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Global Justice Center Blog

The Commission on Unalienable Rights: A U.S. Assault on Human Rights

Description:
While the devastating impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic continues to threaten the health and rights of millions, it is important that we stay vigilant in monitoring and addressing the Trump administration's attacks on the global human rights agenda. This Zoom webinar will discuss the work of the Commission on Unalienable Rights, announced by Secretary of State Pompeo last year, a panel he said was aimed at providing "fresh thinking about human rights discourse where such discourse has departed from our nation's founding principles of natural law and natural rights."  The Commission is mostly made up of individuals who have taken extreme anti- LGBTQ-rights, anti-reproductive rights positions, and is set up to narrow the scope of U.S. human rights advocacy, with religious freedom prioritized over other rights, potentially undermining human rights protections for some of the most vulnerable people across the globe. Its compliance with the federal law governing such outside advisory committees has also been called into question in a lawsuit brought by Democracy Forward on behalf of Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, CHANGE, the Council for Global Equality, and Global Justice Center.

Speakers:
Kerry Kennedy
, President, Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights
Rob Berschinski
, Senior Vice President, Policy, Human Rights First
Mark Bromley
, Council Chair, Council for Global Equality
Serra Sippel
, President, CHANGE
Molly Bangs
, Research Associate, Equity Forward 
Ben Seel
, Counsel and Legal Analyst, Democracy Forward
Rabbi Michael Rothbaum
, Congregation Beth Elohim, Acton, Massachusetts

Moderator:  
Akila Radhakrishnan, President, Global Justice Center 

Justice for genocide: Yazidis hopeful as Islamic State trial opens in Germany

Excerpt of Al-Monitor articles that quotes GJC President Akila Radhakrishnan.

“Genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes fall under this bucket [of universal jurisdiction],” explained Akila Radhakrishnan, president of the New York-based Global Justice Center.

“It’s a recognition that when these serious international crimes happen, they are a concern not just for the country where they occurred, but they are a concern to everybody.”

Read the article

April News Update: Defending Human Rights in a Pandemic

Dear Friend,

Global crises always hit our marginalized communities the hardest. Women, especially poor women and women of color, are among those suffering the most from COVID-19 and its economic fallout. Unfortunately, in a moment when protecting fundamental human rights are more important than ever, we are seeing governments continue to attack their right to abortion care.

In the midst of so much uncertainty, one thing remains clear: we cannot let up in our efforts to ensure and protect women’s rights. We know from experience that all pandemics have a gendered impact, and COVID-19 is no different.

Join us as we fight anti-choice extremists looking to exploit a pandemic to restrict our bodily autonomy.

Read the Full Newsletter

First Yazidi Genocide Trial Commences in Germany

Excerpt of Just Security  articles that features GJC President Akila Radhakrishnan.

As outlined by Sareta Ashraph and Akila Radhakrishnan, sexual violence forms an integral part of how genocide has been committed towards Yazidi women and girls. Yet sexual slavery is often mischaracterized as a recent or modern form of slavery, as highlighted by Patricia Viseur Sellers and Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum in their discussion of the Habré trial. Consequently, it is vital in this context to understand the gendered dimensions of slavery and the slave trade, which include the relation of both types of criminal conduct to sexual violence.

Read the article

United Nations Secretary-General Releases Policy Brief on Human Rights & COVID-19

NEW YORK – United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres released a policy brief today on human rights and COVID-19.

Akila Radhakrishnan, president of the Global Justice Center, had the following response:

“The secretary-general’s policy brief on human rights in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic is an important reminder of why and how human rights need to be at the center of not only immediate government responses to this crisis, but also the rebuilding process after the pandemic. Around the world, we have seen governments ignore fundamental rights in their COVID-19 responses. In some cases, states use it as a pretext to restrict and violate human rights.”

“Nowhere has this been more apparent than in the context of gender. As rates of gender-based violence around the world have spiked during the pandemic, countries have shown themselves either unprepared to provide support services or have completely failed to take this violence into account in their responses. Countries like the United States have also exploited the pandemic to restrict access to abortion services. An effort centered on human rights, as called for by the secretary-general, must include women in the design of responses and be responsive to their specific needs, such as sexual and reproductive rights.”

“It’s imperative that states take meaningful action to incorporate human rights in their responses, and where they fail, they must be held accountable.”