Category: Law

  • Letter from 137 lawmakers urges fund to drop stakes in firms accused of human rights violations or linked to Chinese state

    A cross-party group of more than 137 parliamentarians, including 117 MPs, have called on parliament’s pension fund to disinvest from Chinese companies accused of complicity in gross human rights violations or institutions linked to the Chinese state.

    The signatories include Lisa Nandy, the shadow foreign secretary, and former Conservative cabinet ministers Liam Fox, Iain Duncan Smith and Lord Tebbit. Others include the Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesperson, Layla Moran, and shadow foreign affairs minister Stephen Kinnock. The Conservative MP David Amess was also a signatory, one of his last political acts before his death on Friday.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Australian Human Rights Commission recommends new legislative protections for children

    Intersex people have endured controversial surgeries and treatments, often when they were too young to provide consent, an inquiry by the Australian Human Rights Commission found in a report that recommends new legislative protections for children.

    The commission has been consulting with intersex people, their family members, peer-support and advocacy organisations, clinicians, and legal and human rights groups to make recommendations on how best to protect the human rights of people born intersex when it comes to medical procedures.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Once used in the hunt for fugitive criminals, the global police agency’s most-wanted ‘red notice’ list now includes political refugees and dissidents

    Flicking through the news one day in early 2015, Alexey Kharis, a California-based businessman and father of two, came across a startling announcement: Russia would request a global call for his arrest through the International Criminal Police Organization, known as Interpol.

    “Oh, wow,” Kharis thought, shocked. All the 46-year-old knew about Interpol and its pursuit of the world’s most-wanted criminals was from novels and films. He tried to reassure himself that things would be OK and it was just an intimidatory tactic of the Russian authorities. Surely, he reasoned, the world’s largest police organisation had no reason to launch a hunt for him.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • David Lammy says justice secretary should focus on courts after proposal to undermine human rights law

    The shadow justice secretary, David Lammy, has urged Dominic Raab to tackle the “chaos” in the justice system before unpicking human rights law, after Raab said he wanted to curb the power of the European court of human rights over the government.

    Raab used an interview with the Sunday Telegraph to signal that he would be reviewing the Human Rights Act, which brought the European convention on human rights into UK law, with a view to constraining the influence of the Strasbourg court.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • In recent negotiations on behalf of a woman who was sexually harassed at work, I found myself in an unusual position. My client sought an NDA (non-disclosure agreement). They generally prohibit all parties to the agreement from talking about the claim to anyone. She continues to wrestle with the trauma that her experience caused and didn’t want public attention on what had happened to aggravate the problem.

    Her employer was having none of it.This company has recently adopted a policy of not entering into NDAs in cases of sexual harassment as part of a renewed focus on  providing a safe workplace for women. In the end, we agreed to a compromise whereby the fact of the sexual harassment could be disclosed but my client’s identity remained shielded.

    Let me undercore this – any company NOT wanting an NDA in a case like this is highly unusual. For decades, NDAs have been the standard price of settling a sexual harassment law suit. With few exceptions, it’s been a case of no NDA, no settlement.

    Late last week, California was the source of another tectonic shift in the battle for gender equality when Governor Gavin Newsom signed the Silenced No More Act into law. The new law extends a ban on the enforcement of NDAs in sexual harassment cases to all cases involving unlawful discrimination.

    A similar move is underway in Ireland with the tabling of the Employment Equality Bill by Senator Lynn Ruane who argues that “it is simply untrue and a further manipulation of a victim to imply that settlements require NDAs. They are required to protect employers’ reputations and perpetrators’ identities. If it was in the best interest of the victim then it is only the victim they would protect.”

    There is no doubt that NDAs have protected higher status perpetrators at the expense of the interests of their victims. They have operated to shield the true extent of sexual harassment and gendered violence from us all. This has also impeded the ability of researchers to study the problem with a view to assisting in minimising it. I have repeatedly had to tell academics wishing to conduct research into sexual harassment that my clients are unable to assist them because of their NDAs.

    NDAs are another reminder that we live in a brand-driven world. In recent decades, businesses have turned away from production and direct employment in favour of investing heavily in brand development and management. Anything that may tarnish the brand has become anathema.  Since the 1990s, the use of NDAs has exponentially increased. Many US companies now sign their staff up to non-negotiable employment contracts that ban them from saying anything critical of the company in perpetuity.

    Brand management does not sit comfortably with fundamental human rights.

    The Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse showed how religious institutions used NDAs to try and hide the systematic extent of child sexual abuse in their ranks.

    Journalist Jenna Price argues that NDAs are “a vile legal instrument that silences women and covers up the behaviour of sexual harrassers at all levels and in every sector in Australia.” While there have been calls to ban NDAs about sexual harrassment in Australia, to date that approach has not been embraced. Earlier this year Federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins delivered her major report, Respect@Work, which discusses reforms to the use of NDAs.

    “The Commission heard about the benefits of NDAs in sexual harassment matters in protecting the confidentiality and privacy of victims and helping to provide closure,” the report says. “However, there were also concerns that NDAs could be used to protect the reputation of the business or the harasser and contribute to a culture of silence.”

    The Commission went on to recommend that guidelines be produced that identify principles for the use of NDAs in workplace sexual harassment cases and that possible further regulation of NDAs be considered.

    The issue is not straightforward. While some women do want to speak out, a significant number of women who suffer sexual harassment are not comfortable with the details of their traumatic experience being disclosed to others. There can be many reasons for this including shame, guilt and fear of further adverse consequences.

    Recently both Grace Tame and Brittany Higgins have sought to challenge the notion that women who suffer sexual violence should be shamed into silence. They have sought to encourage other women to come forward and speak out. Their advocacy has inspired many including prominent journalist, Lisa Wilkinson, to disclose her experience of being sexually harassed by the father of a friend when she was a teenager.

    However, it’s important to recognise that the impact of sexual harassment varies for each affected woman. Some are comfortable in disclosing the experience, others may take years before being able to speak openly about it and for other women the best approach is to leave that experience behind and not revisit it.

    To add further complexity, the perspective of many women may change over time. Signing an NDA during a traumatic period of a woman’s life may assist to manage her anxiety and the process or recovering her mental health. Years later, telling her story may become an imperative.

    March4Justice

    Picture taken at the March4Justice in Canberra. Picture: Kat Berney

    Women who complain about sexual harassment are whistleblowers; disturbing the prevailing workplace culture. Like other whistleblowers, they are keenly aware that if they are publicly identified, they may face difficulties in securing employment in the future.

    The story of whistleblowers in this country is not a happy one. When former Prime Minister Tony Abbott was recently fined for not complying with health laws requiring the wearing of a mask , he complained that to “dob people in” was not part of the Australian character. That sentiment underpins the experience of many whistleblowers.

    A ban on NDAs would rob women of choice.

    There is no reason why NDAs could not be adapted to prioritise the interests of  women in cases of sexual harassment. Under such an approach, the woman’s identity could be protected for as long as she wished, but could allow the organisation to acknowledge what had occurred including identifying the perpetrator where allegations are substantiated.

    • Feature image taken by Jenny Scott at the March4Justice, Tarntanyangga, 15 March 2021. It’s used here under a Creative Commons license (CC BY-NC 2.0)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The post A ban on NDAs would rob women of choice appeared first on BroadAgenda.

    This post was originally published on BroadAgenda.

  • In 1940, thousands of the dictator’s opponents were summarily shot and thrown into mass graves. Now these are being opened

    Trowel-heap by trowel-heap, brushstroke by brushstroke, a skull rises from a pillow of ochre earth. Its empty eye sockets stare up at the October sky and its jaw gapes, as if still screaming, gasping for air or remembering what happened on the other side of this bullet-bitten cemetery wall a year after the Spanish civil war had ended.

    Between 16 March and 3 May 1940, 26 Republican soldiers, workers, communists and trade unionists were summarily tried and shot dead in the central Spanish city of Guadalajara.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a pay-to-play network of conservative state lawmakers and business lobbyists that writes model legislation, claims that it no longer works on social policy. But videos of ALEC-led events, obtained by the Center for Media and Democracy (CMD), tell a very different story.

    The post ALEC Leaders Boast About Anti-Abortion, Anti-Trans Bills appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Almost 20 years ago, a police shooting left David Makara without an arm and facing jail. Inspired by the blind lawyer who saved him, he now defends others facing injustice

    When the police started shooting at David Makara in his home town of Nyahururu, in Kenya, he ran before quickly collapsing. Two bullets had hit him – one in his right arm, one in his hip – but he only realised when he looked down and saw his hand dangling from his wrist and blood pouring out.

    “I thought I was going to die,” he says.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Human rights barrister at the forefront of the fight to decriminalise homosexuality around the world

    The barrister Jonathan Cooper, who has died suddenly aged 58, was the driving force behind numerous human rights campaigns over the past 30 years. Exuberant, knowledgable and admired by a wide circle of friends, he was at the forefront of efforts to decriminalise homosexuality around the world and a pivotal figure in educating a generation of civil servants about the Human Rights Act.

    Cooper may not have been a prominent public figure or a highly paid QC, but as a barrister he was a tireless crusader, devising ingenious legal challenges and campaign strategies. Geoffrey Robertson QC, joint head of Doughty Street Chambers, where Cooper practised for most of his working life, described him as a brilliant scholar providing “ammunition” for advocates to win courtroom battles.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Experts say all practices, including prayer, aiming to change sexual orientation or gender identity must be criminalised

    Leading human rights lawyers and experts have called for swift action to outlaw so-called conversion therapy, which they say is degrading and harmful, and should not be tolerated in a civilised society.

    The Forum, chaired by Helena Kennedy QC, says all practices, including prayer, that seek to suppress, “cure” or change sexual orientation or gender identity must be criminalised. There should be no defence that a victim appears to have consented.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Taliban deny Morteza Samadi, 21, has been sentenced to death but family concerned for his safety after he was detained while covering women’s protests in Herat

    Fears are growing for a photojournalist who has been detained by the Taliban for more than three weeks after being arrested while covering the women’s protests in Herat.

    Morteza Samadi, 21, a freelance photographer, was one of several journalists who were arrested at street protests at the beginning of September. All were quickly released except Morteza, whose whereabouts is not known. Some of those detained in Kabul have alleged they were badly beaten and tortured.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Law firm says attempts to evaluate a 15-year-old Afghan held in a hotel had been prevented, breaching the child’s rights

    Fresh concern over the plight of thousands of refugees living in UK hotels has emerged after a council requested that the Home Office shut down temporary accommodation housing child refugees over “safeguarding concerns” and a lawyer revealed how he had been blocked from assessing unaccompanied minors.

    Brighton and Hove city council has asked the Home Office to stop using a hotel holding scores of child refugees, claiming that no initial Covid-19 risk or safeguarding assessment had been carried out. Meanwhile, a law firm said that attempts to evaluate a 15-year-old Afghan held in a hotel had been prevented, breaching the child’s rights, with other unaccompanied minors subject to “unlawful forced imprisonment”.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Rather than relying on court cases, is it time for the right to clean air to be enshrined in UK and US law?

    Last week the high court ruled that the UK Environment Agency must do more to protect a five-year-old boy from dangerous fumes leaking from a nearby landfill site. It was among recent legal cases focusing on air pollution.

    In 2020 the coroner’s court concluded that air pollution was a factor in the death of nine-year-old Ella Kissi-Debrah, who lived alongside London’s South Circular road, and in 2021 French courts halted the deportation of a Bangladeshi man due to the risks posed by air pollution in his home country.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Female taekwondo and karate trainers are forced to practise in secret since the Taliban takeover and fear they may never compete again

    On the morning of 15 August, when the Taliban were at the gates of Kabul, Soraya, a martial arts trainer in the Afghan capital, woke up with a sense of dread. “It was as though the sun had lost its colour,” she says. That day she taught what would be her last karate class at the gym she had started to teach women self-defence skills. “By 11am we had to say our goodbyes to our students. We didn’t know when we would see each other again,” she says.

    Soraya is passionate about martial arts and its potential to transform women’s minds and bodies. “Sport has no gender; it is about good health. I haven’t read anywhere in Qur’an that prevents women from participating in sports to stay healthy,” she says.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Children as young as 20 weeks old are being seized to force opponents to hand themselves in

    Myanmar’s military junta is systematically abducting the relatives of people it is seeking to arrest, including children as young as 20 weeks old, according the UN special rapporteur for the country.

    Tom Andrews told the UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday that conditions in the country had continued to deteriorate and “current efforts by the international community to stop the downward spiral of events in Myanmar are simply not working”.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Case is ‘major blow’ in country with weak workers’ rights and puts trade deals in question, says Human Rights Watch

    One of Thailand’s most prominent union leaders is facing three years in prison for his role in organising a railway safety campaign, in a case described as the biggest attack on organised labour in the country in decades.

    Rights advocates say the case involving Sawit Kaewvarn, president of the State Railway Union of Thailand, will have a chilling effect on unions and threatens to further weaken workers’ rights in the country.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Campaigners fear ban emboldens anti-choice governments as more aggressive opposition, better organised and funded, spreads from US

    The new anti-abortion law in Texas is a “terrifying” reminder of the fragility of hard-won rights, pro-choice activists have said, as they warn of a “more aggressive, much better organised [and] better funded” global opposition movement.

    Pro-choice campaigners have seen several victories in recent years, including in Ireland, Argentina and, most recently, Mexico, where the supreme court ruled last week that criminalising abortion was unconstitutional. Another is hoped for later this month when the tiny enclave of San Marino, landlocked within Italy, holds a highly charged referendum.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Justice secretary called this year for government to be more ambitious as it seeks to reform act

    Labour and senior legal figures have raised concerns that Dominic Raab was appointed as justice secretary in order to enact wholesale changes to the Human Rights Act.

    Labour has unearthed footage of the former foreign secretary saying he did not support the act, which he will now be expected to enforce or overhaul. In messages sent to ministers earlier this year, Raab urged the government to be more ambitious as it sought to reform human rights law and judicial reviews.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • European parliament resolution criticises bloc’s patchwork policy, as some countries ignore recent rulings

    The continued failure of EU governments to respect the residency and benefits rights of same-sex partners as they move between countries in Europe has been condemned in a European parliament resolution.

    Marriages and registered partnerships formed in one member state should be recognised in all of them, with same-sex spouses and partners treated equally to others, according to a text supported by 387 MEPs, with 161 voting in opposition and 123 abstaining.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Exclusive: more than 100 leading doctors call for British Medical Association to adopt neutral stance to law change

    Read the doctors’ letter here

    Medics are being urged to drop their opposition to assisted dying before a landmark vote on the issue by Britain’s biggest doctors’ union.

    As its members prepare to debate the issue at their annual representative meeting on Tuesday, the British Medical Association (BMA), which represents 150,000 doctors, is facing calls to adopt a neutral stance. It has opposed legalising assisted dying since 2006.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • “HOC is fully aware that the property was used for more than a century as a cemetery, and yet it has ignored the law and is planning to move forward with the sale in violation of the law.  Such misbehavior cannot stand unchallenged. Judge Smith’s careful and well-reasoned decision, issued from the bench after a two-hour hearing, properly evaluated the evidence and the statutes protecting the sanctity of burial grounds and blocked the sale.”

    The post Judge Blocks Sale of Historic African Cemetery appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Container Connection, which delivers goods to Southern California retailers including Walmart, Ross Dress for Less and for brands Toyota, Whirlpool and Hanes, has a long record of worker misclassification judgments and findings of labor rights violations. It is also the object of an April 14 strike honored by ILWU dockworkers. Giraldo himself was part of a Cal OSHA complaint in March, saying the company failed to protect its workers from COVID-19. Neither Container Connection, nor its parent company, Universal Logistics Holdings, responded to requests for comment.

    The post California Attempts To Rein In Exploitation Of Truck Drivers appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The legal academic’s views on affirmative consent laws, the Indigenous voice to parliament and section 18C have caused alarm in some circles

    Dr Lorraine Finlay, Australia’s incoming human rights commissioner is not doing interviews.

    “Thank you for getting in touch and for your request. I’ll be looking to do commencement interviews closer to my start date in November.”

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • The most vulnerable people will bear the cost of sanctions, as services and the economy collapse

    Watching Afghanistan’s unfolding trauma, I’ve thought a lot about Mumtaz Ahmed, a young teacher I met a few years ago. Her family fled Kabul during Taliban rule in the late 1990s.

    Raised as a refugee in Pakistan, Ahmed had defied the odds and made it to university. Now, she was back in Afghanistan teaching maths in a rural girls’ school. “I came back because I believe in education and I love my country,” she told me. “These girls have a right to learn – without education, Afghanistan has no future.”

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Mexico’s Supreme Court has ruled that it is unconstitutional to penalise abortion, a major victory for women’s health and reproductive rights that comes amid a “green wave” of abortion decriminalisation in Latin America. The Mexican court’s decision on Tuesday follows moves to decriminalise abortion at the state level, although most of the country still has tough laws in place against women terminating their pregnancy early. “This is a historic step for the rights of women,” said Supreme Court Justice Luis Maria Aguilar.

    The post Mexico Supreme Court says criminalising abortion unconstitutional appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • We’ve won. Government has today announced its new policy for the future of energy production in the UK following our legal challenge last year. We are pleased to say that the proposed new policy is better for our planet, for our children and for our grandchildren. Coal and oil-fired generation are out. Gas is being phased out. Fewer fossil fuel projects will now be rubber-stamped.

    The post A Rare And Vital Win For The Future Of Our Planet appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Criticism of move to end prosecutions says it is broader than almost 300 other amnesties around world

    The UK government’s plan to end all Troubles-era prosecutions in Northern Ireland would create an amnesty wider than the one Augusto Pinochet introduced to shield human rights violators in Chile, according to a study.

    Downing Street’s plan would offer a level of impunity more sweeping than almost 300 other post-conflict amnesties introduced around the world, said the report, published on Tuesday.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Analysis of alleged anti-terrorist shootouts reveals security forces routinely suppressing opposition, claims Human Rights Watch

    Egyptian security forces engaged in an extended campaign of extrajudicial killings of detainees, routinely masked as shootouts with alleged terrorists, according to a new report by Human Rights Watch.

    The report details what it alleges are a pattern of extrajudicial assassinations between 2015 and last year, a period in which the Egyptian interior ministry said publicly that 755 people were killed in alleged exchanges of fire with security forces, while naming just 141.

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Traditionally, the process of getting an opinion from the U.S. Supreme Court takes months and those rulings are often narrowly tailored. Emergency orders, especially during the court’s summer break, revolve around specific issues, like individual death penalty cases. Since Aug. 24, that truncated process known as the shadow docket has moved at astronomical speed, producing decisions related to immigration, COVID-19 and evictions and, most recently, abortion.

    The post Shadow Docket Supreme Court Decisions Could Affect Millions appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • Killing of the strident Fatah critic has underlined the PA’s complicity with Israel and how far Mahmoud Abbas will go to crush dissent

    Nizar Banat knew he was going to die. As he grew bolder calling out corrupt members of Fatah, the party which controls the Palestinian Authority, the death threats mounted. In May, his home near Hebron was attacked by masked gunmen on motorbikes, in an incident which left his children traumatised.

    After that, the political activist decided it wasn’t safe to stay home. “He went to his cousin’s house in H2 [an area of Hebron city controlled by the Israeli military] because he hoped Fatah and the PA could not reach him there, but he knew they were coming for him,” said Jihan, Banat’s widow, as she hugged their youngest son in the family’s reception room in the village of Dura. The front of the house is still pockmarked with bullet holes. “He told me: ‘I don’t want to be killed in front of the children.’”

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    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.