Wednesday, December 10, 2014

International Human Rights Day


The news is full of human rights violations. It has been a very hot summer in terms of exploding ethnic or religious tensions, and arousing conflicts. The Civil War in Syria, attacks on Gaza, Islamic State attacks, power struggle between Ukraine and Russia, riots in Ferguson, demonstrations in Hong Kong and numerous other examples.

If you would stop any random person on the street and ask him or her whether he or she is in favor of or against human rights, most people will probably embrace human rights. However, if you would ask to define human rights, it is very likely that the response would be silence, followed by a frowning face and a huge qustion mark.

On 10 December 1948, the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This was the very first document in which human rights were recognized as such. It has become the most famous and well-known human rights instrument. Although not legally binding, it serves as a guideline and an inspiration for many other legal(ly binding) documents. Since then, 10 December has become International Human Rights Day. This is a good occasion to raise awareness towards human rights globally, to explore what the concept of human rights exactly entails and to reflect on it.


Human rights are certain basic, individual rights that apply to all human beings by virtue of their humanity, without distinction on such grounds as race, color, sex (gender), religion, political opinion, language or national or social origin [Abdullahi A. An-Na’im]. In short, human rights are certain basic rights that apply to everyone, everywhere, any time.

Human rights have their historical and philosophical roots in the American and French Revolutions and the Ara of Enlightenment. The notion arose that the individual needed to be protected from (abuse of) power by the state. Therefore individual rights and freedoms were stressed. In addition, after the first and second World War the urge for international peace and justice grew. Human rights are both applicable in war and and peacetime.

There are all kinds of legal mechanisms in place in order to safeguard human rights. First of all the global, United Nations, system. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, together with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights (the latter two entered into force in 1976 and are legally binding) constitute the International Bill of Human Rights. Second, there are regional human rights systems. The European system is unique in the sense that an individual can, after having exhausted all national remedies, address alleged violations of human rights laid down in European Convention on Human Rights directly at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. There is also an Inter-American and African system, where an individual can address alleged violations to a human rights commission, that can refer the case to either the Inter-American Court on Human Rights in San Jose, Costa Rica or the African Court of Justice and Human Rights in Arusha Tanzania. In addition, there are developments in the Arab world (League of Arab States and Islamic Conference) and Asia (Association of Sout East Asian Nations) concerning human rights mechanisms. Third, numerous human rights are laid down in national constitutions and laws. Nota Bene: when international law and national law are conflicting, the first one prevails.


In general, implementation and enforcement of human rights - as any type of international law -, however, remains a challenge. Nongovernmental organizations like Amnesty International, monitor human rights situations. Next to the possibility to invoke legal tools, political and economical pressure can be used, in accordance with the procedure of naming, blaming and shaming when states or other actors like for example transnational corporations are involved.

Traditionally, the main focus has been on civil and political rights. This is also referred to as first-generation human rights. Classic examples are freedom of expression, freedom of religion, the right not to be tortured  or ill-treated, and the right to vote. In many parts of the world, predominantly socialist countries and the Third World, the criticism was raised that it is not possible to enjoy these classic human rights if you do not have enough food in your stomach and a roof above your head. Therefore their main emphasis lies on economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to food, the right to shelter, the right to education. This is also referred to as second-generation human rights. In addition, different parts of the world look at the first-generation rights as a Western concept, focusing on the individual, rather than groups, the collective. The African human rights system contains the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, stressing rights of groups, families, clans. Examples are equality rights and the right to self-determination. This is also referred to as third- generation human rights. But also in Asia, society often has a higher status than the individual. Honor has a central place within for example Chinese or Japanese culture. Note that the three generations of human rights are chronological, not hiearchial. 

Inevitably, clashes between these rights may occur. The big question is then: which right would prevail in case of conflict? Of course, there is not a clear cut answer to this question. It needs to be examined on a case to case basis, where room for various interpretations and nuances is enshrined. These different angles of looking at the concept of human rights, triggers the debate on universalism versus cultural relativism. Are human rights truly universal? 


Today is International Human Rights Day. Let this day and this article inspire you and nourish your eagerness to learn. Every human being should be treated equally, provided that context, culture and different views are taken into account. Hence, this constitutes true World View Exchange!


Friday, December 5, 2014

Happy Sinterklaas!


Zero tolerance on all forms of discrimination.
It's time to reflect on own world.

Even if "Zwarte Piet" would never have been intended to be a reference to slavery, it is widely interpreted as being discriminating. Even the slightest suspicion or appearance of discrimination should not be tolerated.
If we do not recognize "tradition" as a justification for the infringement of human rights with for example female genital mutilation [referring to cultural relativism], why would we apply different standards to our Western "traditions"? 

The very first article of the Dutch Constitution entails the principle of non-discrimination. This means that no one can be discriminated against on any ground. As a human right this is being laid down in various international treaties. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the most famous treaty, serving as an inspiration for other international [United Nations] and regional human rights mechanisms. 
 
Non-discrimination is a non derogable right.
So let's respect, protect and fulfill this right. Beyond reasonable doubt.


Saturday, April 12, 2014

Rwanda saying

Rwanda saying: 

"Bagarira yose ntuzi irizera n'irizarumba" (Kinyarwanda)


Translation: Help everybody because you never know who will be worth it

Saturday, March 29, 2014

Rwanda Respect: 20 Years after the Genocide


Gorilla - Picture Sophie Poldermans

Hotel Mille Collines - Picture Sophie Poldermans
In April, it will be 20 years ago when the Rwanda genocide started to reach its appalling heat. In the ethnic conflict between the Hutu majority and Tutsi minority, it is estimated that between 750,000 and 1 million people [predominantly Tutsis and moderate Hutus] were killed within a hundred days. The methods that were used to kill, were horrifying. People were slaughtered with machettes, tortured to death, sexual violence was inflicted on a massive scale and in a systematic manner, people were intentionally infected with HIV. Next to the Holocaust, this is one of the classic examples of true genocide, where there was, thanks to the hate speech of Radio Mille Collines, legal proof that there was the intention to destroy a group of people in whole or in part. In addition, war crimes and crimes against humanity were every day’s reality.

During the study trip ”Transitional Justice in Post-Genocida Rwanda”, initiated by the NGO Together against Impunity in the Great Lakes Region and the universities of Tilburg and Kigali, that I participated in in 2012, I experienced a tiny little bit of the impact of the atrocities that had taken place in 1994. During this trip I visited some of the most important places during the conflict, among them the Kigali Memorial Center, the Murambi genocide memorial site [the site of a technical school where during the genocide 30,000 people were killed in one night], the Mpanga Prison, housing 5000 génocidaires, the Millennium Village and a demobilization and reintegration of ex-combatants camp. In this line, I carried out research as to Gender and Transitional Justice: Sexual Violence in Rwanda.

Prisoners - Picture Sophie Poldermans
After this trip, I explored the country on my own. A beautiful country, with a breathtaking landscape - I am sure there were actually a thousand hills - and I followed Dian Fossey’s footsteps by hiking the jungle on the border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda in order to find some of the world’s very last mountain gorillas. The people I met were very nice. However, I was shocked that after so many years, I could still feel the ethnic tension around and this tension was in my experience so strong, that it could easily explode any minute. The conflict is not dead, it is still alive and is being nourished by ethnic tension in the entire region. I could see hatred and fear in people’s eyes, that is very hard to describe. I had only experienced that before when I was doing research in the Balkans. No surprise if you take into account that it takes generations [look at Europe after the Second World War] to move on.

Many ways have been explored in order to achieve peace and justice, both on an international, regional, national and local level. Reconciliation plays an important role, for example in the local gacaca tribunal trials. During my trip to Rwanda, I was happy to encounter numerous positive initiatives to embrace sustainable peace. The Millennium Village is an example of a village where the new generation of Rwanda will be brought up with the United Nations Millennium Goals, with the main focus on education and awareness raising.
Millennium Village - Picture Sophie Poldermans
Another example is an experiment where houses are built within a village in a structure where deliberately a perpetrator, victim and a third person will literally live next door to each other. Can you think of a more concrete example of reconciliation?

Neighbors: Tutsi victim and Hutu perpetrator  - Picture Sophie Poldermans
Although Rwanda has a long way to go, there is hope for today and the future. The keyword here is Respect in the richest meaning of the word.


Kigali Memorial Center - Picture Sophie Poldermans


Saturday, March 8, 2014

Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Act

Uganda recently adopted the Anti-Homosexuality Act, criminalizing acts of homosexuality.
See: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-26320102


This clearly discriminates all LBGTs [lesbian, bisexual, gay, transgender]. It violates very basic human rights of equal treatment and no discrimination on any ground, including sexual orientation that is laid down in various international treaties. For example the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights. But next to these global United Nations funded documents, this new act is in violation of the regional judicial mechanism of the African Convention On Human and Peoples' Rights. The human rights could be invoked in either a national court of law or at the African Court of Justice and Human rights, or could be addressed before the United Nations human rights committee.

I initiated community-based research, where I am supervising my students to analyze the Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Act and its impact on LBGT members of the Ugandan community in Amsterdam, the Netherlands and their refugee status. This research is being carried out in close cooperation with the NGO Pearl of Africa. Next to a thorough analysis of legal tools, political and social [civil society] mechanisms will be explored.


Sunday, February 2, 2014

Zero Tolerance on Female Genital Mutilation day: 6 February

Combating Female Genital Mutilation in Europe 

 
Every year, 3 million girls and women are subjected to the harmful traditional practice of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM).
Worldwide, the number of girls and women who have undergone this practice is estimated to lie between 100 and 150 million.
FGM is not only an important issue in Africa, the Middle-East, and Asia where it has been traditionally practised, but due to the arrival of immigrants, refugees and asylum seekers from these countries to the West, to Europe, North America, and Australia, FGM has also become a Western concern. 
It is estimated that in the European Union alone, 500,000 girls and women are affected or threatened by the practice of FGM.
The magnitude and serious medical and social consequences of this practice in Europe and, moreover, the human rights that might be violated by it, should not be underestimated.


In my thesis, I would like to shed light on the harmful traditional practice of FGM
carried out in Europe, and explore how this practice can be combated most effectively, by means of legislative and/or preventative tools, in order to protect the women and girls concerned in the best possible way. 
Chapter 1 of this thesis sets out what the harmful traditional practice of FGM exactly entails; where, by whom and why it is practised, and which medical and social consequences it results in. Chapter 2 addresses the human rights that are applicable to FGM and the various instruments where they are enshrined. 
Chapter 3, 4, 5, and 6 contain a comparative analysis of legislative and preventative tools regarding FGM in the Netherlands, France, the United Kingdom, and
Austria. My Concluding Observations and Recommendations, in
terms of the most effective way to combat FGM in Europe, follow these Chapters.


See for thesis:
Combating Female Genital Mutilation in Europe: A Comparative Analysis of Legislative and Preventative Tools in the Netherlands, France, the United Kingdom, and Austria, Sophie Poldermans, L.Lm, E.Ma, 2006: