say thank you to us that we showed you your husband. Now, go. We also need time to rest."

According to a source present at the court hearing on 12 November, Ilkhom Ismanov told the judge that he was tortured including by giving him electric shocks and pouring boiling water over his body. The judge reportedly turned down Ilkhom Ismanov’s offer to show him evidence of torture on his body. The judge did not address the torture allegations and said that the lawyer should take it up with the police investigator. The judge ruled on 13 November that allegations that he had been detained since 3 November rather than 9 November, as the police had stated, should be investigated. According to the Tajikistani Criminal-Procedural Code, detainees have to be brought before a judge to rule on their continued detention no later than 72 hours after their arrest. The court announced that Ilkhom Ismanov was charged with "organizing a criminal group" (Article 187 of the Criminal Code of Tajikistan).

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
On 11 November Ilkhom Ismanov was reportedly transferred to the Temporary Detention Facility of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the town of Chkalovsk.

Ilkhom Ismanov's relatives and his lawyer have sent several complaints to the authorities including the Regional Department for the Fight with Organized Crime and the Procurator's Office of Sogd. On 11 November they sent a telegram to the regional procuracy urging them to give Ilkhom Ismanov a medical examination. No replies have been received.

Tajikistan is a landlocked country bordering China (East), Afghanistan (South) and Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan (North) and has an estimated population of 7.2 million. Tajikistan gained its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. The economic decline of the country after the collapse of the Soviet Union was compounded by a devastating civil war, lasting from 1992- 1997. President Emomali Rakhmon has been in power since 1994. Emomali Rakhmon has been successful in consolidating Tajikistan after its devastating civil war. He views himself as the indispensable guarantor of stability and peace in the face of possible new unrest, including in the context of the unstable economic situation in the country and the politically unstable situation in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Amnesty International has criticized human rights violations in the country such as torture and ill-treatment of detainees, and other persons, by law enforcement officers, impunity for torturers, denial of the right to fair trial, inhuman prison conditions, restrictions of freedom of speech; and violence against women. Torture and other ill-treatment are believed to be widespread in Tajikistan.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Expressing concern at allegations that Ilkhom Ismanov was tortured or ill-treated by police from the Department for the Fight against Organized Crime (6th Department) of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in the city of Khudzhand and urging the authorities to promptly conduct a medical examination and open an investigation into the allegations;
- Expressing concern that Ilkhom Ismanov was detained for six days longer than the lawful period before being brought before a judge;
- Expressing concern that his lawyer has been denied access to Ilkhom Ismanov and urging the authorities to ensure that his lawyer is promptly granted access.


APPEALS TO:

The President
Emomali Rakhmon
Apparat Prezidenta Respubliki Tajikistan,
or. Rudaki 80,
734023 g. Dushanbe
TAJIKISTAN
Email: mail@president.tj
Salutation: Dear President

Minister of Foreign Affairs
Zarifi Khamrokhon
pr. Rudaki, 42,
734051 Dushanbe
TAJIKISTAN
Fax: 011 (992 37) 221-02-59
Email: info@mfa.tj
Salutation: Dear Minister


COPIES TO:

Ambassador Abdujabbor Shirinov
Embassy of the Republic of Tajikistan
1005 New Hampshire Avenue, NW
Washington DC 20037

Fax: 1 202 223 6091
Email: tajikistan@verizon.net


PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 27 December 2010.







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Sunday, November 14, 2010

Urgent Action 11-14-10

URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa23610.pdf

12 November 2010

UA 236/10 - Risk of Forced Eviction

ISRAEL 250 Residents, including 1/3 children

Around 250 residents, one third of them children, of the Bedouin village al-'Araqib in southern Israel are facing forcible eviction from their land and the destruction of their property for the seventh time since July. Although residents have a long- established claim to the area and are Israeli citizens, the Israeli government does not recognize their rights to the land.

Since July, al-'Araqib village has been destroyed by the Israeli authorities at least once a month and the villagers anticipate further destruction within the next week. Earlier this week, Israeli authorities demolished a mosque in the nearby Bedouin town of Rahat, and the neighboring local council refused to continue selling water to residents of al-'Araqib. Persistent attempts by the villagers and their supporters to rebuild their homes have been met by further destruction, and the entire village is threatened. Residents are currently camping out in makeshift shacks and tents.

On 27 July, at least 46 homes and other structures in al-'Araqib, including animal pens and water tanks, were destroyed by officials of the Israel Lands Administration (ILA) accompanied by over 1,000 police officers. The entire village was razed by bulldozers, and thousands of olive and other trees were uprooted, destroying the villagers' livelihood. Possessions including electricity generators, refrigerators, and vehicles were confiscated by the police.

On 4 and 10 August, makeshift shelters that the villagers had built were demolished and buried by bulldozers, supported by a large police force in riot gear equipped with a water cannon. Building materials and water tanks were seized; seven residents were arrested but later released, four on condition that they not enter al-'Araqib. Then on 17 August, the authorities recommenced demolitions at dawn during Ramadan, while the villagers were fasting. On 12 September at dawn, dozens of police arrived again at al-'Araqib with bulldozers and destroyed newly erected tents and other structures. The sixth and latest demolition was on 13 October, when the entire village was razed to the ground, and the director of the Negev Coexistence Forum, a group supporting the villagers, was arrested by police and banned from entering al-'Araqib for 10 days.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
These demolitions come in the context of ongoing Israeli government actions against residents of "unrecognized" villages like al-'Araqib. Dozens of Bedouin villages in southern Israel and other parts of the country are not formally recognized by the state authorities, even though their tens of thousands of residents are Israeli citizens. They lack basic services and live under constant threat of destruction of their homes and eviction from the land. This year has seen a marked increase in the demolition of Bedouin homes in the Negev (or Naqab) area of southern Israel. The Israel Lands Administration classifies al- 'Araqib and other "unrecognized" villages as state land and claims that the Bedouin citizens of Israel "invaded" these areas. Yet, the Bedouin have a well-established historical claim to live there and international human rights law supports the view that they should be free from threats of home demolition or forced evictions.

In its concluding observations in July 2010, the UN Human Rights Committee (HRC) stated its concern about "allegations of forced evictions of the Bedouin population based on the Public Land Law (Expulsion of Invaders) of 1981 as amended in 2005" and about what it described as the Israeli authorities "inadequate consideration" of the agricultural and other traditional needs of the Bedouin population of the Negev and the difficulties that the Bedouin face in accessing "health structures, education, water and electricity" due to Israeli policies. The HRC called for the Israeli authorities to "respect the Bedouin population's right to their ancestral land and their traditional livelihood based on agriculture" and to "guarantee the Bedouin population's access to health structures, education, water, and electricity, irrespective of their whereabouts" in Israel. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination has also expressed concern about Israel's relocation of Bedouin residents of "unrecognized" villages to towns and called for their villages to be officially recognized, and for Israel to "enhance its efforts to consult" the villagers and seek their agreement or consent in advance of any process of relocation.

Despite an apparent governmental plan to regularize the status of some of the "unrecognized" villages, it was reported in the Israeli media in early 2010 that the Interior Ministry, the Israel Lands Administration, and the police had decided to triple the demolition rate of Bedouin construction in the Negev, and the marked increase in the number of demolitions and demolition orders this year accords with such reports.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Urging the Israeli authorities not to destroy al-'Araqib again, and to allow the villagers to rebuild their homes;
- Urging the Israeli authorities to immediately end the policy of home demolitions in al-'Araqib and other "unrecognized" villages in Israel, and to take steps to officially recognize al-'Araqib and other "unrecognized" villages so as to allow residents security of tenure and the possibility of developing their villages without threat to their homes and livelihoods;
- Urging the Israeli authorities to take immediate steps in line with the UN Human Rights Committee's recommendations of July 2010 to guarantee access to health structures, education, water, and electricity for residents of these villages.

APPEALS TO:

Director-General of the ILA
Yaron Bibi Israel Lands Administration
6 Shamai Street
P.O. Box 2600
Jerusalem 94631,
ISRAEL
Fax: 011 972 2 620 8427
Email: natalil@mmi.gov.il
Salutation: Dear Director-General, ILA

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior
Eliyahu Yishai
2 Kaplan Street
PO Box 6158
Kiryat Ben Gurion
Jerusalem 91061,
ISRAEL
Fax: 011 972 2 666 2909
Email: sar@moin.gov.il
Salutation: Dear Minister

COPIES TO:

Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu
Office
of the Prime Minister
3 Kaplan Street
Kiryat Ben-Gurion, Hakirya
PO Box 187, Jerusalem,
ISRAEL

Fax: 011 972 2 566 4838
Email: pm_eng@pmo.gov.i

Ambassador Michael Oren
Embassy of Israel
3514 International Dr. NW
Washington DC 20008

Fax: 1 202 364 5607
Email: info@israelemb.org
info@washington.mfa.gov.il

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 24 December 2010.



+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
URGENT ACTION APPEAL
- From Amnesty International USA

To learn about recent Urgent Action successes and updates, go to
http://www.amnestyusa.org/iar/success
----------------------------------
For a print-friendly version of this Urgent Action (PDF):
http://www.amnestyusa.org/actioncenter/actions/uaa13510.pdf

Note: Please write on behalf of these persons even though you may not have received the original UA when issued on 18 June, 2010. Thanks!

12 November 2010

Further information on UA 135/10 (18 June 2010) and follow ups (10 November 2010, 15 September 2010, 3 September 2010, 27 August 2010, 5 August 2010 & 25 June 2010) – Prisoner of conscience/ Unfair trial / Health concern

KYRGYZSTAN Azimzhan Askarov (m), human rights defender

Prisoner of conscience Azimzhan Askarov is critically ill and was transferred to a prison hospital just outside Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan on 12 November. His family and colleagues are concerned that he may die without proper medical treatment, which may not be available in the prison hospital.

Azimzhan Askarov was transported from Jalal-Abad to a prison just outside the capital Bishkek. He was transferred to Prison Colony Number 47, which has better medical facilities than are available in southern Kyrgyzstan. According to official sources, doctors who examined him said that Azimzhan Askarov’s life is no longer in danger, but Amnesty International is concerned he is being transferred because his health has deteriorated further.

Azimzhan Askarov’s lawyer has asked for a second opinion and is trying to ensure that he is given all the necessary tests and treatment. However, there is a danger that Azimzhan Askarov will not be able to receive the necessary tests and treatment in a prison hospital.

Azimzhan Askarov was given a life sentence on 15 September having been accused of participating in “mass violence and murder” in June 2010. He appealed the sentence but on 10 November it was upheld.

His lawyer and family members reported on the final day of his appeal hearing that Azimzhan Askahov was not able to eat for over 15 days because of undiagnosed problems with his digestive tract. Azimzhan Askarov’s colleagues described him as looking very gaunt with yellowish skin. His lawyer and family members also stated an ambulance had to be called earlier in the day to the detention centre in Bazar- Korgan where Azimzhan Askarov was being held because his condition was deteriorating rapidly. His family and lawyer were told that the emergency doctor who attended Azimzhan Askarov was unable to give him the necessary medical assistance and recommended that he be seen urgently by a specialist surgeon as he might need to have emergency surgery.

Amnesty International believes that Azimzhan Askarov has been targeted for his legitimate activities as a human rights defender, as he has documented police ill-treatment for several years.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Amnesty International believes that Azimzhan Askarov has been targeted for his legitimate activities as a human rights defender.

He is the director of the human rights organization Vozdukh (Air) and he has been documenting police ill-treatment of detainees in the district of Bazar Korgan and other parts of the Jalal-Abad region for years. In June 2010, during the violence in south of Kyrgyzstan, Azimzhan Askarov filmed and photographed killings and arson attacks on mostly Uzbek homes and other buildings in Bazar Korgan, allegedly by groups of armed men and men in military uniforms claiming to be Kyrgyz.

He was detained on 15 June 2010 in Bazar Korgan on suspicion of “organizing mass disorder” and “inciting ethnic hatred” in connection with the death of one police officer during the violence that month. On 13 August he was charged with “attempting to participate in hostage taking,” “storage of ammunition,” “storage of extremist literature,” “inciting ethnic hatred,” “mass riots,” “being an accomplice to premeditated murder” and “being an accomplice in the killing of a law enforcement officer.” According to local human rights defenders, Azimzhan Askarov was subjected to prolonged beatings on the premises of the police station in Bazar Korgan to force him to hand over his film footage and confess to the murder of the police officer.

He was sentenced to life imprisonment and the confiscation of his property by the Nooken district court on 15 September after a blatantly unfair trial. Local and international human rights monitors said that during the trial hearing of Azimzhan Askarov and seven co-defendants on 2 September, relatives of the dead police officer attacked and threatened Azimzhan Askarov’s lawyers and family, both inside and outside the courtroom.

Azimzhan Askarov and three of the other defendants appeared at the 6 September hearing with visible bruises on their faces which had not been apparent at the 2 September hearing, suggesting they had been beaten between the two hearings while in custody.

The appeal court hearings started on 25 October in Tash-Kumir some 20 km from Bazar-Korgan in order to guarantee the safety of the defendants, their lawyers and the judges. Armed police officers were guarding the court room. Relatives of the murdered police officer were reportedly less disruptive during the sessions, nevertheless they shouted abuse and threats at the defendants and their lawyers, held up posters asking for the death penalty to be given to the defendants, threw water at Azimzhan Askarov’s lawyer and made death threats against the lawyer of one of the other defendants. No witnesses for the defense were called during the first appeal court sessions. On 3 November the court hearings transferred to Nooken where the trial of first instance had taken place.

On 4 November eyewitnesses reported seeing several defendants with visible signs of beatings leaving the court building in Nooken at the end of the day’s hearing. Observers had been asked to leave the court room before the defendants were removed and so it was not clear who had beaten the defendants. At least one defendant was kicked and beaten by police officers outside the court building as he was escorted to the vehicle taking the defendants back to the Bazar-Korgan detention centre. Defense lawyers asked for forensic medical examinations to be conducted immediately but prosecutors in Bazar-Korgan refused to order any. Human Rights Defenders said that instead the prosecutor’s office held a press conference and denied that any beatings had taken place.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- Expressing alarm that Azimzhan Askarov is critically ill and urge the authorities to ensure that he receives appropriate and necessary emergency care immediately, including being transferred to hospital
- Expressing concern that Azimzhan Askarov is being held at Bazar-Korgan detention center where he has previously been ill-treated and insist that he is moved to a different detention facility
- Reiterating that Azimzhan Askarov should not be in detention or facing trial but is a prisoner of conscience and should be immediately and unconditionally released.

APPEALS TO:

Minister of Justice
Salyanova Aida Zhenishbekovna
32 M.Gandi Street,
Bishkek, 720010
KYRGYZSTAN
Fax: 011 312 656592
Email: minjust@minjust.gov.kg
Salutation: Dear Minister

General Prosecutor
Kubatbek Baibolov
Orozbekova Street,
72 Bishkek 720040
KYRGYZSTAN
Fax: 011 996 312 665411
Salutation: Dear General Prosecutor

COPIES TO:

President
Roza Otunbaeva
Dom praviteltsva
Bishkek 720003
KYRGYZSTAN
Fax: 011 996 312 625012
Email: admin@kyrgyz-el.kg

Ambassador Arslan Anarbaev
Embassy of the Kyrgyz Republic
2360 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington DC 20008

Fax: 1 202 386 7550
Email: consul@kgembassy.org

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 24 December 2010.


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