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Making human rights defenders off limits

In recent months, leading diplomats and statesmen from the international community have been logging frequent flier miles and consulting technical treaties in order to curb the use and development of chemical and nuclear weapons in Syria and Iran. While these efforts have seemingly yielded previously unachievable results and established a new tone in the dynamic between adversaries on the global stage, they are also extremely limited and serve to mask more significant problems.

In Syria, while the deployment of chemical weapons on multiple occasions has targeted and killed civilians, the use of conventional weapons has caused the overwhelming majority of casualties. And in Iran, the focus on that country's nuclear programme and negotiations to contain it seems to be blind to the vast abuses taking place in Iran's other dark sites - its prisons.

One area in which progress can be made with a bit of effort and goodwill is the situation of those human rights defenders in both countries who remain imprisoned. In the early months of the Syrian uprising, the government released lawyer and prominent human rights defender Haitham Al-Maleh. Just days before his release, he had signed a petition to the authorities demanding an end to political detentions. In Iran, just after the election of President Rouhani, lawyer and human rights defender Nasrin Sotoudeh was released from the infamous Evin Prison, though a punitive travel ban remains in force.

These two examples show that in both situations, governments can be flexible and can shift positions on human rights defenders. This should be a point of engagement with the Syrian, Iranian and other governments that lock up human rights defenders. The US, EU, Russia and other actors in the international community can achieve real, practical results by ensuring that respect for human rights defenders is universally applied

(2013-11-30/aljazeera)

 
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11/17:David Cameron urges Sri Lanka to do more on human rights(BBC)
11/17:What's behind attack on Salvadoran human rights group?(CNN)
11/18:Sri Lanka rejects UK call for a human rights inquiry(bbc)
11/18:Libya: Militias Kill Unarmed Protesters(HRW)
11/20:End Military Use of Schools in War Zones(hrw)
11/20:China is not ending its human rights abuses(cnn)
11/24:Yemen: Reject Restrictions on Political Rights(hrw)
11/24:Syria government air strikes kill dozens in Aleppo(bbc)
11/25:Central African Republic: War Crimes by Ex-Seleka Rebels(HRW)
11/25:Gaza: Abuse, Harassment of Activists(hrw)
11/27:Egypt: Deeply Restrictive New Assembly Law(HRW)
11/27:6,000 cases of women raped during Syrian conflict, human rights group says(globalpost)
11/28:U.S. court rules against Sikhs in human rights violation lawsuit(upi)
11/28:Lebanon: Women Refugees From Syria Harassed, Exploited(hrw)
11/29:In Iran, human rights cannot be sacrificed for a nuclear deal(washingtonpost)
11/29:Turkish website chief wins human rights award(theguardian)
11/30:Making human rights defenders off limits(aljazeera)
11/30:Human Rights Standards Set By The British(thesundayleader)

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