WORLD REPORT 2010 EVENTS OF 2009
Human Rights Watch is one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to defending and protecting human rights. By focusing international attention where human rights are violated, we give voice to the oppressed and hold oppressors accountable for their crimes. Our rigorous, objective investigations and strategic, targeted advocacy build intense pressure for action and raise the cost of human rights abuse. For over 30 years, Human Rights Watch has worked tenaciously to lay thelegal and moral groundwork for deep-rooted change and has fought to bring greater justice and security to people around the world.
Human Rights Watch began in 1978 with the founding of its Europe and Central Asia division (then known as Helsinki Watch). Today, it also includes divisions covering Africa, the Americas, Asia, and the Middle East and North Africa; a United States program; thematic divisions or programs on arms, business and human rights, children’s rights, health and human rights, international justice, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights, refugees, terrorism/counterterrorism, and women’s rights; and an emergencies program. It maintains offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Cairo, Chicago, Geneva, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Tokyo, Toronto, Washington DC, and Zurich, and field presences in around a dozen more locations globally. Human Rights Watch is an independent, nongovernmental organization, supported by contributions from private individuals and foundations worldwide. It accepts no government funds, directly or indirectly. Table of Contents
The Abusers’ Reaction: Intensifying Attacks on Human Rights Defenders, Organizations, and Institutions / 1 by Kenneth Roth
Civilian Protection and Middle East Armed Groups: In Search of Authoritative Local Voices / 30 by Joe Stork
Abusing Patients: Health Providers’ Complicity in Torture and Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment / 49 by Joseph Amon
In the Migration Trap: Unaccompanied Migrant Children in Europe / 60 by Simone Troller
Africa / 73 Angola / 74 Burundi / 81 Chad / 87 Côte d’Ivoire / 93 Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) / 98 Equatorial Guinea / 106 Eritrea / 112 Ethiopia / 118 Guinea / 123 Kenya / 128 Liberia / 136 Nigeria / 142 Rwanda / 148 Sierra Leone / 153 Somalia / 157 South Africa / 164 Sudan / 169 Uganda / 176 Zimbabwe / 182 Americas / 191 Argentina / 192 Bolivia / 197 Brazil / 201 Chile / 207 Colombia / 212 Cuba / 218 Guatemala / 223 Haiti / 228 Honduras / 232 Mexico / 238 Peru / 245 Venezuela / 250 Asia / 257 Afghanistan / 258 Bangladesh / 264 Burma / 270 Cambodia / 279 China / 285 India / 298 Indonesia / 306 Malaysia / 315 Nepal / 320 North Korea / 326 Pakistan / 331 The Philippines / 338 Singapore / 343 Sri Lanka / 347 Thailand / 355 Vietnam / 361 Europe and Central Asia / 369 Armenia / 370 Azerbaijan / 376 Belarus / 381 Bosnia and Herzegovina / 386 Croatia / 391 European Union / 396 Georgia / 414 Kazakhstan / 419 Kyrgyzstan / 424 Russia / 429 Serbia / 439 Tajikistan / 450 Turkey / 455 Turkmenistan / 460 Ukraine / 466 Uzbekistan / 471 Middle East and North Africa / 479 Algeria / 480 Bahrain / 485 Egypt / 490 Iran / 495 Iraq / 501 Israel/Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) / 509 Jordan / 521 Kuwait / 527 Lebanon / 531 Libya / 536 Morocco/Western Sahara / 541 Saudi Arabia / 548 Syria / 555 Tunisia / 562 United Arab Emirates (UAE) / 568 Yemen / 574 United States / 581 2009 Human Rights Watch Publications / 597 INTRODUCTION
The Abusers’ Reaction : Intensifying Attacks on Human Rights Defenders, Organizations, and Institutions By Kenneth Roth
Every government is at times tempted to violate human rights. To encourage governments to resist that temptation, the human rights movement seeks to raise the price of abuse—to shift the cost-benefit calculus behind a government’s actions.
The human rights movement’s ability to raise that price has grown substantially in recent years. Today, activists are capable of exposing abuses most anywhere in the world, shining an intense spotlight of shame on those responsible, rallying concerned governments and institutions to use their influence on behalf of victims, and in severe cases, persuading international prosecutors to bring abusers to justice. These are effective tools, and they have retained their power even as certain traditional allies wavered in their support for human rights. That effectiveness has spawned a reaction, and that reaction grew particularly intense in 2009. Certain abusive governments, sometimes working together, sometimes pursuing parallel tracks, are engaged in an intense round of attacks on human rights defenders, organizations, and institutions. The aim is to silence the messenger, to deflect the pressure, to lessen the cost of committing human rights violations. These attacks might be seen as an unwitting tribute to the human rights movement. If governments were not feeling the heat, they would not bother trying to smother the source. But the cynicism of their motives does not mitigate the danger. Under various pretexts, these governments are attacking the very foundations of the human rights movement.
The techniques vary from the subtle to the transparent, from the refined to the ruthless. In some cases, human rights activists—be they advocates, journalists, lawyers, petition-gatherers, or others who document and publicize abuses or defend victims—have been harassed, detained, and sometimes killed. Organizations have been shut down or crippled. The tools used range from the classic police raid to the more novel use of regulatory constraints.
International institutions have also been targeted. The emergence of an international system of justice—especially the International Criminal Court—has been the focus of particular venom by government leaders who fear prosecution. The aim is apparently to suppress any institution that is capable of penalizing those who violate human rights. The attacks are built on a series of arguments that have resonance but cannot ultimately be reconciled with the imperative of justice for the worst international crimes. In addition, the Human Rights Council, the United Nations’ foremost intergovernmental human rights body, has become victim of concerted efforts to undermine its potential by restricting voices that are independent of government control.
The emergence of a strong human rights movement has not, of course, meant the end of human rights abuses. Pressure sometimes works to mitigate or curb abuses, but at other times governments see such advantages to violating human rights that they are willing to brave the cost. The trend, however, is that a growing number of governments hope to have their cake and eat it too—to violate human rights without paying a price. They hope to achieve that abuser’s paradise by subverting the individuals and institutions that impose a cost for human rights abuse Governments, of course, have long been tempted to attack the bearer of bad news. There is a long, sordid history of human rights defenders being censored, imprisoned, “disappeared,” or killed. But now, as the human rights movement has grown more powerful and effective, the silence-the-messenger efforts of many governments have grown in subtlety and sophistication. Murders are committed deniably. Politically motivated prosecutions are disguised by common criminal charges. Censorship is accomplished through seemingly neutral regulatory regimes. Funding streams are blocked. As the UN special rapporteur on human rights defenders noted in August 2009, “the ways and means applied in certain countries in order to restrict the activities of human rights organizations are now even more widely used in all regions of the world.”
The perpetrators of these attacks are not limited to classic authoritarian governments such as Cuba and China. Democracies such as Sri Lanka have increased the pressure on local and international human rights groups that documented violations, as have governments that hold elections but fall short of democratic rule, such as Russia.
These efforts have yet to succeed in diminishing pressure from the human rights movement. Most human rights defenders accept the unintentional compliment behind the attacks and redouble their efforts. But the campaign to undermine human rights activism is nonetheless dangerous. By highlighting it in this year’s World Report, Human Rights Watch seeks to expose and help to reverse the trend.
A strong defense of human rights depends on the vitality of the human rights movement that is now under assault. We appeal to governmental supporters of human rights to help defend the defenders by identifying and countering these reactionary efforts... Copyright © 2010 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN-13: 978-1-58322-897-5
Front cover photo: Sri Lankan Tamils wait behind barbed wire during a May 2009 visit by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to Menik Farm camp, where the government interned several hundred thousand people displaced in the final months of the war between the government and the Tamil Tiger separatists.
© 2009 Joe Klamar/AFP/Getty Images
Back cover photo: Relatives of prominent reformers and other people detained after Iran’s disputed June 2009 election gather outside the prosecutor's office in Tehran calling for the release of their family members. © 2009 Sipa Cover and book design by Rafael Jiménez
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