PM’s weak response exposes Indigenous kids to more abuse

Prime Minister Turnbull has failed to back Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion’s commitment on national youth justice change, leaving children around the country exposed to continuing abuse in prison.

During Question Time yesterday, Rebekha Sharkie MP gave Mr Turnbull the opportunity to “re-affirm today your government’s commitment to showing national leadership on youth justice, to end the abuse and overrepresentation of Indigenous kids in prison.”

She also asked for a deadline for the government’s full response to The Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the Northern Territory

Prime Minister Turnbull failed to answer either question.

Dodging and delays

“Eighteen days since Mr Scullion committed to leading national change on youth prisons, Prime Minister Turnbull is already trying to dodge accountability for our kids’ safety,” said Rodney Dillon, Indigenous Affairs Adviser at Amnesty International Australia.

“Every day our Prime Minister delays, children as young as 10 years old are suffering in every jurisdiction – and this abuse is 25 times more likely to happen to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander kids.”

“Young children’s lives are at risk under this injustice system. Mr Turnbull should be doing everything he can to make sure children are thriving, not locked up and abused.”

“Mr Turnbull cannot stand up in Federal Parliament and say children need dignity, respect and safety; while failing to recommit to changing the very system that separates our children from their families in harsh prisons,” said Rodney Dillon.

Holding PM Turnbull to commitment

Mr Scullion said, on the day the Royal Commission report was released, that his Government would develop a response, “not only here in the Northern Territory, but across every jurisdiction in Australia. Every other jurisdiction will be looking to the Northern Territory and the Commonwealth for leadership about change throughout our jurisdictions and I know that [Chief Minister Michael Gunner] and I are committed to working together to provide that leadership.”

“The federal government has committed to leading national change on the issue of youth justice, and we are holding them to that commitment – our kids deserve nothing less,” said Rodney Dillon.

USA: Travel ban decision confuses Manus-Nauru settlement deal

Following the United States’ Supreme Court’s decision to allow President Trump’s travel ban to go into full effect, Graham Thom, Refugee Coordinator at Amnesty International Australia said:

“This ban has always been, at its core, deeply cruel and discriminatory. Rather than keep anyone safe, the travel ban has caused chaos and instability for thousands of people who just want to travel without fear and be reunited with their families.”

“The ban also adds further confusion to the pending USA settlement deal for refugees on Manus and Nauru, many of whom are Iranian, one of the six countries impacted by Trump’s hateful ban.”

“The ban also adds further confusion to the pending USA settlement deal for refugees on Manus and Nauru, many of whom are Iranian, one of the six countries impacted by Trump’s hateful ban.

“The people on Nauru and Manus Island have suffered enough at the hands of Australia’s deliberately cruel policies.

“Their mental health and wellbeing is paramount and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull must immediately provide clarity around what this ban means for those warehoused in offshore detention and commit to resolving the cruel chaos of offshore detention.”

UN / Rohingya apartheid: Australia must support robust resolution

Ahead of tomorrow’s United Nations Human Rights Council “special session” on the situation of the Rohingya and other minorities in Myanmar, Amnesty International Australia’s Crisis Campaigns Coordinator Diana Sayed said:

“Australia must show leadership in guiding the Human Rights Council towards a robust resolution on the Rohingya crisis. Any resolution passed must send a strong message to the Myanmar Government and military that the international community will not remain silent or sit by idly while evidence of ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity continues to pile up.

“Australia under Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser was once one of the world’s most outspoken critics of South Africa’s then apartheid regime. But there is an apartheid regime in operation right now on our doorstep against the Rohingya, which Australia has done very little about.

“The horrors inflicted on the Rohingya people by the Myanmar military are indescribable. The plan by Bangladesh to repatriate and relocate the Rohingya is unthinkable while the systemic discrimination against them continues. The silence of the Australian Government is deafening.

“Now is our chance to let the world know that we will not tolerate this apartheid regime any longer.

“By holding this special session, the Human Rights Council is highlighting the urgency of the need to address the human rights crisis in Myanmar.

“But this is not enough – the Council must now step up and pass a strong resolution that sends a clear message to Myanmar’s government and military that their abhorrent treatment of the Rohingya must end immediately, and that perpetrators will not enjoy impunity.”

Background

More than 620,000 people have fled into Bangladesh in a matter of months, as security forces unleashed a targeted campaign of violence against the Rohingya: killing an unknown number of women, men and children; raping women and girls; laying landmines; and burning entire Rohingya villages.

Rohingya people who remain in the country are trapped in a dehumanising system of apartheid, where virtually every aspect of their lives is severely restricted. Dismantling this system of apartheid is essential to ensure the safe, voluntary and dignified return of the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya who have fled Myanmar.

Myanmar’s security forces have also committed wide-ranging human rights violations against other ethnic minorities, in particular in Kachin and northern Shan States. These include extrajudicial executions and other unlawful killings, enforced disappearances, arbitrary detentions, torture and forced labour.

Philippines: ICC must examine ‘war on drugs’ crimes as child killings go unpunished

The International Criminal Court (ICC) must urgently open a preliminary examination into crimes against humanity, including the slaughter of dozens of children, committed during Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s murderous “war on drugs”, Amnesty International said today.

Thousands of people have been killed by police since Duterte took office in June 2016, yet not a single police officer has been held to account for any of the crimes committed.

“It is time for international justice mechanisms to step in and end the carnage on Philippine streets by bringing the perpetrators to justice. The country’s judiciary and police have proven themselves both unwilling and unable to hold the killers in the ‘war on drugs’ to account,” said James Gomez, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

“The ICC must open a preliminary examination into the situation and cast its net widely. Responsibility is not just limited to those pulling the trigger, but also those who order or encourage murders and other crimes against humanity.

“President Duterte and other high-level government officials have openly advocated for killings, which could amount to criminal responsibility under international law.”

Crimes against children

Amnesty International’s call on the ICC comes amid growing evidence of crimes against humanity committed against children in the “war on drugs”. As many as 60 children have been killed in anti-drug operations since June 2016.

Family members told Amnesty International they witnessed police shoot children dead at point-blank range as they were begging for mercy.

“They pointed a gun at my head [and] told me to get out… I heard shouting and three gunshots, then three more shots,” said O, the partner of a 17-year-old victim, who was killed after he was woken up in the middle of the night.

An Amnesty International research team witnessed how large numbers of children suspected of drug-related offences were kept in overcrowded and unsanitary holding centres for minors in the capital, Manila. Some said they had been beaten and tortured by police on their arrest, and claimed police had framed them by forcing them to pose in photographs with drugs that had been planted.

The killing of 17-year-old Kian delos Santos in August sparked a national outcry. Police claimed Kian had been shot in self-defence, but CCTV footage and eyewitness testimony showed how plainclothes officers dragged away the unarmed teenager and shot him dead in an alleyway.

More than 12 police officers have been investigated for the killing after the case received international attention, but no one has yet been held to account.

The ICC recently indicated that it will investigate and pay special attention to crimes against children.

“Police in the Philippines have killed dozens of children since 2016. Children have also been tortured and detained in appalling conditions, while families have been torn apart,” said James Gomez.

“The case of Kian delos Santos has rightly sparked outrage. The blatant lies by officers to try to cover up their role in the cold-blooded murder of a child shows that the police cannot be trusted to investigate themselves.”

Time for the ICC to step in

In January 2017, Amnesty International recommended that – unless Philippine authorities took key steps to end drug-related killings – the ICC should open a preliminary examination into the crimes.

The organisation called for an immediate end to extrajudicial executions, plus an end to the incitement and encouragement of such killings by high-ranking officials, including the President. Amnesty also urged the authorities to launch an impartial and efficient investigation into all suspected unlawful killings.

However, the Philippine authorities have completely failed to heed any of these calls.

“How many bullet-riddled bodies must be found dumped on the streets before the international community takes action?” said James Gomez.

“The ICC must act now. We believe the “war on drugs” meets the threshold of crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute, and international pressure is needed to persuade the Philippine authorities to change course.”

Submission: Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities Migration Amendment Bill 2017

Amnesty International has made a submission to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee inquiry into the Migration Amendment (Prohibiting Items in Immigration Detention Facilities) Bill 2017.

The Australian Government Migration Amendment Bill would allow the Minister to declare a mobile phone as a prohibited item for people seeking asylum and refugees in immigration detention facilities.

Amnesty International maintains that people seeking asylum and refugees in immigration detention facilities should maintain their access to mobile phones and SIM cards (and any associated necessary goods such as phone chargers or batteries).  Mobile phones are needed to contact lawyers, maintain good mental health, and helps visitors keep in contact.  

Blanket bans on mobile phones in immigration detention treats all detainees in the same way as high risk detainees.

The Senate Committee’s report was tabled in the Senate on 16 November 2017 and is available here.

READ OUR SUBMISSION HERE

 

 

Update on Manus Island

We watched in disbelief on Thursday the 23rd of November as authorities in Papua New Guinea sent immigration officials into Lombrum detention centre, demanding the men move to the new centre at Hillside Haus. There has been footage and reports of officials entering armed with sticks and knives, destroying personal belongings as they dragged men out of the decommissioned camp.

Our researcher Kate Schuetze, who has investigated the situation on the ground on Manus, said:

“There is no justification for this action. International law and standards demand that refugees enjoy international protection. The country where they sought refuge – Australia – has violated their rights at every turn. PNG has aided and enabled Australia’s policy of cruelty and degradation of the refugees.  Now the PNG authorities are putting their lives at risk.”

Behrouz Boochani has been reporting from Manus Island. He has been arrested. © AI
Behrouz Boochani has been reporting from Manus Island. © AI

One of those arrested by police during the morning of November 23rd, was journalist and recent Amnesty Media Award winner and human rights activist Behrouz Boochani, who has exposed to the world the extent of the abuse being experienced by all of the men in the detention camp on Manus. It was not clear why Behrouz Boochani was arrested, however it seems this was a deliberate attempt to isolate human rights activists from the wider group. Thankfully Behrouz was quickly released, but concerns remain for his safety and well-being.

Refugees are afraid to move to the new site because they fear for their safety. Amnesty International’s research confirms their fears are well-founded. Refugees have been attacked and seriously injured by some members of the local population who have made clear they do not want the men on Manus. Refugees have little or no protection from these attacks.

Amnesty International has expressed ongoing concerns about the overall safety of the refugees at the new centre as well as lack of access to medical treatment and other services. We will continue to monitor the situation closely and report on incidents as they unfold.

Want to do something for the men on Manus?

Call these MPs

Thousands of you have left messages of solidarity to the men on Manus. Many of these messages of support were read out and recorded by Amnesty staff, activists and volunteers from across the country. These messages have been shared with the men on Manus and you can check some of the videos out here here:

We received an immediate response from refugee, activist and journalist Behrouz Boochani thanking everyone for the messages.

Your words make a difference. Never doubt the power you have to make change by voicing your concerns.

Syria: Banned Soviet-made cluster munitions fuel humanitarian catastrophe in Eastern Ghouta

  • Verified photographs show Soviet-made cluster munitions used over densely populated areas by Syrian government forces
  • Doctors describe dire humanitarian situation – including widespread malnutrition – amid tightening siege
  • Witnesses recount indiscriminate attacks killing civilians as Syrian forces commit daily war crimes

Syrian government forces’ increasing use of banned Soviet-made cluster munitions to carry out indiscriminate attacks and direct attacks on civilians amid a tightening siege in rebel-held Eastern Ghouta has killed at least 10 civilians and brought the area’s humanitarian crisis to breaking point, Amnesty International can reveal today.

The organisation interviewed five people currently under siege in Eastern Ghouta, among them activists and medical professionals, who described a severely deteriorating situation as the government has escalated its bombing campaign of this rebel-held enclave, near the capital, Damascus, since 14 November.

“The Syrian government is committing war crimes on an epic scale in Eastern Ghouta. Using its familiar, brutal strategy of siege and bombardment of civilians – already employed to devastating effect in Aleppo, Daraya and other rebel strongholds – the population is being forced to surrender or starve,” said Philip Luther, Amnesty International’s Research and Advocacy Director for the Middle East and North Africa.

“Amid a worsening malnutrition epidemic, Syrian forces must immediately end the unlawful siege of Eastern Ghouta and allow unimpeded access to humanitarian organisations before an already catastrophic situation claims yet more civilian lives.”

Attacks on civilians and civilian objects

“I clearly saw parachutes strapped to small bombs falling, and 10 seconds later a series of explosions echoed.” – Mustafa, civil defence volunteer

Images shared by activists in Eastern Ghouta, which have been verified by Amnesty International’s arms expert, show remnants of cluster munitions from attacks that have taken place in the past 10 days, including one on 19 November.

Appearing in the images are Soviet-made ground-launched 240mm 3O8 cluster munitions projectiles containing up to 10 sub-munitions. According to Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor, these first appeared in Syria after Russia began missile strikes against anti-government groups in September 2015.

Such weapons are banned by more than 100 countries due to the enormous danger presented to civilians by their indiscriminate nature.

“The Syrian government has shown callous disregard to the lives of the hundreds of thousands of people living in Eastern Ghouta since it laid siege to the area in late 2012. But this recent escalation in attacks – clearly targeting civilians and civilian infrastructure using internationally banned cluster munitions – is horrific,” said Philip Luther.

“There are around 400,000 civilians struggling to survive under daily, often hourly, bombardment, without access to food and medical care.”

Activists told Amnesty International the Syrian government also attacked residential areas with imprecise, improvised rockets such as “Elephant rockets”, named in connection with the distinctive noise they make when launched.

According to the Violations Documentation Centre in Syria, a local monitoring group, 97 civilians were killed in ground and air attacks by government forces between 14 and 26 November 2017.

Amnesty International interviewed two people who witnessed an attack by Syrian government forces using cluster munitions projectiles on al-Quawtli, a densely populated residential neighbourhood close to the Grand Mosque in Douma.

Mustafa, a volunteer with the civil defence, which carries out rescue work after military attacks, witnessed an attack on a crowded market on 19 November. He told Amnesty International:

“I heard the launch of the rocket because the government military base is close. Then I clearly saw parachutes strapped to small bombs falling and, 10 seconds later, a series of explosions echoed. After that, the shelling continued but the sound was different.

“I went to the scene of the attack and saw injured people on the floor, including women, children and men. Several people later died of their injuries.”

Amnesty International analysed four videos posted online showing what were claimed to be cluster munition explosions by the Grand Mosque and verified that the images of the parachutes used to deliver the sub-munitions of the 240mm 3O8 cluster munitions projectiles used in the attack (see attached, copyright: Firas Abdullah) were taken in Douma.

Muhammad, a media activist, witnessed an attack that hit a residential building. He recalled:

“The missiles struck two residential buildings surrounding a market, which is usually crowded with shops and children playing.

“At the scene of the attack, I saw the civil defence removing the body of a girl around six years old. Her name is Ghina. Her family survived but she didn’t. She was in one of the buildings that was hit. Thankfully, the warplane didn’t hit the market or else there would have been more casualties.”

Humanitarian crisis escalates

“All the children who come to me are skeletons, bones and skin.” – Hoda, a doctor in Eastern Ghouta

Since the Syrian government captured the areas of al-Qaboun and Barze, which both border the Harasta neighbourhood of Eastern Ghouta, in February 2017, smuggling tunnels that had for years guaranteed a minimum flow of food, water and medical supplies to the besieged population have been closed.

As a result, the humanitarian situation inside Eastern Ghouta has rapidly deteriorated and food prices have increased exponentially, while hospitals have struggled to treat patients due to depleting stocks. On 3 October 2017, the Syrian government further tightened the siege by closing the last remaining entry point to Douma, the al-Wafideen checkpoint.

Muhammad, a media activist in Eastern Ghouta, described to Amnesty International how medical workers are struggling to provide adequate care to people facing malnutrition and injury, due to lack of supplies. He said:

“Outsiders think we are exaggerating but we are not. We barely have food. My wife and I had to cut down by half the amount of food we are eating. It is impossible to afford to buy food with the current prices, which are four times more than before.”

According to the World Health Organisation’s food security report, published on 22 November, by mid-November 2017 a 700g bundle of bread was 85 times more expensive in Eastern Ghouta than in Damascus, located just 15km away.

Hoda, a doctor working in one of the field hospitals in Eastern Ghouta, described the scale of malnutrition crisis to Amnesty International:

“Hospitals are now relying on humanitarian aid convoys that are rarely allowed to enter. The last humanitarian aid convoy that entered Kaferbatna [a neighbourhood in Eastern Ghouta] was a month ago [October]. It carried a very small amount of medical aid. We need fuel, anesthetics, oxygen, antibiotics… We are seriously running out of these supplies.

“The children are suffering the most. I am receiving lots of cases of malnutrition. They need food for energy and their immune systems, but their families can’t afford to buy them any food so they end up eating barley, which is affordable, once a day. That’s it.

“We don’t have cases of children dying from malnutrition but all of the children who come to me are skeletons, bones and flesh. One child I saw is 10 months old and weighs 800g. All of the children are underweight without any exception.”

In October, the UN’s children’s fund, UNICEF, announced that 232 children in Eastern Ghouta were suffering severe acute malnutrition.

“Russia, as a party to this conflict has a particular responsibility to ensure that its ally, the Syrian government, ends this unlawful siege and stops committing war crimes. Other states must use their influence to pressure Syria to allow unfettered impartial humanitarian relief to reach besieged civilians in Eastern Ghouta and elsewhere in Syria,” said Philip Luther.

Background

In August 2015, Amnesty International published a report documenting the unlawful siege of Eastern Ghouta and attacks on civilian objects. In November 2017, it released a report on mass displacement inside Syria, exposing the government’s strategy of prolonged sieges with the aim of forcibly displacing the local population. It has been documenting violations and abuses by all parties in Syria since the onset of the crisis.

Amnesty International has been calling on all states for years to immediately halt the use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster munitions and to join the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM).

Egypt: 16 men jailed amidst unprecedented homophobic crackdown

Responding to the news that a Cairo court convicted 16 men of “debauchery” and sentenced them to three years prison followed by three years’ probation, Amnesty International’s North Africa Campaigns Director Najia Bounaim said:

“These sentences strike at the very heart of being human and are another example of the ongoing persecution of LGBTI people and the wider crackdown on human rights by Egyptian authorities. This prosecution violates the rights of these men to be treated equally regardless of their perceived sexual orientation.

“In the last two months more than 70 LGBTI people have been arrested in an unprecedented crackdown with more than 40 sentenced for up to six years. The Egyptian authorities must quash the sentences against the 16 men immediately and unconditionally release them.

“At least five of the men sentenced have been subjected to forced anal examinations following their arrest in September. Forced anal examinations violate the prohibition of torture and other ill-treatment under international law. We condemn these actions in the strongest terms.”

According to the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, at least 76 people across Egypt have been arrested based on their perceived sexual orientation following the display of a rainbow flag at a concert by Mashrou’ Laila in Cairo on 22 September. Many of those arrested by security forces were entrapped through online dating apps. More than 60 members of Egypt’s parliament have proposed a deeply discriminatory law that will explicitly criminalise same-sex sexual activity in the country for the first time.

Submission: Modern Slavery Act Inquiry

Amnesty International is concerned that there are an estimated up to 45.8 million individuals in modern slavery worldwide.  Modern slavery affects almost every sector, region and company.

Modern slavery covers a wide spectrum of crimes, but includes human trafficking, slavery and slavery like practices such as servitude, forced labour, forced or servile marriage, the sale and exploitation of children and debt bondage.

Modern slavery is often hidden across a number of supply chains. This fact alone makes addressing and reducing its incidence difficult. The global demand for cheap labour and the exploitation of vulnerable individuals to provide this labour, compounded by governance gaps in developing markets means that slavery continues to flourish.

The Australian Government has a chance to be a leader in the Pacific region in addressing modern slavery by establishing a legislative framework to eradicate it. This legislation should be underpinned by a thorough inquiry into the extent to which slavery is part of Australian supply chains and business practices.

Transparency, accountability, harm minimization and due diligence processes should be a central focus of any regime to address this complex issue.

Amnesty International has made a submission to the Parliamentary Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Inquiry into a Modern Slavery Act (Submission number 154).

READ OUR SUBMISSION HERE

Background

In March 2016 Amnesty International released its report into the abuse of migrant workers building the Khalifa International Stadium in Qatar for the World Cup 2022.  The report, The ugly side of the Beautiful Game: Exploitation of Migrant Workers on a Qatar 2022 World Cup site.  In November 2016 Amnesty International released its report into the Palm Oil industry, Palm Oil: Global Brands Profiting from Child and Forced Labour.

Five women defending human rights that you need to know about

In the face of discrimination, violence and imprisonment, these extraordinary women are refusing to back down.

Claire Yinguinza. © AI
Claire Yinguinza. © AI

Claire Yinguinza, Central African Republic

In 2013 Claire Yinguinza and her her 19-year-old daughter Nadia were raped in their home in the Central African Republic (CAR) by a group armed men. Nadia became pregnant as a result of the attack and was also infected with HIV – her baby daughter is also HIV positive.

The men responsible are part of CAR’s anti-Balaka group – a ‘self-defence’ militia made up largely of animists and Christians who target Muslims.

Claire has taken the brave step of preparing to take her case to the High Court. Find out how you can stand with Claire and Nadia.

Ni Yulan, China

Ni Yulan was among thousands whose homes were demolished in the lead-up to the Beijing Olympics in 2008. Without a permanent place to live herself, Ni Yulan now defends the rights of others forced from their homes by lucrative construction projects.

Pursued by the Chinese Government for nearly 20 years, she has been beaten, harassed, put under surveillance, threatened, evicted and repeatedly arrested for her activism.

Despite all this, Ni Yulan won’t stop defending the rights of others. Call on the Chinese authorities to put a stop to the constant harassment and intimidation of Ni Yulan and her family now.

Hanan Badr el-Din. © Private
Hanan Badr el-Din. © Private

Hanan Badr el-Din, Egypt

Hanan Badr el-Din’s husband disappeared after attending a protest in July 2013. Khalid Mohamed Hafez Ezz el-Din joined hundreds of people who have gone missing at the hands of Egypt’s security forces.

In 2014 Hanan co-founded a group tasked with finding the truth behind Egypt’s  disappeared. Her latest attempt to get information about her husband has lead to her arrest and being charged with belonging to a banned group. Hanan’s courage and determination could see her locked up for at least five years.

Join our call on the Egyptian President to drop all charges and free Hanan immediately and unconditionally.

İdil Eser, Turkey

Idil Eser. © AI
Idil Eser. © AI

İdil Eser, Head of Amnesty International Turkey, was one of ten human rights workers arrested in July 2017 as part of a series of government efforts to silence its critics. Since the attempted coup of July 2016, over 150,000 people have been placed under criminal investigation.

İdil and her fellow human rights workers, the Istanbul 10, have dedicated their lives to defending the rights of others in Turkey. Criminalising them leaves everyone vulnerable to the government’s ongoing crackdown on freedoms.

Following a global outcry, İdil and the Istanbul 10 have been released on bail. However, Taner Kılıç, Chair of Amnesty International Turkey, is still in prison and the Istanbul 10 remain at risk.

Tell Turkey to stop persecuting these rights defenders and drop the charges against them.

Shackelia Jackson, Jamaica

In 2014 Shackelia Jackson’s brother, Nakiea, was shot by police while he worked as a cook. According to eyewitnesses, a police officer, searching for an alleged suspect with dreadlocks, stormed into Nakiea’s shop and shot him. Nakiea died from his wounds.

Horrified by her brother’s murder, Shackelia took on the Jamaican court system to fight for justice. Since speaking out, Shackelia and her family have been raided, harassed and intimidated by police but refuse to be silenced. Join our call on the Prime Minister of Jamaica to protect Shackelia and ensure justice for all those killed by police.