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Report 2012: No longer business as usual for tyranny and injustice
Amnesty International
May 23, 2012
http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news_details.asp?NewsID=20135
The courage shown by
protesters in the past 12 months has been matched by a failure of
leadership that
makes the UN Security Council seem tired, out of step and increasingly
unfit for purpose, Amnesty
International said as it launched its 50th global human rights report
with a call for a strong global Arms Trade Treaty later this year.
"Failed leadership
has gone global in the last year, with politicians responding to
protests with brutality or indifference. Governments must show legitimate
leadership and reject injustice by protecting the powerless and
restraining the powerful. It is time to put people before corporations
and rights before profits," said Salil Shetty, Amnesty International
Secretary General.
The vocal and enthusiastic
support for the protest movements shown by many global and regional
powers in the early months of 2011, has not translated into action.
As Egyptians go to the polls to vote for a new president, it looks
increasingly as if the opportunities for change created by the protestors
are being squandered.
"In the last year
it has all too often become clear that opportunistic alliances and
financial interests have trumped human rights as global powers jockey
for influence in the Middle East and North Africa," said Salil
Shetty. "The language of human rights is adopted when it serves
political or corporate agendas, and shelved when inconvenient or
standing in the way of profit."
A failure to intervene
in Sri Lanka and inaction over crimes against humanity in Syria
- one of Russia's main customers for arms - left
the UN Security Council looking redundant as a guardian of global
peace. The emerging powerhouses of India, Brazil and South Africa
have too often been complicit through their silence.
"There is a clear
and compelling case for the situation in Syria to be referred to
the International Criminal Court for investigation of crimes against
humanity. The determination of some UN Security Council members
to shield Syria at any cost leaves accountability for these crimes
elusive and is a betrayal of the Syrian people," said Salil
Shetty.
Amnesty International
Report 2012 documents specific restrictions on free speech in at
least 91 countries as well as cases of people tortured or otherwise
ill-treated in at least 101 countries - in many cases for
taking part in demonstrations.
"Ousting individual
leaders - however tyrannical - is not enough to deliver
long-term change. Governments must uphold freedom of expression
at home and abroad, take international responsibilities seriously,
and invest in systems and structures that ensure justice, freedom
and equality before the law."
The UN meeting to agree
an Arms Trade Treaty in July will be an acid test for politicians
to place rights over self-interest and profit. Without a strong
treaty, the UN Security Council's guardianship of global peace
and security seems doomed to failure; its permanent members wielding
an absolute veto on any resolution despite being the world's
largest arms suppliers.
"Protestors have
shown that change is possible. They have thrown down a gauntlet
demanding that
governments stand up for justice, equality and dignity. They have
shown that leaders who don't meet these expectations will
no longer be accepted. After an inauspicious start 2012 must become
the year of action," said Salil Shetty.
Other global developments
highlighted in Amnesty International Report 2012:
- Highly repressive
states including China threw the full weight of their security
apparatus into the
suffocation of protest. There was no improvement in North Korea's
horrific human rights situation.
- In sub-Saharan Africa,
the Middle East and North Africa uprisings resonated strongly
with people - but excessive force was used against protesters
in countries from Angola to Senegal to Uganda.
- Social protest gathered
strength in the Americas, frequently bringing people into confrontation
with powerful economic and political interests. Activists were
threatened and killed, including in Brazil,
Colombia and Mexico.
- In Russia, civic activism
grew and the country saw its largest demonstrations since the
collapse of the Soviet Union, but opposition voices were abused
and systematically undermined.
- There was no sign
of significant change in countries such as Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
This year's Eurovision Song Contest host, Azerbaijan, suppressed
freedom of expression and sixteen prisoners of conscience are
still behind bars for raising their voices in 2011.
- Violence followed
South Sudan's vote for independence but the UN Security
Council - along with the African Union's Peace and
Security Council - again failed to condemn abuses including
indiscriminate bombardments by the Sudanese Armed Forces, or the
Sudanese government's closure of affected states to humanitarian
organizations.
- In the Middle East
and North Africa, as the uprisings occupied world attention, other
deep-seated
problems festered. Iran's government was increasingly isolated,
tolerated no dissent, and used the death
penalty with an enthusiasm only outstripped by China, while Saudi
Arabia cracked down on protestors.
Israel maintained its blockade of Gaza, prolonging the humanitarian
crisis and continued to expand illegal settlements in the West
Bank. Palestinian political organizations Fatah and Hamas targeted
each other's supporters; Israeli forces and Palestinian
armed groups mounted tit-for-tat attacks in Gaza.
- Myanmar's government
took a pivotal decision to free more than 300 political prisoners
and allow Aung San Suu Kyi to contest elections. An escalation
of conflict-related human rights violations in ethnic minority
areas, as well as continuing harassment and detention of activists,
however, suggested limits to the reform.
- Trends included abuses
against Indigenous communities in the Americas as drives to exploit
resources intensified; worsening discrimination in Africa over
people's sexual orientation or gender identity; increased
xenophobic rhetoric from some European politicians; and increased
vulnerability to terrorist acts in Africa by Islamist armed groups.
- Progress including
the global trend towards abolition of the death penalty; the erosion
of impunity for past abuses in the Americas; and landmark steps
towards justice in Europe with the arrests of General Ratko Mladic
and Croatian Serb Goran Hadic, to face trial for crimes
committed in the 1990s wars in former Yugoslavia.
Notes to editors
1. Amnesty International Report 2012: State of the World's
Human Rights covers January-December
2011.
2. Facts and figures, audio-visual materials, details of media events
and other information are available.
Please email press@amnesty.org
for further details.
3. For more information or to arrange an interview with an AI spokesperson
and those involved in the
frontline of the struggle for human rights, contact the Press Office
on + 44 (0) 20 7413 5566 or
press@amnesty.org.
Follow us on Twitter @amnestypress
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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