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On
Human Rights Day, maintain focus on protecting peaceful protest
and assembly
Jeffrey
T. Smith
December 10, 2013
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeffrey-t-smith/on-human-rights-day-maint_1_b_4419589.html
Since 1950,
December 10 has been internationally recognized as Human Rights
Day, which celebrates the decision by the United Nations General
Assembly to adopt the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), proudly proclaiming its
principles and aspirations as the "common standard of achievement
for all peoples and all nations." While the human rights landscape
has significantly improved since that time as a result, for example,
of large-scale decolonization, widespread acceptance of economic
rights as fundamental to human dignity, and measures to better protect
marginalized communities much work remains to be done. That is why
this year's theme, "Working for Your Rights," which places
an emphasis on identifying future challenges that inevitably lie
ahead, is both apt and timely.
While human
rights defenders and civil society activists are more equipped than
ever before with the essential tools to confront repression, so
too are autocratic regimes savvier and better positioned to block
their efforts. No longer relying on brute force alone, autocrats
in nations such as Zimbabwe, Egypt, Uganda, and Morocco are enacting
legal measures to stifle peaceful protest and freedom of assembly,
often under the dubious guise of public safety. While strictly enforcing
the "rule of law" in these contexts may provide a veil
of legitimacy to the outside world, those who work on behalf of
and are genuinely guided by democratic principles know better than
to stand down and accept the unacceptable.
Recognizing
that these fundamental rights stand at the vanguard of broader protection
for civic activists and ordinary citizens alike, the Robert F. Kennedy
Center for Justice and Human Rights (RFK Center) worked closely
with our partners, Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), to file a landmark petition before
the African Commission on Human and People's Rights (ACHPR), seeking
to protect the right to engage in peaceful demonstrations. WOZA's
leaders have been routinely beaten, detained, and arrested more
than 50 times over the course of the past decade; to date, not once
have they been convicted of committing an actual crime. Last month,
the ACHPR accepted the case filed on behalf of WOZA, marking the
first time that Africa's leading human rights body will hear a case
that directly addresses the right to peaceful protest. This important
development at the ACHPR represents a truly significant step towards
strengthening democracy not only in Zimbabwe, but across the continent,
including in neighboring Zambia where major democratic backsliding
is evident.
The impact of
the ultimate ACHPR judgment could prove decisive in countries like
Egypt, where a new protest law has been discussed by the cabinet
and now only awaits presidential approval. The controversial law
allows security forces to use deadly force to disperse crowds and
imposes a highly restrictive government permission requirement in
order for citizens to gather in public, violating a host of international
human rights standards, including those enshrined in the African
Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (African Charter) and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
The right to
peaceful assembly is also under threat in Uganda, as the Public
Order Management Act (POMA), signed into law in September of this
year, places undue burdens on civil society and outlaws public demonstrations
around "democratic institutions," including parliament
and the courts. POMA also criminalizes assembly organizers and provides
no protection to the rights of media to both attend and report on
public demonstrations. Of particular concern are the negative effects
this law could potentially have on Uganda's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) community, members of which are
already specifically targeted for abuse and routinely suffer human
rights violations.
Perhaps the
most egregious example of continued rights violations as it pertains
to freedom of assembly and peaceful protest has occurred in Western
Sahara, where systematic violations against the Sahrawi people by
Moroccan security forces have continued for decades. Moroccan authorities
have violently dispersed Sahrawi protests on numerous occasions,
many of which result in arbitrary detention, verified reports of
torture, and a mounting death toll comprised of both innocent civilians
and human rights defenders.
The immense
challenges to protecting the rights to peaceful protest and freedom
of assembly, throughout Africa and elsewhere, will no doubt remain.
However, this year's commemoration of Human Rights Day should remind
each of us that while the power of autocrats and dictatorships are
both real and present, brave activists the world over are necessarily
empowered with the wherewithal and persistence to outlast our common
adversaries. As the late Nobel laureate Nelson Mandela once said,
"To deny people their human rights is to challenge their very
humanity." Indeed, it is that challenge which will continue
to spur us on and motivate each of us on this day, and successive
others, to continue working for our shared human rights.
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