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racism

Racism operates directly and indirectly to exclude people from real access to equality. Racism feeds unjust policies which deny people categorised as “other”: their human rights. Racism can feed social exclusion within communities and in turn breed cycles of hostility and violence. Treating “non-citizens” differently to “citizens”, apart from what else it amounts to – amounts to discrimination on the basis of race.

The Duty of Kindness and Sympathy Towards Strangers and Foreigners

By
October 18, 2011
Paris in the 1900s

It is hardest to write of those things about which we feel most deeply. Today I wish to write about someone whose words and life have profoundly influenced and inspired me. That person is Abdu’l Baha: the son of the founder of the Baha’i Faith and its leader from 1892 to 1921. I wish...
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Tragedy

By
July 31, 2011
norway

It is one of the saddest realities of our modern world that prejudice and hate often rear their ugly heads through acts of gross violence. Yet that is precisely what happened this month. Unfathomable bigotry took the lives of 77 innocent men, women, and youth in Norway. To dwell excessively here on the evil...
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The Anti-Immigration Era: What is going on in the United States?

By
July 19, 2011
What is happening in America

What is happening in America? America is in turmoil on the issue of immigration. Some describe it as the new ‘civil rights’ issue. Laws are being introduced across the country to mark out  people who are to be excluded.  These laws impact particularly on people of Latino heritage, both migrant and not. Ordinary activities such...
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Do Foreigners Have the Same Human Rights as the Rest of Us?

By
July 6, 2011
Same Human Rights?

At the core of human rights is the axiomatic truth that human beings have inherent rights: that all human beings are equal and possessed of dignity and that violation of such rights is both morally offensive and legally impermissible. An alternative ordering of human relationships is mandated by exclusive national citizenship. Implicitly and explicitly...
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Libya’s Migrant Slaves

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March 13, 2011
Benghazi - calling for freedom

Among the tragedies befalling the people of Libya, is the tragedy befalling its migrant workers.   On 9 March the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies reported that 30,000 migrant workers were forced back into Libya by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi to ‘return to work’ in Tripoli.   This forced return amounts to slavery.  It also violates international human...
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Bartolome de las Casas: An early human rights worker

By
February 13, 2011
Guatemalan girls in traditional dress

Bartolome de las Casas is one of those remarkable people in history who arose at the very beginning of the modern human rights movement.  A great humanitarian;  he learnt human rights in his encounter with the people of Central and South America during the sixteenth century European invasion of the Americas.  He used his office as...
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Government should take lesson from Christmas Islanders

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December 21, 2010
Christmas Island

It appears from all reporting that what makes the tragedy that occurred on the morning of Wednesday 15 December, 2010 on the shoreline of Christmas Island all the more tragic is that human beings had to watch (and listen) helplessly whilst fellow humans died just metres away. The stories of the traumatised witnesses have painted a horrific picture of...
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Book Review: The Strange Alchemy of Law and Life by Justice Albie Sachs

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November 10, 2010
Book Review: The Strange Alchemy of Law and Life by Justice Albie Sachs

The victims and perpetrators of human rights abuses whisper from the pages of this short book.  They speak to us of their struggle to realize their own humanity and recognize the humanity of each other.   For a judge it is an unusual book, but then Albie Sachs is an unusual judge.  A member of the...
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Only Water in a Stranger’s Tears

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October 29, 2010
Only Water in a Stranger’s Tears

‘It’s only water in a stranger’s tears.’  I start with this line partly because I’ll always get in a musical reference if I can (it’s a lyric from the song Not One of Us, by Peter Gabriel), but also because it sums up to me what defining ‘the other’ (the foreigner) seems to be...
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