Showing posts with label Amnesty International. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amnesty International. Show all posts

Amnesty International Withdraws from Leonard Cohen’s Israel Concert Fund

Amnesty International has announced today that it will abstain from any involvement in the Leonard Cohen concert in Tel Aviv and will not be party to any fund that benefits from the concert's proceeds. A number of media accounts had reported that Amnesty International was to manage or otherwise partner in a fund created from the proceeds of Cohen’s concert in Israel that would be used to benefit Israeli and Palestinian groups. Amnesty International’s announcement today followed an international outcry over the human rights organization’s reported involvement in the Leonard Cohen concert fund, and an earlier international call for Cohen to boycott apartheid Israel.

Omar Barghouti from the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) commented, “We welcome Amnesty International’s withdrawal from this ill-conceived project which is clearly intended to whitewash Israel’s violations of international law and human rights. By abandoning the Leonard Cohen project in Tel Aviv, Amnesty International has dealt Cohen and his public relations team a severe blow, denying them the cover of the organization’s prestige and respectability.”

A statement confirming Amnesty's withdrawal has now been posted on the Amnesty International website.

After reports in late July that Amnesty International would manage a fund from the proceeds of Leonard Cohen’s concert in Israel, groups in occupied Palestine and around the world mobilized to pressure Amnesty International not to participate in such a fund. The Palestinian Non-governmental Organizations’ Network (PNGO) called in an August 11th letter on Amnesty International to reject management of a fund that is to be created from the proceeds of Leonard Cohen’s planned September concert in Israel. The West Bank village of Bil’in had made a similar appeal to Amnesty International. An international campaign of about one thousand letters to Amnesty International called for Amnesty’s withdrawal from the Cohen concert initiative. The only Palestinian organization that was claimed to be a recipient of the fund had previously announced that it was not involved in the project. Additionally, a representative of the joint Palestinian Israeli group Combatants for Peace, another previously announced beneficiary of the Cohen concert fund, had informed the New York Campaign for the Boycott of Israel in writing that the group had decided not to participate in the Leonard Cohen concert in Tel Aviv and not to accept any funds from its proceeds.

PNGO explained in their letter to Amnesty International that Israel Discount Bank, a major sponsor of Cohen’s concert in Israel, “is involved in the construction and the continuation of the Israeli settlement project in the oPT [occupied Palestinian Territories]… These settlements built on Palestinian lands are illegal under international law and are considered as war crimes in the Fourth Geneva Convention.” PNGO added that Cohen’s “concert in Israel contributes in normalizing Israeli occupation and colonization policies.” In an August 9th letter to Amnesty International, the West Bank village of Bil’in, a leader in the Palestinian nonviolent resistance movement, said that, “Israel Discount Bank’s trading room and other computer services are run by an Israeli company called Matrix IT. Matrix IT’s trading room is located on our villages land stolen by the illegal settlement of Modiin Illit.”

Additionally, nineteen groups and organizations worldwide explained in an open letter to Amnesty International that, “Being one of the world’s strongest proponents of human rights and international law, you shall thus be subverting a non-violent, effective effort by Palestinian and international civil society to end Israel's violations of international law and human rights principles.” The groups asserted that, “Accepting funds from the proceeds of Cohen’s concert in Israel is the equivalent of Amnesty accepting funds from a concert in Sun City in apartheid South Africa.” They also commented that the Peres Center for Peace, Amnesty International’s announced partner in managing the concert fund, “has been denounced by leading Palestinian civil society organizations for promoting joint Palestinian-Israeli projects that enhance ‘Israeli institutional reputation and legitimacy, without restoring justice to Palestinians.’”

On August 5th, eleven groups launched a letter writing campaign to Amnesty International which has resulted in hundreds of emails sent. Among those urging Amnesty International to reject involvement with the Cohen concert are former Amnesty International USA board member Prof. Naseer Aruri, Amnesty International USA’s former Midwest Regional Director Doris Strieter, peace activist Kathy Kelly, and a number of Amnesty International members.

The announcement of Cohen’s planned concert in Israel was swiftly met by letters from British, Israeli and Palestinian organizations and protests at his concerts in New York, Boston, Ottawa and Belfast, among other cities, calling on Cohen to respect the international call for an academic and cultural boycott of Israel. In response to the protests, Cohen had tried to schedule a small concert in Ramallah to “balance” his concert in Israel. However, Palestinians rejected the Ramallah concert, insisting that Cohen should first cancel his Tel Aviv gig to be welcomed in Ramallah.

With the international community failing to take action to stop Israeli oppression of the Palestinian people, and inspired by the international boycott movement that helped bring an end to apartheid in South Africa, Palestinian civil society has launched calls for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel, including an institutional academic and cultural boycott. Ninety-three artists, writers and other cultural workers have signed onto the Palestinian cultural boycott call. Palestinian boycott calls have inspired a growing international boycott movement which gained added momentum following Israel’s assault on Gaza last winter.

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The Criminal investigating itself lacks credibility. Don't You Think?

Israel's Gaza report 'lacks credibility': Amnesty

The Israeli army's investigation into its recent war in Gaza "lacks credibility" and is no substitute for an independent probe, London-based rights organisation Amnesty International said Thursday.

The Israeli army on Wednesday defended its conduct during the 22-day offensive against Hamas, saying five investigations carried out by the military found the army "operated in accordance with international law."

But Amnesty said the army briefing "lacks crucial details" and failed to explain the overwhelming majority of civilian deaths during the war, including incidents involving shooting at medical facilities.

"In the absence of the necessary evidence to substantiate its allegations, the army?s claims appear to be more an attempt to shirk its responsibilities than a genuine process to establish the truth," it said in a briefing note.

"Such an approach lacks credibility."

Amnesty urged Israel to cooperate with a UN commission headed by former international prosecutor Richard Goldstone to probe allegations of crimes during the offensive.

It said: "The Israeli army?s probe is no substitute for a thorough, independent and impartial investigation."

A major charge against the Israeli military concerned its use of white phosphorous shells, which are allowed under international law for use on open battlefields to create a smokescreen for troops, but prohibited in densely populated areas.

The army said it had acted in accordance with international humanitarian law, but Amnesty said its assurances "could not be further from the truth."

"Amnesty International researchers on the ground found hundreds of white phosphorus-impregnated felt wedges in residential areas all over Gaza, still smouldering weeks after they had been fired," it said.

It added: "The Israeli army must provide specific, detailed information about why targets were chosen and the means and methods of attack used in order to assess their conclusion that the IDF (Israeli Defence Forces) complied fully with international humanitarian law."
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Five African migrants shot dead crossing Egypt-Israel border

Press Release:

Amnesty International supporters are sending
appeals to the Egyptian authorities expressing
concern that three men and two women have
been shot dead by Egyptian security forces since
the beginning of 2008, as they attempted to
cross the border into Israel.

On 19 February Egyptian security forces shot dead
a Sudanese man trying to cross into Israel bringing
the total to five. Security officials said 50-year-old
Ermeniry Khasheef was shot in the back after he
ignored orders to stop as he attempted to cross
barbed wire near the border town of Rafah, in the
north of the Sinai Peninsula.

Three days earlier, an Eritrean woman, Mervat Mer
Hatover was shot dead after she ignored orders to
stop as she was attempting to jump over the barbed
wire in the El Kuntilla border region, in south-eastern
Sinai Peninsula.

According to security officials, Mervat Mer Hatover and
her two daughters - aged eight and 10 - had been among
a group of Africans who paid smugglers to help them
cross into Israel. All were arrested. The military prosecutor
has reportedly ordered an autopsy on Mervat Mer Hatover
but no proper investigation is known to have taken place.

An Amnesty International spokesperson said:
'We're concerned that the Egyptian border police are
disregarding their duty in opening fire on people
who may have in no way presented an immediate
threat to life.

'The international standards are clear: if lives are in
immediate danger, then lethal force is permissible.
If not, it is not.

'Desperate migrants should not be at
the mercy of border guards who disregard
basic international standards over
using their weapons.'


On 30 January two migrants from Ivory Cost were
shot and killed trying to cross the border south of
Rafah. According to the Egyptian security forces,
a 22-year-old man and an 18-year-old woman bled
to death before an ambulance could reach them.
Six Eritreans and two Ethiopians were also arrested.
On 19 January, another man from Ivory Cost bled to
death after he was shot in the thigh at the border with
Israel. A Sudanese and a Guinean were arrested.

Thousands of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers,
mostly from Sudan and Eritrea or other parts of
sub-Saharan Africa, try to cross from Egypt to
Israel each year. Their numbers have been
increasing since 2007. In July 2007 alone, over
230 mostly Sudanese migrants were arrested
trying to cross into Israel without official permission.
According to the UNHCR some two to three million
Sudanese nationals live in Egypt; most of them are
migrants but they also include thousands of refugees
who have fled persecution in Sudan. Israel has put
pressure on Egypt to reduce the flow of people
crossing the border into its territory without
authorization.

Amnesty supporters will be calling on the authorities
to order a thorough and impartial investigation into
the killings in line with UN principles.
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