“It's important to talk about the terrible things that are
happening, but the media always covers the negative. It’s more
important to talk about what is rarely discussed—that the people are
organizing themselves. Not much has been said about how the country is
different now, or at least that there are new ideas now about what
policies should be like and how we can change things. I wanted to bring
that sense of hope and possibility here. The belief that a new America
is possible, a different order is possible.”
Human rights organizations are joining together to condemn
and call for urgent
action following the horrific attacks against an international
human rights caravan in Oaxaca earlier this week.
On Tuesday, April 27th a caravan of 25 human rights observers, reporters
and teachers was ambushed
by an armed group of paramilitaries in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico.
Two members of the delegation were killed in this attack, Betty Alberta
Cariño, the director of Center for Community Support Working Together
(CACTUS) along with Tyri Antero Jaakkola, a human rights observer from
Finland, with 15 more reported
injured.
“How many years has this been going on? Why didn't they change the
way they investigate everything?” These are the questions that
linger on the mind of Irma Monreal after nearly nine years of
struggling to find a semblance of justice after her daughter, Esmeralda,
was raped, tortured and murdered in Ciudad Juárez in 2001.
Take a look at a quality analysis by Salvador Sarmiento of the Robert F.
Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights of the road to travel
between an apparently successful donors conference and the actual
delivery of well-targeted aid, published on the Center for International
Policy’s Americas Program blog.
Speaking recently before a university audience in Kentucky, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton shared her thoughts about the future of U.S.-Cuban relations. She touched on many headline-grabbing issues, but her comment that it's her “personal belief that the Castros do not want to see an end to the embargo and do not want to see normalization with the United States, because they would then lose all of their excuses for what hasn’t happened in Cuba in the last 50 years" is what got Cuba's, and the international media's, attention.
Although months have passed since the massive earthquake that devastated Haiti, our partners believe that a lot more should be done to help Haitians recover and rebuild.
We don't typically take action on state-level legislation. However, we find a bill recently passed by Arizona's state legislature and currently on its way to Governor Jan Brewer's desk –- SB1070 –- so dangerously misguided that we feel we cannot sit back silently. And you shouldn't either!
If allowed to pass into law by Gov. Brewer, SB 1070 would effectively force police to engage in racial profiling, criminalize unauthorized migrants for 'trespassing' into Arizona, and permit anyone to sue local agencies if they believe that the law isn't being adequately enforced. Such policies are as sweeping as they are dangerous.
Over the last couple weeks, from Tempe, Arizona to Duluth, Minnesota,
Olympia, Washington to Jackson Heights, New York, people like you have
been creating hundreds of portraits of our
Colombian sisters and brothers and have been showcasing them in your community centers, churches
and city streets. And people are paying attention!
But to make a real impact, we need Washington to get in on the
conversation, too.
Extremely serious human rights violations have taken place since
the inauguration of Honduran President Porfirio Lobo on January 27th.
Since that date, there has been a notable increase in attacks against
people opposed to the June 28th coup d’état and their family members, as
well as a surge in attacks against journalists. A teacher was slain in
front of his class. Three campesino leaders from the community of Aguán
were assassinated.