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New Network Formed to Protect Human Rights in U.S.
OneWorld ^ | 12/11/03 | Jim Lobe

Posted on 12/11/2003 2:02:59 PM PST by nypokerface

WASHINGTON, D.C., Dec. 10 (OneWorld US) -- U.S. civil-liberties and social justice groups marked International Human Rights Day Wednesday by launching a new ''U.S. Human Rights Network'' dedicated to raising awareness about international human rights standards and focusing attention on the U.S. failure to enforce them.

More than 50 groups, ranging from the American Civil Liberties Union(ACLU) to New York-based Center for Economic and Social Rights (CESR), said they had agreed to join forces to address what they said was ''the alarming rate of human rights violations in the U.S.,'', particularly as it pursues its ''war on terrorism''.

The groups called on U.S. citizens to speak out against these abuses, as well as to fight ''U.S. exceptionalism,'' the view pushed strongly by the Bush administration, which considers that the United States should not be constrained by international law or human rights standards, especially relating to economic and social rights.

''The demonstrations that we are currently seeing against the U.S. around the world are a reaction to the perception that the U.S.--and particularly the Bush administration--thinks that it is above international law--laws the rest of the world are required to abide by'', said Ajamu Baraka, who works for Amnesty International USA's (AIUSA) Atlanta office and is part of the new network's secretariat.

''The rights of ordinary Americans and others residing in the U.S. are being trampled on a daily basis--in violation of a host of international laws and standards'', said Cathy Albisa, a secretariat member who is based at CESR.

''These include the right to economic security and a decent standard of living, the right of children convicted of crimes not to be executed, the right to a fair trial, the right to seek asylum, and the right to be free from torture and cruel and inhuman treatment, among many others'', she added, noting that the U.S. has the developed world's highest child poverty rate and that 20 percent of adults are functionally illiterate.

The network, which has been several years in the making, marks its birth from a meeting last year at Howard University on the subject of ''Ending Exceptionalism: Strengthening Human Rights in the United States''.

Most of the network's founding organizations--which include advocacy groups for immigrants, ethnic minorities, welfare recipients, the disabled, prison rights, among others--took part in the conference, addressing such issues as the death penalty, discrimination and sovereignty.

Among the best-known groups are the ACLU, the American Friends Service Committee, AIUSA, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Human Rights Watch, the Indian Law Resource Center, the Kensington Welfare Rights Union, the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, and the National Association for the Advanced of Colored People Defense Education Fund.

The network is to be guided by six ''core principles,'' including acceptance that that all rights enumerated in the UN's Universal Declaration of Human Rights are interdependent and universal; that they include economic, social, and cultural (ESC) rights, as well civil and political rights, which are generally given more recognition in the U.S.; and that rights are most effectively protected through building social movements whose leadership should be accountable to those who are most directly affected by their work.

These principles challenge the work of several important U.S.-based human rights groups historically dominated by professional elites and that have generally ignored economic and social rights, in part because of their failure to accept the Universal Declaration and international human rights law as a sufficient juridical basis for their work. They have tended instead to rely on the rights provided under the U.S. Constitution.

In recent years, however, U.S. courts--even the Supreme Court--have increasingly cited international human rights standards in their decisions regarding, for example, the death penalty for juveniles and the mentally retarded, women's rights, and the accountability of U.S. companies for wrongful conduct overseas.

Many of the network groups have been pushing courts in this direction. ''The ACLU decided several years ago to integrate more international principles in our work'', said Gregory Nojeim, a staff attorney who represents the ACLU in the network.

''A lot of groups that have traditionally focused on political and civil rights have expanded their mandates'', said Albisa, who cited both Amnesty and Human Rights Watch, which has produced a number of reports on cases where civil and political rights have intersected with economic and cultural rights, such as the impact of practices by multinational corporations on local communities.

''There's a growing recognition that you cannot separate economic rights from political and civil liberties'', she added, noting that groups that have tried to use international law to broaden the panoply of rights recognized in the U.S. have until now been fragmented. ''We are pulling together in a way that can build movements,'' she said. The network's launch is the first step.

Both the inclusion of ESC rights into the broader human rights pantheon and the use of international human rights law by U.S. courts are anathema to the Bush administration and key policy-makers, about two dozen of whom are members of the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy, a legal association whose recent national convention here featured half a dozen major presentations on the dangers allegedly posed to U.S. national sovereignty by international human rights standards that have not been ratified by the U.S. government.

Among others, the Society was addressed by White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, Attorney General John Ashcroft, UN Ambassador John Negroponte, and the Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security John Bolton, who argued that the International Criminal Court (ICC) represents a particularly grave threat to U.S. sovereignty, and that Washington obtained all the legitimacy it needed in invading Iraq by following its own Constitutional processes rather than deferring to the UN Security Council.

This kind of ''exceptionalism'' is precisely what the network is trying to organize against, however. ''As the U.S. indulges an increasingly unilateralist bent in both domestic and foreign policy, the cost to rights at home and abroad is growing,'' said Baraka, notina the rise in racial profiling, the summary detention and deportation of Muslim immigrants after September 11, 2001, and the indefinite detention as ''illegal combatants'' at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, of hundreds of foreigners seized in Afghanistan and elsewhere as examples.

The international human rights framework, including ESC rights, he said, remains under-utilized in the U.S. ''due in large part to a deliberate, long-standing effort by the U.S. government to deny human rights laws and standards when they applies to a situation internal to the U.S. and to U.S. actions around the world.''

Washington's exceptionalist policy has been most vividly on display in the administration's refusal to request ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All Kinds of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), its renunciation of the ICC treaty; its withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty; its walkout at the World Conference Against Racism; and its failure to adhere to the Geneva Conventions protecting prisoners of war, according to the network.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 5; amnesty; antiamericanism; cesr; esr; hrw; humanrights; internationallaw; leftists; ngos; postamericanism; socialists; transnationalism
OH NO! Were in trouble now.
1 posted on 12/11/2003 2:02:59 PM PST by nypokerface
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To: nypokerface
Let's talk about the US failure to enforce them.

Let's also post all known photos of the ANSWER marches where the protestors held signs in favor of Hussein.

Leftist groups haven't a shred of credibility anymore. When they had honest and real chances to speak out for the human rights of Iraqis, they turned tail and ran.
2 posted on 12/11/2003 2:06:17 PM PST by JoJo Gunn (Help control the Leftist population - have them spayed or neutered. ©)
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To: nypokerface
don't worry... I'm sure they will put great emphasis on the primary human right to self defense and safeguard from tyranny for which there can be no infringement as noted in the second amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
3 posted on 12/11/2003 2:06:23 PM PST by glock rocks (molon labe)
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To: nypokerface
Another Soros funded anti-Bush, anti-American, staffed by utopia-brained, easily-duped, adolescents (age making no difference for this term in this context), who are blindly looking for causes to support (especially ones that fight against "the man"), in efforts to believe they are going to bring world peace.

Why don't they just offer everyone on the planet a coke? That would be cheaper, easier, and according to the instrument of their education (TV) would solve the problem instantly.

4 posted on 12/11/2003 2:16:56 PM PST by UCANSEE2 ("Duty is ours, Results are God's" --John Quincy Adams)
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To: nypokerface
Attention please, would RICO please pick up a white courtesy phone. RICO please answer the nearest courtesy phone. That is all, thank you.
5 posted on 12/11/2003 2:17:31 PM PST by Texas_Jarhead
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To: nypokerface
''These include the right to economic security and a decent standard of living, the right of children convicted of crimes not to be executed..."

Socialist, pro-criminal morons.

"developed world's highest child poverty rate"

Higher than Russia? Are they developed? Define "poverty." How many American kid starved last year?

Another bunch of morons reaching for our wallets.
6 posted on 12/11/2003 2:27:18 PM PST by Little Ray (When in trouble, when in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout!)
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To: nypokerface
I don't want anyone to raise my awarness, teach me to think outside the box, connect the dots, or find closure.
7 posted on 12/11/2003 2:31:35 PM PST by Blue Screen of Death (,/i)
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To: nypokerface
Cathy Albisa, a secretariat member who is based at CESR: "These include the right to economic security and a decent standard of living...

Take my money, please!

"...the U.S. has the developed world's highest child poverty rate and that 20 percent of adults are functionally illiterate."

Too many illegal aliens, perhaps?

8 posted on 12/11/2003 2:37:00 PM PST by DumpsterDiver
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To: nypokerface
Whew! I was wondering if anyone cared about Human Rights violations in the US, i.e. the children's prisons, torture and paper shredder killings by gov't officials, people picked up in the middle of the night by gov't officials without due process, gassing of civilians, the mass graves, and, of course, the denial of women the right to vote and to be educated.

President Bush has done more for Civil Rights during his presidency than these folks will ever do in their entire lifetimes combined and then some.
9 posted on 12/11/2003 2:48:40 PM PST by TheDon
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To: nypokerface
''These include the right to economic security and a decent standard of living...

Gee Cathy, I looked all through the Constitution and I couldn't find those rights anywhere! Might you be one of the functionally illiterate adults you were so worried about?

10 posted on 12/11/2003 3:11:01 PM PST by wizardoz ("Now we know what the "F" stands for in John F. Kerry." -stands2reason)
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To: nypokerface
When are they going to speak about the human rights, civil rights abuse that was 9/11 and the Bali bombing . .etc etc. ?

When terrorists snuff out thousands of inosent people, they are abusing the most widely recognised, most widely adopted human right, the first and foremost civil right of all: THE RIGHT TO CONTINUE TO LIVE.

11 posted on 12/11/2003 3:19:00 PM PST by ChadGore (No blood for ratings! This means YOU AOL-Time-Warner-Turner-CNN)
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To: ChadGore
When terrorists snuff out thousands of inosent people, they are abusing the most widely recognised, most widely adopted human right, the first and foremost civil right of all: THE RIGHT TO CONTINUE TO LIVE.

Put simply, our human right to continue to live is a civil right, is a human right, and it was denied to my people, and so many other people from more than 60 countries, on 9/11.

What's more is, as these acts continue across the globe, and these groups are strangly silent on this point. Why ??

12 posted on 12/11/2003 3:23:07 PM PST by ChadGore (No blood for ratings! This means YOU AOL-Time-Warner-Turner-CNN)
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To: nypokerface
They can start by protecting our right to criticize a political candidate 30 days before an election.
13 posted on 12/11/2003 4:29:00 PM PST by Maceman (Too nuanced for a bumper sticker)
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To: sauropod; hellinahandcart; kristinn; Poohbah; backhoe; DPB101; dighton
Socialists co-opting "human rights" ping! (Paging all "exceptionalists")

Economic/Social Rights -- Good
Constitutional Rights -- Baaaad!

14 posted on 12/12/2003 1:19:38 PM PST by Stultis
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To: wizardoz
Gee Cathy, I looked all through the Constitution and I couldn't find those rights anywhere!

Yeah, they know. Pegging your liberties in The Consititution is what they're calling (and opposing as) "American Exceptionalism".

15 posted on 12/12/2003 1:21:58 PM PST by Stultis
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To: nypokerface
the U.S. has the developed world's highest child poverty rate

I'd love to know the exact basis for this statistic.

I have one friend who is pretty radical. He sneered about liberating Iraq because we should take care of the three million "homeless children" in America first. (Of course he reserves the right at any other time to complain about America not doing enough to help people overseas.)

He also accused me of doing nothing about this. (To his credit he does a good deal of volunteer work, which I do not.) Ironically, though, I was able (after a little research) to point out to him that I had actually housed "homeless" children! I took in a friend for a several months who was temporally hard up financially. She was a single mom with two kids.

It turned out that the majority of "homeless children" in his statistic were dependents of single moms living in non permanent housing arrangements (e.g. staying with friends or family).

16 posted on 12/12/2003 1:31:49 PM PST by Stultis
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