And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

via League of Indigenous Sovereign Nations of the Western Hemisphere
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: New York Times article - US named Human Rights Violator at the
UN Commission on Human Rights
Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1999 11:49:53 EST
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
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Dear Big Mountain supporters,

The US is named Human Rights violator at the UN Commission on Human
Rights.

Yours sincerely,
Marsha Monestersky

March 28, 1999
New York Times
Good Friends Join Enemies to Criticize U.S. On Rights

By ELIZABETH OLSON

GENEVA -- The United States, which regards itself as a bastion of human
rights, found itself under attack from friend and foe alike during the
first week of the U.N. annual meeting on global democratic rights.

The sharpest blow came from America's ally, Germany, whose foreign
minister, Joschka Fischer, announced that the 15-member European Union
for the first time would submit an anti-death-penalty resolution to the
U.N. Human Rights Commission.

He told delegates from the 53 member countries that the resolution was
intended to prevent "the execution of minors, of the mentally ill,
enforcement before completion of ongoing procedures, and extradition to
countries where the death penalty is in force."

Fischer did not single out the United States by name, but Germany
protested when Arizona executed two German-born men earlier this year,
despite German government protests that the executions were"barbarism."

America's rights record was excoriated by longtime rivals like Cuba, but
it also came under criticism from friendly countries and from Amnesty
International, a leading crusader against human rights violations.

On the commission's opening day, Amnesty International for the first
time
placed the United States on its list of human rights violators, in the
company of Algeria, Cambodia and Turkey, among others, because of police
brutality, violations against people in detention and increased numbers
of executions.

Each year, Amnesty International, which is based in London, targets a
half-dozen nations as the worst violators of human rights and lobbies to
see that the U.N. body censures them. "Human rights violations in the
United States are persistent, widespread and appear to
disproportionately affect people of racial or ethnic minority
backgrounds," said Pierre Sane, the group's secretary general. He argued
that despite its "claim to international leadership," the United States'
position as a champion of human rights had been tarnished by its
violations.

Police brutality and poor treatment of those in detention are widespread
in America, he said. He also accused American officials of detaining
those
seeking asylum from political persecution in other countries without
judicial review and sometimes in the same lockups as criminals.

Nancy Rubin, head of the American delegation, disagreed "strongly that
civil and human rights violations in the United States are persistent,
widespread or indeed that they go unpunished."  There are already
"mechanisms in place" to safeguard citizens' rights, she noted.

"In the United States, the average time on death row is 11 years," said
one American official, who refused to be identified. "The average time
after a death sentence is given in China is 30 minutes, but it is not on
Amnesty's list this year."

In previous years, Amnesty International has placed China high on its
list of violators, but it was listed as a second priority this year.

Sane, from Senegal, said Amnesty International would support a
resolution that will urge a moratorium on executions, with the goal of
abolishing the death penalty. To do otherwise, he said, would jeopardize
the group's credibility because of the increased numbers of people being
executed in the United States, and because of the 3,500 people currently
on death row.

The United States has executed 380 people since 1990, with 78 put to
death
last year. Currently, 38 states have the death penalty.  Around the
world,
about 90 countries still reserve the right to use capital punishment,
while 105 nations have renounced it, including Canada,  Bulgaria and
Lithuania in the last year.

Most European countries either bar the death penalty or have placed a
moratorium on its use.

If adopted, the resolution would be the rights commission's third
endorsing a global moratorium on executions. The campaign against the
death penalty has been led by Italy, and picked up speed in Europe after
the British government, under Tony Blair, placed a moratorium on
executions.

A number of European countries, including Norway, Finland and Italy,
used
their opening statements last week to emphasize opposition to the death
penalty.

Finland's Foreign Minister, Tarja Halonen, denounced it as "an inhuman
form of punishment." She did not name the United States but said that
capital punishment should never be used in the "case of minors," one of
the key complaints against the United States, where people are held
accountable for crimes committed before they turned 18.

================================================================
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League of Indigenous Sovereign Nations of the Western Hemisphere
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