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Wanted: A New World Champion

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  • Wanted: A New World Champion

    WANTED: A NEW WORLD CHAMPION
    Clive Stafford Smith

    New Statesman
    December 18, 2006

    How can the US condemn torture in Argentina, political murders in
    Russia and censorship in North Korea when it promotes "kangaroo courts"
    at Guantanamo Bay?

    Despite various bright moments in the past year, the cause of human
    rights continued to be undercut by the very countries that should be
    leading the way. It is difficult for a human-rights violator to be
    an effective advocate for human rights and human decency.

    Bringing the perpetrators of international crimes to justice is an
    important step along the path towards civilisation. By resisting any
    international trial of US personnel, no matter what the crime, and
    by promoting what the British former law lord Lord Steyn described as
    "kangaroo courts" in Guantanamo Bay, the Bush administration continues
    to act as a dead weight in this area.

    None the less, 2006 has brought some notable milestones. Charles Taylor
    is the former Liberian president charged with ordering hundreds of
    rapes that started on Valentine's Day 1998, continuing until the end of
    June. His trial was moved from Sierra Leone to The Hague, with Britain
    promising a prison cell if he is convicted. In November, the case
    began against Momcilo Mandic, justice minister in the Bosnian-Serb
    government of Radovan Karadzic. Wire-tap evidence will be used to
    prove his role in guards' torture of inmates in three prisons.

    The prosecution of war crimes has thoroughly infiltrated domestic
    law as well. The French are seeking to prosecute President Paul
    Kagame of Rwanda for the 1994 killing of the then Rwandan president,
    Juvenal Habyarimana, when his plane was shot down. The murder sparked
    violence that led to 800,000 deaths; the French claim jurisdiction
    because the plane's crew was from France. Prosecutors have authorised
    arrest warrants for nine senior Rwandan officials. Similarly,
    in November, Canada ordered the trial of Desire Munyaneza for his
    alleged participation in the genocide.

    Meanwhile, the pardons issued in favour of various Argentinian junta
    leaders were ruled unconstitutional by a federal court in Buenos
    Aires, leaving them open to prosecution for various crimes, including
    kidnapping up to 30,000 people who "disappeared" during the late
    1970s. And Spain ordered the arrest of the former Argentinian police
    officer Ricardo Taddei for the torture and murder of 160 left-wing
    "dissidents" at secret detention centres.

    As prosecutions of officials become more frequent, there are signs that
    the punishment of less exalted criminals is becoming more humane. In
    April, the president of the Philippines, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo,
    commuted the sentences of all 1,230 prisoners on death row to life
    imprisonment. In Vietnam, a proposal would end executions for several
    non-violent offences. That said, Le Manh Luong, a British national, was
    sentenced to death in Vietnam just two weeks ago, on 25 November. In
    the same month, another British citizen on death row, Mirza Tahir
    Hussain, was freed by President Pervez Musharraf after 18 years in
    prison, his liberation due largely to the personal intervention of
    Prince Charles, then on a state visit to Pakistan.

    The trend away from the death penalty has reached the US, where,
    this past year, the number of such sentences imposed has been well
    under half the figure ten years ago.

    Free speech, however, is a human right that is all too often ignored.

    The worldwide record has not been good in 2006. President George
    Bush protested that his suggestion to Tony Blair that they should
    bomb al-Jazeera's headquarters in Qatar was a "joke". Most people
    failed to see the humour, including Sami al-Hajj, a journalist
    for al-Jazeera, who on 15 December celebrated his fifth year in US
    custody at Guantanamo Bay. In all that time, no charges have been
    laid against him.

    The Bush administration has been setting a bad example to some
    unsavoury regimes. According to Reporters Without Borders, North
    Korea, one of the members of the "axis of evil", is bottom of the
    press freedom league table. Turkmenistan comes a close second: each
    news bulletin there begins with a pledge that the broadcaster's
    tongue will shrivel if he slanders the country, the flag, or the
    president. Such discord is unlikely, as President Saparmurat Niyazov
    personally appoints journalists.

    Various close allies of the west are not doing much better. The 59th
    World Newspaper Congress was held in Moscow in June. Four months later,
    the leading Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, a powerful critic
    of President Vladimir Putin's Chechen policy, was murdered.

    Her killers have not yet been identified, despite video footage of them
    entering her apartment building. The following month, there was much
    less media coverage of a five-year sentence for Boris Stomakhin on a
    charge of "inciting ethnic hatred" with his coverage of the Chechen
    conflict. His crime was to describe the Russian presence in Chechnya
    as an "occupation" and to compare Putin with Saddam Hussein.

    It has also been a dangerous year to be a journalist in the
    Philippines, where at least eight people working to expose corruption
    have been killed. Although 60 journalists have been murdered there
    in the past ten years, a trial of three men in October for the murder
    of the journalist Marlene Esperat led to only the fourth conviction.

    Meanwhile, Jose Miguel Arroyo, the husband of the president, has
    brought 43 separate actions against journalists for libel; they have
    now clubbed together in a class action to sue him for seeking to
    "chill the freedom of the press".

    But there have also been positive developments on free speech,
    particularly where the European Union has brought pressure to bear
    on new members, and countries aspiring to membership. The most famous
    example came in October when the EU harshly condemned the prosecution
    of the Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk, for "denigrating Turkishness"
    by describing the genocide of Armenians during the Great War.

    The prospect of entry into the EU also encouraged free speech in
    Bulgaria, where Georgi Koritarov, a respected journalist, admitted to
    acting as a spy during the country's communist era and apologised for
    his actions on television. His name had been officially released by
    the interior minister as part of a Freedom of Information action. FOI
    has become big news in Bulgaria, where the ministry of agriculture
    and forestry was given a sardonic "Golden Padlock" award for refusing
    to answer requests for information about corrupt sales of coastal
    property to private individuals - including a growing number of UK
    citizens. Romania faces similar challenges in joining the EU, and
    has set up an "Institute for the Investigation of Communist Crimes".

    Meanwhile, the struggle against discrimination on the basis of
    gender and sexual orientation has oscillated this year. Much is
    made in the western media of the alleged chauvinism of Islam; yet,
    on the other side of that coin, the first 50 women were appointed as
    state religious preachers in Morocco in May, in a government drive
    to promote a more tolerant version of Islam. Four months earlier,
    in Sudan, two female judges were elected to the new African Court on
    Human and Peoples' Rights.

    Meanwhile, as the US Supreme Court debates whether to roll back the
    constitutional right to abortion, the trend towards criminalising
    all abortions in central America continues, with the Nicaraguan
    government passing restrictive legislation in October. The new law
    penalises abortion even when it is carried out to save the pregnant
    woman's life, or when the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest.

    Gay rights suffered a similar setback in Uganda, where a conviction
    for sodomy carries the penalty of life imprisonment. In September,
    a local tabloid began to publish the names of alleged homosexuals in
    a development that could provoke the government to crack down.

    Sadly, the focus of human rights to date has by necessity been on
    the prevention of oppression. Yet we must not forget the words of
    the US Declaration of Independence, which champions "the pursuit
    of happiness". Although most people in Britain probably could not
    find Bhutan on a map, the Himalayan country has made its priority
    the "gross national happiness", rather than the conventional gross
    national product.

    In 2007, politicians, the media and advocates alike would do well to
    remember that human happiness is the most significant right of all,
    a view recognised in Bhutan, if not in Britain.

    <em>Clive Stafford Smith is the legal director of Reprieve, a UK
    charity fighting for the lives of people facing the death penalty and
    other human-rights violations. He writes this column monthly. Contact
    Reprieve at PO Box 52742, London EC4P 4WS. Tel: 020 7353 4640.
    www.reprieve.org.uk.</em>
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