candlewire Working to protect human rights
 
Help us find the disappeared

You could be taken at any time, day or night. You might be at home, at work or travelling on the street. Your captors may be in uniform or civilian clothes. They forcibly take you away, giving no reason, producing no warrant.  It becomes a nightmare  for your relatives who might spend years desperately trying to find you, going from one police station or army camp to the next.  They might never discover whether you are dead or alive. The officials deny having arrested you or knowing anything about your whereabouts or fate. You have become a victim of enforced disappearance.

 

An “enforced disappearance” occurs when agents of the state arrest a person and the state then denies any knowledge of the person’s status or whereabouts. 

 

Amnesty International has reports of many thousands of such enforced disappearances - in Sri Lanka, Russia, El Salvador, Morocco, Iraq, Thailand, Pakistan, Bosnia, Equatorial Guinea, Egypt and Argentina, to name a few. No one is immune; victims include men, women and children.

 

 

 

 

One such case is that of 29 year old Ibragim Gazdiev who, on 8th August 2007,  was reportedly abducted by armed men in the North Caucasus republic of Ingushetia in the Russian Federation. He has not been seen since, and his family believe that he is - or was - held incommunicado. The authorities deny that they are holding him. The reason for his disappearance is unknown. Ibragim's father reported his son's disappearance the same day and a criminal investigation was opened. However, the investigation has been suspended more than once.  Ibragim's father reported his son's disappearance the same day and a criminal investigation was opened. However, the investigation has been suspended more than once; it was reopened in February 2009 but it has been suspended again since.

 

August  30th  is the International Day of the Disappeared. In Sheffield on Monday 30th August at 2.00 pm local Amnesty International supporters will be assembling in front of the Town Hall to remember the thousands of victims of enforced disappearance from around the world and to campaign for justice for them and their families.

Published Date:
23/08/2010
Modified Date:
23/08/2010







International day of the disappeared
Aug. 30, is the International Day of the Disappeared, observed by Amnesty International and other human rights groups around the word to remember the disappeared and to press for justice for the victims of enforced disappearance and their families.  An “enforced disappearance” occurs when agents of the state arrest a person and the state then denies any knowledge of the person’s status or whereabouts. 

In Sheffield on 30th August at 2.00 pm we will be assembling in front of the Town Hall to remember victims of enforced diappearance from around the world.

Published Date:
14/08/2010
Modified Date:
14/08/2010







Amnesty remembers the plight of the people in Burm



This Sunday (8th) marks the 12th anniversary of the famous 8/8/88 protests in Burma, when hundreds of thousands of peaceful protestors took to the streets to call for human rights and democracy. It was to end in bloodshed – a brutal crackdown by the ruling military junta would leave an estimated 3,000 people dead in the weeks that followed.


It is a massive milestone for the Burmese people and it would be great if you could blog about it and keep an eye on the comment pages for other stories about the anniversary.

The leader of the protests back then was Min Ko Naing. He was also involved in organising the protests in 2007. He is now in jail and is one of Amnesty’s priority cases.

Sadly little seems to have changed over the years and the junta’s reaction to the protests back in 2007 only reinforced the point. Burma is a country where torture, slave labour and unfair trials are all common place. And there are estimated 2,200 political prisoners there.

An overview of the current state of play in Burma can be found in our annual review entry on the country here.


If you fancy watching  a bit of video content, we also have the moving testimony of Waihhin is a Burmese student living in London, and her father Ko Mya Aye was also involved in both protests. He is currently serving a 65-year jail sentence. Her video can be viewed here

There’s a good timeline of the events in Burma on Dipity


Published Date:
08/08/2010
Modified Date:
08/08/2010







Free Sheffield Library Theatre event.7th July
Seven Years with Hard Labour
Scripted by Christine Bacon and Sara Masters

"The command came. The machine gun blew her off the armoured car. I ran to her body and she was already dead. 3000 people were killed on the streets that day. And I said, whatever I face, I have to stay alive to fight this."
 
Where: Library Theatre,
 Central Library, Surrey St, Sheffield, S1 1 XZ
 

When: Tuesday 6th July @ 7pm
Tickets: Free entry! Donations welcome for Burmese Political Prisoners and Karen Community Association, Sheffield.
Kindly Supported by Sheffield City Council as part of Summer of Sanctuary
There are currently over 2100 political prisoners incarcerated in Burma. This play weaves together four accounts from former Burmese political prisoners now living in the UK. Through their engaging, divergent and often humorous stories, a damning picture of a ruthless military regime is painted. 

   

iceandfire explores human rights stories through performance. Seven Years with Hard Labour is performed by members of their national outreach network, Actors for Human Rights, made up of over 500 professional actors dedicated to drawing public attention to a range of contemporary human rights concerns. 

www.iceandfire.co.uk/outreach/


Support our work

iceandfire theatre is a registered charity and we receive no statutory funding. If you would like to make a financial contribution to our work, you can do this via this linkwww.justgiving.com/iceandfire
Published Date:
30/06/2010
Modified Date:
30/06/2010







Street choirs amass in Sheffield

The National Street Choir Festival is a long-standing annual weekend of song that aims to create a connection and sense of community between choirs nationwide. It has been held in a different location, predominantly in the North of England, each year. The Festival celebrated its 25th anniversary in Manchester in 2007.  Last year the wonderful Whitby Community Choir did a fine job of hosting,  and in 2010 the festival returns to Sheffield, the city where it all began.

More info

http://streetchoirsheffield.wordpress.com/

Published Date:
18/06/2010
Modified Date:
18/06/2010







Calling people of faith in Sheffield

The Sheffield Amnesty Group is keen to forge links with faith communities who share the aims of Amnesty International and subscribe to the Articles of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human rights.

To further this cooperation the Group can provide speakers and materials to describe the work of Amnesty International in general and the Group and its various campaigns in particular. We also welcome requests to attend events that faith communities organise, e.g., festivals, special anniversaries and demonstrations and marches promoting awareness of human rights.

 

For further information contact story.robin@yahoo.co.uk.

Published Date:
22/05/2010
Modified Date:
22/05/2010







Shell's hell in the Niger delta

You will have recently  seen the damage an oil disaster can do in  the Gulf of Mexico. Decades of pollution in the Niger Delta has led to serious human rights violations, driving the people of the region into poverty. The oil industry has failed to adequately prevent the human rights impacts of its operations in the Niger Delta.

Watch the video

http://vimeo.com/11804108

 

  EMAIL 

Decades of pollution in the Niger Delta has led to serious human rights violations, driving the people of the region into poverty. The oil industry has failed to adequately prevent the human rights impacts of its operations in the Niger Delta.

Background information

The Niger Delta is one of the 10 most important wetland and coastal marine ecosystems in the world and home to some 31 million people. It is also the location of massive oil deposits, which have been exploited for decades by the government of Nigeria and multinational oil companies. The people of the Niger Delta have seen their human rights undermined by oil companies that their government cannot or will not hold to account.

Amnesty International is concerned about the devastating impact that pollution and environmental damage, associated with the operations of Shell, is having on the human rights of people in the Niger Delta.

 

For more information:

http://www.amnesty.org.uk/actions_details.asp?ActionID=618

Published Date:
17/05/2010
Modified Date:
17/05/2010







Messages from two brave people
I have received  two brave and powerful messages to you from two people in the Russian Federation  whose cases we have been working on in Sheffield AI group. 

 

Ibragim Gazdiev

 1)Update 08-Apr-2010 Investigation into Ibragim Gazdiev’s disappearance was suspended by the investigator yet again on 7 November 2009. The investigation was suspended on the standard grounds given in the Russian Criminal Code of "failing to establish someone who may be a suspect in the case." Mukhmed Gazdiev, Ibragim’s father, appealed to the Karabulak District Court against the decision to suspend the investigation. On 15 March 2010 Karabulak District Court rejected Mukhmed Gazdiev's appeal, and refused to order the investigation to be reopened. The Court concluded that all the possible investigative actions had been taken.

 “I received letters from many...correspondents, who write to me with warmth, with concern, different people write, different ages....I am not able to reply because I don’t speak English. But when I pick up this letter, I feel the warmth it gives off. And I want to ask you to use the means you have to contact these people in my name and thank them, at least in words. If I could do it myself, I would have done it long ago… Thank them from me for this. They wished me a Happy New Year, a Happy Christmas. And these letters are lying here, right before our eyes, with their wishes, and they make me feel sorrow and grief, and joy.”

"...you know, in the world, the vilest things are happening. Because sometimes not everyone realizes, and even if they do realize, they do not say what they think, do not fight for justice, do not fight against the filth in their midst. Due to these people, there are wars and misfortune, crises, etc. You must not be silent, if next to you your friend, your comrade, your fellow Earth-dweller, that is, your sort of “planet co-dweller”, let’s say, is suffering. They are being killed, and you say nothing. Tomorrow they’ll come for you, and this time you’ll be silent forever. So, if we want to live on this Earth – this wonderful Earth – with all our comforts, and if they are not there, we can create them, these comforts, in peaceful conditions. I am talking to all those who can hear me: do not keep silent! Act! ... How can we live in a society where a person has no rights. Such a society is a perfect setting for the killing of peoples, for stealing their resources, for corruption to grow, for drug addiction to flourish, etc. We must stand up against this. ... I want people to not stay silent, to be concerned for each other, to help each other. And then it may happen that these barbarians will stop their criminal activity, so that people will be able to breathe more easily."


 2)   Aleksei Sokolov


Aleksei Sokolov is a human rights defender and head of the Russian human rights organisation Pravovaia Osnova (Legal Basis), campaigning against torture and other ill-treatment of prisoners in the Russian Federation. He is also a member of the Public Commission for the Control of Places of Detention. He has been detained since May 2009 and is currently under trial in Bogdanovich, a small town in the Sverdlovsk Region of Russia.  Aleksei Sokolov has passed on the following message of thanks for all the help and support he has received:

"I have got an opportunity to thank .. all members of the organization personally for the help and support that you are giving me. Your kindness and understanding fills my soul so much that I continue to struggle against despotism, human rights violations and oppression of human beings, wherever I am. I am prepared to defend human rights, despite the danger that threatens me. In prison many are not happy with my behaviour and dream of the time when I finally break down and become "obedient" and "manageable", but they are sadly mistaken, because life without fighting loses its meaning and is called an existence, and this is not for me. Thank you very much for the postcards and letters with kind words and words of support. With respect to you and all the good people at "Amnesty International". Aleksei Sokolov."
Published Date:
15/04/2010
Modified Date:
15/04/2010



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