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Showing posts with label Human Rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Human Rights. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

This Photo Shows The Horrific Toll Of Europe's Refugee Crisis

Traumatic photos showing a dead Syrian boy lying face down in the sand of a tourist beach in Turkey on Wednesday once again highlighted the immense humanitarian toll of the refugee and migrant crisis in Europe.  NOTE: THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS DISTURBING IMAGES FROM THE BEACH AT BODRUM THAT WILL BE UPSETTING TO SOME READERS. Still young enough to wear velcro shoes, the child's body was found on shore after two boats carrying Syrian refugees capsized. The boats were attempting to journey from the Turkish town of Bodrum to the island of Kos in Greece.  Survivors say at least 12 people died in the failed crossing, including four children and a woman. Seven other people were rescued.  Turkish media identified the boy as 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi from the Syrian town of Kobani, according to Reuters. Kurdi's 5-year-old brother is also believed to have died when the boat capsized. In other photos, a Turkish officer cradles Kurdi's limp body as he removes the child from the beach. The photos offer even more evidence of the dangers hundreds of thousands of people fleeing conflict or seeking a better life in Europe can face during their journeys across international borders. Kurdi's death, along with the those of 71 people found suffocated in a truck in Austria last week, have spurred urgent calls from human rights groups across the world for European leaders to agree on a unified policy to respond to the crisis.  "These deaths are utterly preventable if Europe actually had a policy in place to provide safe passage for people fleeing the war in Syria," Human Rights Watch Emergency Director Peter Bouckaert told The WorldPost. "I think that picture perfectly demonstrates the consequences of the European failure to come to terms with the reality of this very profound crisis." Every day, thousands of people from countries including Syria, Afghanistan and Eritrea attempt to make it to European nations. Over 350,000 have crossed the Mediterranean in 2015 alone, according to the International Organization for Migration. The response from European countries has so far been scattered and insufficient. Many EU states have addressed the issue as a security dilemma, putting up walls or proposing anti-migration laws instead of allowing for safe border passage or access to asylum procedures. "Refugees are left with no option but to take extraordinarily dangerous illegal journeys by sea to Greece and Italy. With an estimated 200,000 refugees still planning to make the journey to Greece this year, it is inevitable that we will see a further loss of life until Europe’s policies change," the International Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement Wednesday. Germany, which projects it will take 800,000 applications for asylum this year, has called on other nations to come together to find a unified approach to the crisis. EU ministers are set to meet on Sept. 14 to discuss what action should be taken. Rights groups and observers have pointed out that while the number of refugees and migrants heading to Europe has risen sharply in the past year, this migration still only accounts for a tiny fraction of populations. "Just to give you an idea of scale and of reality, so far the number of people who have applied for asylum in Europe represent .1 percent of the population of Europe," Bouckaert said. Hein de Haas, the former co-director of the International Institute on Migration, told The WorldPost that Europe's refugee crisis is really a crisis of political failure to establish a common policy for those trying to enter the EU. "With more than half a billion inhabitants, the European Union has the resources to cope with this, and can make sure that people arriving at the European border get access to asylum procedures," he said.  -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


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Monday, August 31, 2015

Relentless flow of refugees continues in Europe

A new group of some 2,500 migrants was ferried to the port of Piraeus, outside the Greek capital, Athens, on Monday. Brought to shore from the…


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Sunday, August 30, 2015

Surge of migrants walking through Balkans hits Hungary

SUBOTICA, Serbia (AP) — Thousands of migrants, many from Syria, poured into Hungary on Tuesday as soldiers frantically tried to finish a border fence to keep them out — the latest flashpoint as Europe struggles to handle a torrent of asylum seekers. The rush over the border by migrants fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia followed Macedonia's decision to lift a three-day blockade of its border with Greece after thousands of migrants simply stormed past the Macedonian police who tried to stop them with force. According to Hungarian police data, 2,093 migrants were detained while crossing illegally Monday, the highest figure so far this year. Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said Tuesday that the migrant flow needs to be better controlled. Besides the border fence and the increased police presence, Hungary is preparing laws to make it a crime to cut through the fence or to enter Hungary illegally and is increasing the penalties for human traffickers. "Building fences, using tear gas and other forms of violence against migrants and asylum seekers, detention ... will not stop migrants from coming or trying to come to Europe," said Francois Crepau, the U.N. special rapporteur on the human rights of migrants.


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GREECE'S push back of asylum boats puts lives at risk, says Amnesty

But the human rights body says refugees trying to reach the EU via GREECE are being routinely and unlawfully pushed back to Turkey by Greek coast ...


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Migrant Voyage through Greece Now Reaches Hungary

UBOTICA, SERBIA — Thousands of migrants, many from Syria, poured into Hungary on Tuesday as soldiers frantically tried to finish a border fence to keep them out — the latest flashpoint as Europe struggles to handle a torrent of asylum seekers. The rush over the border by migrants fleeing war and poverty in the Middle […] The post Migrant Voyage through Greece Now Reaches Hungary appeared first on The National Herald.


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GREECE'S push back of asylum boats puts lives at risk, says Amnesty

But the human rights body says refugees trying to reach the EU via GREECE are being routinely and unlawfully pushed back to Turkey by Greek coast ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.euronews.com

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Greece's push back of asylum boats puts lives at risk, says Amnesty

But the human rights body says refugees trying to reach the EU via Greece are being routinely and unlawfully pushed back to Turkey by Greek coast ...


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Amnesty International: ‘Refugees in Lesvos Are Facing Dreadful Conditions’

Weak coordination and severe shortages in facilities and staffing are creating dreadful conditions for the hundreds of refugees and migrants arriving daily on the Greek island of Lesvos, Amnesty International said in a report on Monday, after a research team returned from the island. “Overloaded, under-resourced authorities are failing to cope with the dramatic increase in the


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Sunday, August 23, 2015

'Brothel' cabarets thrive in breakaway Cyprus statelet

Nicosia (AFP) - A white stretch limousine pulls up outside a northern Nicosia hospital to drop off cabaret girls for their monthly HIV test, in a breakaway statelet where officially prostitution is illegal.Clubs with names such as Sexy Lady, Harem and Lipstick leave little to the imagination, with 50 of them in the so-called Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), where tens of thousands of troops from Turkey are stationed in camps on the divided island.Hundreds of young foreign women work and live on the premises, on the basis of "konsomatris" ("hostess" in Turkish) visas.Although the women are legally obliged to have monthly HIV tests, Turkish Cypriot authorities do not acknowledge they are prostitutes or victims of sex trafficking.Official figures show 1,168 such visas were issued between April 2014 and January 2015, half to Moldovans and the rest to Moroccans, Ukrainians and women from central Asian countries.As the women await their blood tests, the hospital ward is filled with Arabic and Slavic conversation, but their minders discourage talk with outsiders.According to local newspapers, a foreign woman in June tried to escape from a fourth floor hospital window and broke a leg.She had reportedly expected to be working as a waitress and panicked when she realised her job was to sell sex."I've been here a month," a Moroccan in heavy makeup said in a hushed tone as she waited for a check at a police station, the next stop after the hospital."The police have got my passport," she added before a ginger-haired man in his 50s with a pockmarked face told her to keep quiet. - 'Sex slaves' - Police say they keep the passports "for their security", but the lucrative cabaret business in northern Cyprus, under international embargo since a Turkish invasion, has its critics."These nightclubs are brothels. Women are used as sex slaves. Everybody knows it and nobody does anything," said Dogus Derya, a member of the TRNC parliament."Often the girls do not get a salary. They get a portion of what they made, but sometimes only half of what was promised to make sure they come back for the rest," she said. "They pay for their own shoes, underwear, medicine. And they are asked up to $150 a week for their accommodation at the nightclub," said the feminist MP."It's easy to do human trafficking here." Under pressure from the European Court of Human Rights, the local parliament in January 2014 approved a series of amendments outlawing human trafficking for sex.The offence can carry a seven-year jail sentence.A telephone helpline, 157, has been launched, but Mine Atli, a lawyer and member of an "Association of Women to Support Life", said victims were "afraid to call because the helpline is linked to the authorities".Past experience has served as a deterrent for women to complain."A number of women escaped and went to the police. The police charged both the woman (with prostitution) and the pimp," Atli said.She said such cases "end up in an agreement in court: the woman pulls back her complaint in exchange for the prosecution to drop the charges against her... The status quo remains."  - Powerful lobby - Cabaret owners are a powerful lobby in a statelet dependent on alternative sources of revenues such as nightclubs and casinos, a magnet for tourists from Turkey where casinos are banned.The TRNC's interior minister, Aziz Gurpinar, said the cabarets pay around 7.5 million Turkish liras in annual taxes ($2.5 million) and insisted that measures were being taken to prevent exploitation of the women."A brochure was prepared which contains information on the legal rights of the hostesses upon entry to the country and emergency phone numbers they can call if needed," he said."The risk of exploitation due to the laws and regulations on hostesses has been prevented," he told AFP by email.The Greek Cypriot-run south of the island, an EU member since 2004, abolished "artistes'" visas four years later under a barrage of US and European accusations of women trafficking.The republic of Cyprus remains on a US trafficking watch list.The State Department charges the TRNC "continues to be a zone of impunity for human trafficking", with a growing number of foreign women forced into prostitution without any official intervention.The flip side of the TRNC's lack of international recognition is that it has not signed any international conventions, nor does it have to abide by them.Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkish troops occupied its northern third in response to an Athens-inspired coup seeking union with Greece.Only Ankara recognises the TRNC, self-declared in November 1983.Emine Colak, its foreign minister, was candid in a conversation in her law office."The situation would improve if there was a solution as international treaties could be used to leverage pressure on authorities," she told AFP."With international recognition comes international pressures," said Colak, who also runs a human rights foundation.After decades of failed international initiatives, a new round of UN-brokered reunification talks between the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot leaders was launched in May. Join the conversation about this story »


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Friday, August 14, 2015

EU fast-tracks funding as migrant crisis accelerates

The European Union pledged Friday to fast-track new funding to help debt-hit Greece cope with a surge in migrants, with hundreds coming ashore daily only to be confronted by often hellish conditions.


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Monday, July 27, 2015

Greek Tragedy: Creditors' "Rights" Trump Human Rights

The recent Greek tragedy has revealed much about the anti-democratic nature of Brussels, and the victory of austerity ideology over economic wisdom ...


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Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Seeking Refuge: Migrants say 'no thanks' to EU distribution plans

Hundreds of black and blue tarps, many with thatched roofs, vie for space in this port city’s migrant camp, a testament to the powerful flow of human migration across Europe this year. Camps like this are spurring some European nations to push for what they're calling burden sharing, particularly Italy and Greece. Unsurprisingly, many of the less affected countries are opposed, arguing they have neither the infrastructure nor the resources to house and care for asylum seekers.


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As Europe confronts Greek debt crisis, UN expert says new measures must not lose sight of human rights

The implementation of new austerity measures in Greece amid the country's deteriorating economic crisis must not come at a cost to human rights, a United Nations expert warned today as he urged international institutions and the Greek Government to make “fully informed decisions” before adopting additional reforms.


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Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Despite financial woes, Greeks welcome refugees. Will others?

Amid a nationwide financial crisis, Greeks have been welcoming and generous to the thousands of refugees arriving to their shores each week, reports the UN's refugee agency (UNHCR). Greece and Italy have borne the brunt of a wave of migrants seeking asylum from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Eritrea, and Somalia, according to the report released Friday. Amnesty International reports that about 5,000 refugees were arriving in Greece each week in June.


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Saturday, July 11, 2015

The South Surrenders?

"Does the South surrender?" is the question some are asking today, in the wake of South Carolina's House of Representatives' decision to remove the Confederate Flag from capitol grounds. But the question is misplaced. When I was a young law student, I spent a summer in northern India studying comparative constitutional law and international human rights law. I spent most of my time in Shimla (a stunning and romantic town where many Indians honeymoon) and Dharamasala (the primarily Buddhist city where the seat of the Tibetan government in exile is located). While there, surrounded by ancient Hindu and Buddhist shrines and symbols, I saw - for the first time in my life - the swastika pictured somewhere other than a history book. It was not very common, but it appeared a few times during my stay. On a bracelet here or an ancient work of art there. It was quickly explained to me that the swastika is an age-old symbol found worldwide, with roots not only in India but also used in the art of Egyptians, Romans, Greeks, Celts, Native Americans, Persians, Hindus, Jains and Buddhists. While its meaning is different in each culture, in none of those cultures did it ever represent anything other than positive harmony and good fortune. By the time Hitler adopted the swastika as a symbol of his brutal dictatorship based on fascism and violent notions of white supremacy, the Buddhists had been using it for more than 2,500 years to represent universal harmony. This was my first experience with a symbol that could hold polar opposite meanings for different people. It is beyond debate that the horrific brutality of Hitler's regime and its slaughter of millions of innocents, many of them children, forever converted the meaning conveyed by the swastika - at least in western society. That Hitler changed the symbol slightly (twisted it 45 degrees and changed its usual color representation) is totally irrelevant. That it meant something different to a Buddhist living in India is also irrelevant. Just as significantly, components of Hitler's regime that may be considered distinct from the Third Reich's fascist principals do nothing to soften the blow of the swastika as a symbol of hatred. Indeed, Hitler's Germany was responsible for the advent or rocket engines and jet propulsion. The Third Reich built dams, railroads, and the first national highway system. All of this at a time when the Stock Market Crash of 1929 (which caused the U.S. government to call in its loans to Germany) helped spiral Germany into severe economic depression, with unemployment at 15% and vast homelessness and starvation. Yet, it seems obvious to us that if a German government office were to display the Third Reich's flag, claiming with it comes their expression of pride in the development of the Autobahn, we would consider this not only absurd, but also a justification of the worst of human evil. Our hearts would drop at the sight of the flag, and we would demand it be taken down. Why? Because as far as the swastika's symbolism is concerned, it is immaterial that the Third Reich did things other than massacre millions of innocent children with plans of expanding its white supremacy to the world through illegal and violent war and domination. And for a German to wish to express his German pride in those advances, flying the flag is not an option. Because without a doubt, that flag also represents the horrors of Hitler. A regime so based in the most vile and heinous of human behavior that anything external to that is camouflaged. And because this symbolism is internalized not only by the many millions of innocents and descendants of innocents, but also to those who revere hold Hitler's ideals. Slavery began in America in 1501 (with the arrival of African slaves to what is now the Dominican Republic), and was legally established in approximately 1641 (at which time Massachusetts was the first colony to legalize slavery). It did not end until the passage of the 13th Amendment in 1865. Two hundred years later. Slaves were human beings considered to be nothing more than property. They were beaten, raped, and killed with impunity. Hundreds of years of horrifically brutal indentured servitude, assault, and murder of millions upon millions of innocent human beings. During this time, America was part of a slave trade that involved the importation of slaves shipped across the Atlantic, many of whom would die in the journey alone. Quickly, however, the American slave trade became "self-sustaining" because the children of American slaves were enslaved themselves. Children raised by the very old and the very young in their slave communities (as their mothers were expected to return to work). Some put to work as toddlers. Many suffering the most grotesque of human rights violations. There can be no debate that the civil war largely concerned the Southern states desire to secede and run themselves without any interference from the Federal Government - in other words, they no longer desired to be a part of the United States of America. It is widely understood (though disputed by some) that nearly every reason for secession is chiefly related to slavery. The Southern states were fighting for "state rights v. federal rights." But more specifically, they were fighting for their states' rights to maintain legalization of a horrific social order rooted in white supremacist ideals and economic greed, namely, slavery. The Southern states were also fighting for economic rights. But again, the main issue was the economics of slavery - the South's one-crop economy depended on this free labor to remain profitable. The South and the North disagreed on the laws affecting new states admitted to the union. Specifically, as to whether or not the new states should be slave or free (a fight that came to a head on the floor of the senate when anti-slavery proponent Charles Sumner was beat over the head by South Carolina's Senator Preston Brooks). And, of course, the election of Abraham Lincoln, chiefly his abolitionist positions. There were other issues. Land rights were an issue, as was trade and tariffs. Significantly, many in the South abhorred slavery and opposed it, while some in the North owned slaves. Without a doubt, many who fly it today are well-meaning people who wish no ill will upon anyone on the basis of their race or creed (I know and have met some of these people). And there are a group of revisionists who insist that the history books must be re-interpreted because the North really did not go to war over slavery at all. All of this, however, does very little if anything to rescue the symbolism of the Confederate Flag as that symbolism exists today. Just as it matters little that the Buddhists used the swastika to symbolize harmony or that the Third Reich also fought for Germany's economic stability and invented jet engines. When war struck between the North and the South, as four million human beings were held in bondage in the South, the flag waived by slave owners and the army justifying their rights to own other humans was the Confederate Flag (or more specifically, the Confederate Battle Flag). Today, flying the flag is certainly not limited to the South or to Southerners and is instead used by many who lack any Southern heritage. It was prevalently flown by the KKK and continues to be a component of KKK marches. White supremacists fly it, as do members of the Aryan Nations. South Carolina in particular - the first state to leave the union in 1860 - only restored the Confederate Flag in the capitol grounds 50 years ago in an explicit protest at the civil rights movement. There can also be no doubt that, by and large, the descendants of slaves today view the Confederate Flag as a symbol of their ancestor's enslavement and their own ongoing struggles in the face of racism. Today, the House of Representatives in South Carolina voted to remove the Confederate Flag from capitol grounds. Whether the flag is inherently racist or was stolen by racists who are demonizing an otherwise wholesome Southern heritage, it hardly matters. Whether it always represented racist philosophies or was misappropriated by racists, it now widely represents un-American and inhumane ideals of violent white supremacy - not just to the millions of innocents, but also to those who hold those fascist notions dear. Of course, none of this means that flying the Confederate Flag should be illegal. In Germany, it is illegal to fly the flag of the Third Reich. This can never happen in America, simply because of our First Amendment. Regardless of a person's reasons for flying the flag, the First Amendment protects their right to do so. The question is not whether individuals should maintain that right. Nor is the question whether the South has finally surrendered its battle to the North. Rather, the question answered by the South Carolina House of Representatives today is whether their state government, as a political and democratic institution representing constituents of all races, should maintain on its capitol grounds the very flag it placed there 50 years ago to protest the civil rights movement. The answer to that question is an easy one. Just as it was hoisted in opposition to equal rights, the flag's removal symbolizes an end to that opposition. And the symbolism of that is not one of surrender. It is a symbol of the honor that comes along not with simply tolerating human rights, but promoting them. A symbol of respect for the millions whose lives remain stained by this nation's dark history of slavery. It is a moment of dignity for those of our country's citizens who were expected to bear the humiliation of a state sponsorship of a flag that not only they, but those who hate them for the color of their skin, deem a symbol of that hatred. Today, South Carolina welcomed a new era of celebrating the positive components of Southern heritage without the use of symbolism that tarnishes those elements. May others follow suit. By Shermin Kruse Author of Butterfly Stitching Many thanks for your "likes", "shares," "tweets", and thoughtful commentary. Dynamic and respectful conversation is welcomed and appreciated. Yours, Shermin -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


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Thursday, May 14, 2015

Greek Government Rejects Amal Clooney's Report; Drops Legal Action Against Britain for Return ...

The Greek government has rejected advice by human rights attorney Amal Clooney to wage a legal battle for the Parthenon Marbles and has dropped ...


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Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Elgin Marbles: Greece should take UK to court over sculptures, claim human rights lawyers

Greece should take the UK to an international court to win back the so-called Elgin Marbles, according to legal advice prepared by senior human rights lawyers including Amal Clooney and Geoffrey Robertson.


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Thursday, May 7, 2015

Human rights group: Greek police target marginalized people

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — An international human rights group says Greek police frequently ill-treat homeless people, drug users and sex workers in the country's capital through arbitrary spot checks and temporary detentions.


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Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Human rights group: Greek police target marginalized people

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — An international human rights group says Greek police frequently ill-treat homeless people, drug users and sex workers in the country's capital through arbitrary spot checks and temporary detentions.


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Monday, May 4, 2015

Two die in riot at Greek jail

Two people have been killed and 21 injured in a riot at Korydallos prison in Athens. The violence is said to have been caused by a conflict between ...


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