Friday, January 30, 2015

RIGHTS NOW - ABA Center for Human Rights - December 2014



RIGHTS NOW / December 2014


American Bar Association / Washington, DC




__________________________________
Chair’s Message / Deborah Enix-Ross

As 2014 draws to a close, it’s natural to reflect upon the year’s events, both personal and
professional, and look ahead to the promise of a new year. For human rights lawyers
and advocates, 2014 was momentous, with historic gains in, for example, marriage
equality; yet we also saw new levels of horrific mass violence. Indeed, hard-won
progress in human rights advocacy often seems incremental, even imperceptible, while
jarring setbacks can make the whole enterprise seem futile. As we embark on 2015, we
choose again to keep at it — to confront human darkness with ultimate faith in what
Lincoln called “the better angels of our nature.” With that faith in mind, my colleagues
and I at the ABA Center for Human Rights wish you and yours a happy and restorative
holiday season. – DER

Justice Defenders Program Victorious in African Human Rights Court
Lohé Issa Konaté is a journalist who was jailed and fined under Burkina Faso’s criminal
defamation laws for alleging corruption by a public prosecutor. With the pro bono
assistance of Covington & Burling, CHR’s Justice Defenders Program and regional and
international organizations filed a brief as amici curiae in the African Court on Human
and People’s Rights. On December 5, 2014, the Court held unanimously that any
custodial sentence relating to defamation is inconsistent with the African Charter on
Human and Peoples’ Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
and referenced the amici’s assertion that such laws are an “obstacle to efforts aimed at
ensuring accountability and transparency of government action.” The Konaté ruling is
binding on African Union member states and an historic step toward securing freedom
of speech across the continent. (For more information, contact Ginna Anderson, CHR
Senior Counsel, at ginna.anderson@americanbar.org.)

ABA-ICC Project Hosts Event at ICC Assembly of States Parties in New York
On Dec. 11, 2014, the Center’s ABA-ICC Project and the Council on Foreign Relations
(CFR) co-sponsored an event entitled, 
"Prosecuting Sexual and Gender-Based Violence: New Directions in International Criminal Justice," 
featuring ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and Amb. David Scheffer, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Expert on UN Assistance to the Khmer Rouge Trials and former U.S. Ambassador at-large for War
Crimes Issues. They examined how policymakers can better combat sexual and genderbased
violence in conflict, including through the promotion of international criminal
justice.

ICC President, Colleagues Examine Criminal Justice and Human Rights
On Dec. 10, 2014, the International Criminal Justice Consortium (of which the ABA is a
founding member), the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and the Municipality of The Hague,
International City of Peace & Justice, co-sponsored an event in New York City examining
the importance of international criminal justice to advancing human rights. The event
featured keynote remarks by Judge Sang-Hyun Song (South Korea), President of the
International Criminal Court, who emphasized the potential deterrent effect of
international criminal justice to future mass human rights abuses; the right to justice for
victims of these crimes; and, to secure both, the need for a swift and effective criminal
justice system. Song then joined a panel discussion on how to make atrocity
accountability more effective and efficient in multiple types of jurisdictions. His copanelists
were Hon. Patricia Whalen (USA), Special advisor to and former international
judge of the War Crimes Chamber at the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina; Brahmy
Poologasingham (Sri Lanka), Director of Advancement & Counsel, Eastern Congo
Initiative; Matevz Pezdirc (Slovenia), Head of EU Genocide Network Secretariat,
Eurojust; and Linda Carter (USA) (moderator), Distinguished Professor of Law at the
University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law and Director of Pacific McGeorge
Institute for Legal Infrastructure and International Justice. The Center’s ABA-ICC Project
helped organize the event.

ABA President Addresses Judicial Independence in Timor-Leste
Earlier this month, President William C. Hubbard noted with concern that Timor-Leste
had ordered the termination of all international judicial personnel and advisors working
in the Timor-Leste judicial sector. The ABA supports the call of Gabriela Knaul, the
United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers, that
Timor-Leste officials initiate a dialogue with relevant partners to address the situation
and map an appropriate way forward in compliance with Timor-Leste’s constitutional
and international human rights obligations. (Read full statement)

ABA Establishes International Human Rights Award
In November the ABA Board of Governors approved the establishment of an ABA
International Human Rights Award. The annual award will honor an entity or individual
who has made a special contribution in the area of human rights outside the United
States. Nominees will be vetted, and awardees, selected, by a joint committee
comprised of representatives of the Center for Human Rights, the Section of
International Law, the Section of Individual Rights and Responsibilities, and the Rule of
Law Initiative. (Note that the ABA honors domestic human rights advocacy with the
Thurgood Marshall Award, among others.)

Massimino to Keynote CHR Luncheon at ABA Midyear Meeting in Houston
Elisa Massimino, President and CEO of Human Rights First (HRF), will deliver the keynote
remarks at the Center’s Human Rights Luncheon, at the ABA Midyear Meeting in
Houston, Texas, on February 9, 2015. Held annually at the Midyear Meetings, the
luncheon welcomes more than 100 ABA leaders, members, and guests to learn more
about the Center’s work and that of another prominent leader in the field. Among the
topics Massimino will address are U.S. immigration policy and HRF’s related decision to
open a Houston office.

CHR, IBA, AU Law to Host Joint Conference on Business and Human Rights
On April 23-24, 2015, the ABA Center for Human Rights, the International Bar
Association-North America, and the Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law of
the American University Washington College of Law, will co-host a conference on
“Business and Human Rights: The State of the Art.” The conference will feature leaders
from business, government, and civil society examining current trends and recurring
challenges associated with the responsibility of business enterprises to respect human
rights, as set forth in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights; and offer
a half-day of expert-led training on integrating human rights into business operations
and practices.

CHR to Examine Legal Obligations & Obstacles to Atrocity Prevention
In response to recent mass atrocities and pursuant to ABA policy urging rapid and
effective responses to them, the Center is developing a white paper examining the legal
obligations and obstacles to humanitarian intervention. The paper will be the first
product of the Center’s Atrocity Prevention and Response and Advisory Group and will
contribute to a multidisciplinary analysis being conducted by the Council on Foreign
Relations.

“As secretary of state, I saw the contribution that the ABA
makes around the world. The search for justice drives people
to stand up against dictatorship, corruption, and
oppression. Rule of the law is the most powerful tool in
human history to deliver this justice.”
— Hillary Rodham Clinton

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ABA Center for Human Rights
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