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Amnesty International

Amnesty International (also referred to as Amnesty or AI) is an international non-governmental organization focused on human rights, with its headquarters in the United Kingdom. The organization says it has more than ten million members and supporters around the world.[1] The stated mission of the organization is to campaign for "a world in which every person enjoys all of the human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights instruments."[3] The organization has played a notable role on human rights issues due to its frequent citation in media and by world leaders.[4][5]

Amnesty International
FoundedJuly 1961; 61 years ago (1961-07)
United Kingdom
Founders
Type
HeadquartersLondon, WC1
United Kingdom
Location
  • Global
ServicesProtecting human rights
FieldsMedia attention, direct-appeal campaigns, research, lobbying
Members
More than ten million members and supporters[1]
Agnès Callamard[2]
Websiteamnesty.org

AI was founded in London in 1961 by the lawyer Peter Benenson.[6] Its original focus was prisoners of conscience, with its remit widening in the 1970s, under the leadership of Seán MacBride and Martin Ennals to include miscarriages of justice and torture. In 1977, it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In the 1980s, its secretary general was Thomas Hammarberg, succeeded in the 1990s by Pierre Sané. In the 2000s, it was led by Irene Khan.

Amnesty draws attention to human rights abuses and campaigns for compliance with international laws and standards. It works to mobilize public opinion to generate pressure on governments where abuse takes place.[7]

History

1960s

 
Peter Benenson, the founder of Amnesty International. He worked for Britain's GC&CS at Bletchley Park during World War II.

Amnesty International was founded in London in July 1961 by English barrister Peter Benenson, who had previously been a founding member of the UK law reform organisation JUSTICE.[8] Benenson was influenced by his friend Louis Blom-Cooper, who led a political prisoners’ campaign.[9][10] According to Benenson's own account, he was travelling on the London Underground on 19 November 1960 when he read that two Portuguese students from Coimbra had been sentenced to seven years of imprisonment in Portugal for allegedly "having drunk a toast to liberty".[a][11] Researchers have never traced the alleged newspaper article in question.[a] In 1960, Portugal was ruled by the Estado Novo government of António de Oliveira Salazar.[12] The government was authoritarian in nature and strongly anti-communist, suppressing enemies of the state as anti-Portuguese. In his significant newspaper article "The Forgotten Prisoners", Benenson later described his reaction as follows:

Open your newspaper any day of the week and you will find a story from somewhere of someone being imprisoned, tortured or executed because his opinions or religion are unacceptable to his government... The newspaper reader feels a sickening sense of impotence. Yet if these feelings of disgust could be united into common action, something effective could be done.[6]

Benenson worked with his friend Eric Baker. Baker was a member of the Religious Society of Friends who had been involved in funding the British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament as well as becoming head of Quaker Peace and Social Witness, and in his memoirs, Benenson described him as "a partner in the launching of the project".[13] In consultation with other writers, academics and lawyers and, in particular, Alec Digges, they wrote via Louis Blom-Cooper to David Astor, editor of The Observer newspaper, who, on 28 May 1961, published Benenson's article "The Forgotten Prisoners". The article brought the reader's attention to those "imprisoned, tortured or executed because his opinions or religion are unacceptable to his government"[6] or, put another way, to violations, by governments, of articles 18 and 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The article described these violations occurring, on a global scale, in the context of restrictions to press freedom, to political oppositions, to timely public trial before impartial courts, and to asylum. It marked the launch of "Appeal for Amnesty, 1961", the aim of which was to mobilize public opinion, quickly and widely, in defence of these individuals, whom Benenson named "Prisoners of Conscience". The "Appeal for Amnesty" was reprinted by a large number of international newspapers. In the same year, Benenson had a book published, Persecution 1961, which detailed the cases of nine prisoners of conscience investigated and compiled by Benenson and Baker (Maurice Audin, Ashton Jones, Agostinho Neto, Patrick Duncan, Olga Ivinskaya, Luis Taruc, Constantin Noica, Antonio Amat and Hu Feng).[14] In July 1961, the leadership had decided that the appeal would form the basis of a permanent organization, Amnesty, with the first meeting taking place in London. Benenson ensured that all three major political parties were represented, enlisting members of parliament from the Labour Party, the Conservative Party, and the Liberal Party.[15] On 30 September 1962, it was officially named "Amnesty International". Between the "Appeal for Amnesty, 1961" and September 1962 the organization had been known simply as "Amnesty".[16]

What started as a short appeal soon became a permanent international movement working to protect those imprisoned for non-violent expression of their views and to secure worldwide recognition of Articles 18 and 19 of the UDHR. From the very beginning, research and campaigning were present in Amnesty International's work. A library was established for information about prisoners of conscience and a network of local groups, called "THREES" groups, was started. Each group worked on behalf of three prisoners, one from each of the then three main ideological regions of the world: communist, capitalist, and developing.

By the mid-1960s, Amnesty International's global presence was growing and an International Secretariat and International Executive Committee were established to manage Amnesty International's national organizations, called "Sections", which had appeared in several countries. They were secretly supported by the British government at the time.[17] The international movement was starting to agree on its core principles and techniques. For example, the issue of whether or not to adopt prisoners who had advocated violence, like Nelson Mandela,[18] brought unanimous agreement that it could not give the name of "Prisoner of Conscience" to such prisoners. Aside from the work of the library and groups, Amnesty International's activities were expanding to helping prisoners' families, sending observers to trials, making representations to governments, and finding asylum or overseas employment for prisoners. Its activity and influence were also increasing within intergovernmental organizations; it would be awarded consultative status by the United Nations, the Council of Europe and UNESCO before the decade ended.

In 1966, Benenson suspected that the British government in collusion with some Amnesty employees had suppressed a report on British atrocities in Aden.[19] He began to suspect that many of his colleagues were part of a British intelligence conspiracy to subvert Amnesty, but he could not convince anybody else at AI.[20] Later in the same year there were further allegations, when the US government reported that Seán MacBride, the former Irish foreign minister and Amnesty's first chairman, had been involved with a Central Intelligence Agency funding operation.[19] MacBride denied knowledge of the funding, but Benenson became convinced that MacBride was a member of a CIA network.[20] Benenson resigned as Amnesty's president on the grounds that it was bugged and infiltrated by the secret services, and said that he could no longer live in a country where such activities were tolerated.[17] (See Relationship with the British Government)

1970s

During the 1970s, Seán MacBride and Martin Ennals led Amnesty International. While continuing to work for prisoners of conscience, Amnesty International's purview widened to include "fair trial" and opposition to long detention without trial (UDHR Article 9), and especially to the torture of prisoners (UDHR Article 5). Amnesty International believed that the reasons underlying torture of prisoners by governments were either to acquire and obtain information or to quell opposition by the use of terror, or both. Also of concern was the export of more sophisticated torture methods, equipment and teaching by the superpowers to "client states", for example by the United States through some activities of the CIA.

Amnesty International drew together reports from countries where torture allegations seemed most persistent and organized an international conference on torture. It sought to influence public opinion to put pressure on national governments by organizing a campaign for the "Abolition of Torture", which ran for several years.

Amnesty International's membership increased from 15,000 in 1969[21] to 200,000 by 1979.[22] This growth in resources enabled an expansion of its program, "outside of the prison walls", to include work on "disappearances", the death penalty and the rights of refugees. A new technique, the "Urgent Action", aimed at mobilizing the membership into action rapidly was pioneered. The first was issued on 19 March 1973, on behalf of Luiz Basilio Rossi, a Brazilian academic, arrested for political reasons.

At the intergovernmental level Amnesty International pressed for the application of the UN's Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners and of existing humanitarian conventions; to secure ratifications of the two UN Covenants on Human Rights in 1976, and was instrumental in obtaining additional instruments and provisions forbidding the practice of maltreatment. Consultative status was granted at the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in 1972.

In 1976, Amnesty's British Section started a series of fund-raising events that came to be known as The Secret Policeman's Balls series. They were staged in London initially as comedy galas featuring what The Daily Telegraph called "the crème de la crème of the British comedy world"[23] including members of comedy troupe Monty Python, and later expanded to also include performances by leading rock musicians. The series was created and developed by Monty Python alumnus John Cleese and entertainment industry executive Martin Lewis working closely with Amnesty staff members Peter Luff (assistant director of Amnesty 1974–1978) and subsequently with Peter Walker (Amnesty Fund-Raising Officer 1978–1982). Cleese, Lewis and Luff worked together on the first two shows (1976 and 1977). Cleese, Lewis and Walker worked together on the 1979 and 1981 shows, the first to carry what The Daily Telegraph described as the "rather brilliantly re-christened" Secret Policeman's Ball title.[23]

The organization was awarded the 1977 Nobel Peace Prize for its "defence of human dignity against torture"[24] and the United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights in 1978.[25]

1980s

By 1980, Amnesty International was drawing more criticism from governments. The Soviet Union alleged that Amnesty International conducted espionage, the Moroccan government denounced it as a defender of lawbreakers, and the Argentinian government banned Amnesty International's 1983 annual report.[26]

Throughout the 1980s, Amnesty International continued to campaign against torture, and on behalf of prisoners of conscience. New issues emerged, including extrajudicial killings, military, security and police transfers, political killings, and disappearances.

Towards the end of the decade, the growing number of refugees worldwide became a focus for Amnesty International. While many of the world's refugees of the time had been displaced by war and famine, in adherence to its mandate, Amnesty International concentrated on those forced to flee because of the human rights violations it was seeking to prevent. It argued that rather than focusing on new restrictions on entry for asylum-seekers, governments were to address the human rights violations which were forcing people into exile.

Apart from a second campaign on torture during the first half of the decade, two major musical events took place to increase awareness of Amnesty and of human rights (particularly among younger generations) during the mid-to-late-1980s. The 1986 Conspiracy of Hope tour, which played five concerts in the US, and culminated in a daylong show, featuring some thirty-odd acts at Giants Stadium, and the 1988 Human Rights Now! world tour. Human Rights Now!, which was timed to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), played a series of concerts on five continents over six weeks. Both tours featured some of the most famous musicians and bands of the day.

1990s

Throughout the 1990s, Amnesty continued to grow, to a membership of over seven million in over 150 countries and territories,[1] led by Senegalese Secretary General Pierre Sané. Amnesty continued to work on a wide range of issues and world events. For example, South African groups joined in 1992 and hosted a visit by Pierre Sané to meet with the apartheid government to press for an investigation into allegations of police abuse, an end to arms sales to the African Great Lakes region and the abolition of the death penalty. In particular, Amnesty International brought attention to violations committed on specific groups, including refugees, racial/ethnic/religious minorities, women and those executed or on Death Row. The death penalty report When the State Kills[27] and the "Human Rights are Women's Rights" campaign were key actions for the latter two issues.

During the 1990s, Amnesty International was forced to react to human rights violations occurring in the context of a proliferation of armed conflict in Angola, East Timor, the Persian Gulf, Rwanda, and the former Yugoslavia. Amnesty International took no position on whether to support or oppose external military interventions in these armed conflicts. It did not reject the use of force, even lethal force, or ask those engaged to lay down their arms. Instead, it questioned the motives behind external intervention and selectivity of international action in relation to the strategic interests of those who sent troops. It argued that action should be taken to prevent human-rights problems from becoming human-rights catastrophes and that both intervention and inaction represented a failure of the international community.

In 1995, when AI wanted to promote how Shell Oil Company was involved with the execution of an environmental and human-rights activist Ken Saro-Wiwa in Nigeria, it was stopped. Newspapers and advertising companies refused to run AI's ads because Shell Oil was a customer of theirs as well. Shell's main argument was that it was drilling oil in a country that already violated human rights and had no way to enforce human-rights policies. To combat the buzz that AI was trying to create, it immediately publicized how Shell was helping to improve overall life in Nigeria. Salil Shetty, the director of Amnesty, said, "Social media re-energises the idea of the global citizen".[15] James M. Russell notes how the drive for profit from private media sources conflicts with the stories that AI wants to be heard.[28]

Amnesty International was proactive in pushing for recognition of the universality of human rights. The campaign 'Get Up, Sign Up' marked 50 years of the UDHR. Thirteen million pledges were collected in support, and the Decl music concert was held in Paris on 10 December 1998 (Human Rights Day). At the intergovernmental level, Amnesty International argued in favour of creating a United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (established 1993) and an International Criminal Court (established 2002).

After his arrest in London in 1998 by the Metropolitan Police, Amnesty International became involved in the legal battle of Senator Augusto Pinochet, former Chilean dictator, who sought to avoid extradition to Spain to face charges. Lord Hoffman had an indirect connection with Amnesty International, and this led to an important test for the appearance of bias in legal proceedings in UK law. There was a suit[29] against the decision to release Senator Pinochet, taken by the then British Home Secretary Jack Straw, before that decision had actually been taken, in an attempt to prevent the release of Senator Pinochet. The English High Court refused[30] the application, and Senator Pinochet was released and returned to Chile.

2000s

After 2000, Amnesty International's primary focus turned to the challenges arising from globalization and the reaction to the 11 September 2001 attacks in the United States. The issue of globalization provoked a major shift in Amnesty International policy, as the scope of its work was widened to include economic, social and cultural rights, an area that it had declined to work on in the past. Amnesty International felt this shift was important, not just to give credence to its principle of the indivisibility of rights, but because of what it saw as the growing power of companies and the undermining of many nation-states as a result of globalization.[31]

In the aftermath of 11 September attacks, the new Amnesty International Secretary General, Irene Khan, reported that a senior government official had said to Amnesty International delegates: "Your role collapsed with the collapse of the Twin Towers in New York."[32] In the years following the attacks, some[who?] believe that the gains made by human rights organizations over previous decades had possibly been eroded.[33] Amnesty International argued that human rights were the basis for the security of all, not a barrier to it. Criticism came directly from the Bush administration and The Washington Post, when Khan, in 2005, likened the US government's detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to a Soviet Gulag.[34][35]

During the first half of the new decade, Amnesty International turned its attention to violence against women, controls on the world arms trade, concerns surrounding the effectiveness of the UN, and ending torture.[36] With its membership close to two million by 2005,[37] Amnesty continued to work for prisoners of conscience.

In 2007, AI's executive committee decided to support access to abortion "within reasonable gestational limits...for women in cases of rape, incest or violence, or where the pregnancy jeopardizes a mother's life or health".[38]

Amnesty International reported, concerning the Iraq War, on 17 March 2008, that despite claims the security situation in Iraq has improved in recent months, the human rights situation is disastrous, after the start of the war five years earlier in 2003.[39]

In 2009, Amnesty International accused Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement of committing war crimes during Israel's January offensive in Gaza, called Operation Cast Lead, that resulted in the deaths of more than 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis.[40] The 117-page Amnesty report charged Israeli forces with killing hundreds of civilians and wanton destruction of thousands of homes. Amnesty found evidence of Israeli soldiers using Palestinian civilians as human shields. A subsequent United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict was carried out; Amnesty stated that its findings were consistent with those of Amnesty's own field investigation, and called on the UN to act promptly to implement the mission's recommendations.[41][42]

2010s

 
Amnesty International, 19 March 2011.
 
Japanese branch of Amnesty International, 23 May 2014.

2010

In February 2010, Amnesty suspended Gita Sahgal, its gender unit head, after she criticized Amnesty for its links with Moazzam Begg, director of Cageprisoners. She said it was "a gross error of judgment" to work with "Britain's most famous supporter of the Taliban".[43][44] Amnesty responded that Sahgal was not suspended "for raising these issues internally... [Begg] speaks about his own views ..., not Amnesty International's".[45] Among those who spoke up for Sahgal were Salman Rushdie,[46] Member of Parliament Denis MacShane, Joan Smith, Christopher Hitchens, Martin Bright, Melanie Phillips, and Nick Cohen.[44][47][48][49][50][51][52]

2011

In February 2011, Amnesty requested that Swiss authorities start a criminal investigation of former US President George W. Bush and arrest him.[53]

In July 2011, Amnesty International celebrated its 50 years with an animated short film directed by Carlos Lascano, produced by Eallin Motion Art and Dreamlife Studio, with music by Academy Award-winner Hans Zimmer and nominee Lorne Balfe.[54]

2012

In August 2012, Amnesty International's chief executive in India sought an impartial investigation, led by the United Nations, to render justice to those affected by war crimes in Sri Lanka.[55]

In November 2012, Amnesty International initiated disciplinary proceedings against Kirstyan Benedict, one of its UK campaigns managers, for a tweet singling out three female Jewish MPs in a manner that critics asserted was antisemitic; Benedict defended the tweet as a joke.[56]

2014

 
Supporters of Amnesty International at Cologne Pride Parade 2014

On 18 August 2014, in the wake of demonstrations sparked by people protesting the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old who assaulted a police officer and then resisted arrest , and subsequent acquittal of Darren Wilson, the officer who shot him, Amnesty International sent a 13-person contingent of human rights activists to seek meetings with officials as well as to train local activists in non-violent protest methods.[57] This was the first time that the organization has deployed such a team to the United States.[58][59][60] In a press release, AI USA director Steven W. Hawkins said, "The U.S. cannot continue to allow those obligated and duty-bound to protect to become those who their community fears most."[61]

2015

On 19 April 2015, Amnesty International voted against a motion proposing that it fight against antisemitism in the UK, which reached then-record levels in the previous year; despite its extensive attention to the single issue of Islamophobia in earlier years, Amnesty stated that it would be inappropriate to campaign for an issue with a "single focus" and that Amnesty "fights against discrimination in all its forms."[62][63][64]

In August 2015, The Times reported that Yasmin Hussein, then Amnesty's director of faith and human rights and previously its head of international advocacy and a prominent representative at the United Nations, had "undeclared private links to men alleged to be key players in a secretive network of global Islamists", including the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas.[65][66] The Times also detailed instances where Hussein was alleged to have had inappropriately close relationships with the al-Qazzaz family, members of which were high-ranking government ministers in the administration of Mohammed Morsi and Muslim Brotherhood leaders at the time.[65][66] Ms Hussein denied supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and told Amnesty that “any connections are purely circumstantial”.[65]

2016

In February 2016, Amnesty International launched its annual report of human rights around the world titled "The State of the World's Human Rights". It warns from the consequences of "us vs them" speech which divided human beings into two camps. It states that this speech enhances a global pushback against human rights and makes the world more divided and more dangerous. It also states that in 2016, governments turned a blind eye to war crimes and passed laws that violate free expression. Elsewhere, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Iran, Thailand and Turkey carried out massive crackdowns, while authorities in other countries continued to implement security measures represent an infringement on rights.[67] In June 2016, Amnesty International has called on the United Nations General Assembly to "immediately suspend" Saudi Arabia from the UN Human Rights Council.[68][69] Richard Bennett, head of Amnesty's UN Office, said: "The credibility of the U.N. Human Rights Council is at stake. Since joining the council, Saudi Arabia's dire human rights record at home has continued to deteriorate and the coalition it leads has unlawfully killed and injured thousands of civilians in the conflict in Yemen."[70]

In November 2016, Amnesty International conducted an internal investigation of Kirstyan Benedict, its UK campaign manager, for comparing Israel to the Islamic state.[71][72]

In December 2016, Amnesty International revealed that Voiceless Victims, a fake non-profit organization which claims to raise awareness for migrant workers who are victims of human rights abuses in Qatar, had been trying to spy on their staff.[73][74]

2017

 
Amnesty International sign at the WorldPride Madrid in July 2017

Amnesty International published its annual report for the year 2016–2017 on 21 February 2017. Secretary General Salil Shetty's opening statement in the report highlighted many ongoing international cases of abuse as well as emerging threats. Shetty drew attention, among many issues, to the Syrian Civil War, the use of chemical weapons in the War in Darfur, outgoing United States President Barack Obama's expansion of drone warfare, and the successful 2016 presidential election campaign of Obama's successor Donald Trump. Shetty stated that the Trump election campaign was characterized by "poisonous" discourse in which "he frequently made deeply divisive statements marked by misogyny and xenophobia, and pledged to roll back established civil liberties and introduce policies which would be profoundly inimical to human rights." In his opening summary, Shetty stated that "the world in 2016 became a darker and more unstable place."[75]

In July 2017, Turkish police detained 10 human rights activists during a workshop on digital security at a hotel near Istanbul. Eight people, including Idil Eser, Amnesty International director in Turkey, as well as German Peter Steudtner and Swede Ali Gharavi, were arrested. Two others were detained but released pending trial. They were accused of aiding armed terror organizations in alleged communications with suspects linked to Kurdish and left-wing militants, as well as the movement led by US-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen.[76]

Amnesty International supported the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. James Lynch, Head of Arms Control and Human Rights at Amnesty International, said: "This historic treaty brings us a step closer to a world free from the horrors of nuclear weapons, the most destructive and indiscriminate weapons ever created."[77]

2018

 
A protest calling for the release of detained Saudi women's rights activists in May 2018

Amnesty International published its 2017/2018 report in February 2018.[78]

In October 2018, an Amnesty International researcher was abducted and beaten while observing demonstrations in Magas, the capital of Ingushetia, Russia.[79]

On 25 October, federal officers raided the Bengaluru office for 10 hours on a suspicion that the organization had violated foreign direct investment guidelines on the orders of the Enforcement Directorate. Employees and supporters of Amnesty International say this is an act to intimidate organizations and people who question the authority and capabilities of government leaders. Aakar Patel, the executive director of the Indian branch claimed, "The Enforcement Directorate's raid on our office today shows how the authorities are now treating human rights organizations like criminal enterprises, using heavy-handed methods. On Sep 29, the Ministry of Home Affairs said Amnesty International using "glossy statements" about humanitarian work etc. as a "ploy to divert attention" from their activities which were in clear contravention of laid down Indian laws. Amnesty International received permission only once in Dec 2000, since then it had been denied Foreign Contribution permission under the Foreign Contribution Act by successive Governments. However, in order to circumvent the FCRA regulations, Amnesty UK remitted large amounts of money to four entities registered in India by classifying it as Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).[80]

The current Prime Minister of India, Narendra Modi, has been criticized by foreign medias for harming civil society in India, specifically by targeting advocacy groups.[81][82][83] India has cancelled the registration of about 15,000 nongovernmental organisations under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA); the U.N. has issued statements against the policies that allow these cancellations to occur.[84][85] Though nothing was found to confirm these accusations, the government plans on continuing the investigation and has frozen the bank accounts of all the offices in India. A spokesperson for the Enforcement Directorate has said the investigation could take three months to complete.[84]

On 30 October 2018, Amnesty called for the arrest and prosecution of Nigerian security forces claiming that they used excessive force against Shi'a protesters during a peaceful religious procession around Abuja, Nigeria. At least 45 were killed and 122 were injured during the event .[86]

In November 2018, Amnesty reported the arrest of 19 or more rights activists and lawyers in Egypt. The arrests were made by the Egyptian authorities as part of the regime's ongoing crackdown on dissent. One of the arrested was Hoda Abdel-Monaim, a 60-year-old human rights lawyer and former member of the National Council for Human Rights. Amnesty reported that following the arrests Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms (ECRF) decided to suspend its activities due to the hostile environment towards civil society in the country.[87]

On 5 December 2018, Amnesty International strongly condemned the execution of Ihar Hershankou and Siamion Berazhnoy in Belarus.[88] They were shot despite UN Human Rights Committee request for a delay.[89][90]

2019

 
Amnesty International sign in Rouen, 4 May 2019

In February 2019, Amnesty International's management team offered to resign after an independent report found what it called a "toxic culture" of workplace bullying, and found evidence of bullying, harassment, sexism and racism, after being asked to investigate the suicides of 30-year Amnesty veteran Gaetan Mootoo in Paris in May 2018 (who left a note citing work pressures), and 28-year-old intern Rosalind McGregor in Geneva in July 2018.[91]

In April 2019, Amnesty International's deputy director for research in Europe, Massimo Moratti, warned that if extradited to the United States, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange would face the "risk of serious human rights violations, namely detention conditions, which could violate the prohibition of torture".[92]

On 24 April 2019, protestors occupied the reception of Amnesty's London offices, to protest against what they saw as Amnesty's inaction in on human rights abuses against Kurds in Turkey, including the incarceration and isolation of a founding member of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, Abdullah Öcalan. A hunger strike was declared by the occupiers.[93][better source needed] There were claims[by whom?] that Amnesty's inaction had been driven by undue deference to the Turkish and Qatari regimes. On 26 April Amnesty called on the Police forcibly to eject the demonstrators, and the offices were cleared.

On 14 May 2019, Amnesty International filed a petition with the District Court of Tel Aviv, Israel, seeking a revocation of the export licence of surveillance technology firm NSO Group.[94] The filing states that "staff of Amnesty International have an ongoing and well-founded fear they may continue to be targeted and ultimately surveilled"[95] by NSO technology. Other lawsuits have also been filed against NSO in Israeli courts over alleged human-rights abuses, including a December 2018 filing by Saudi dissident Omar Abdulaziz, who claimed NSO's software targeted his phone during a period in which he was in regular contact with murdered journalist Jamal Kashoggi.[96]

In August 2019, the Global Assembly elected five new Members to the International Board – Tiumalu Peter Fa'afiu (New Zealand), Dr Anjhula Singh Bais (Malaysia), Ritz Lee Santos III (The Philippines), Lulu Barera (Mexico) and Aniket Shah (USA) as Treasurer. Given Fa'afiu received the most votes, his term will be for four years and others three years. Bais and Santos become the first Malaysian and Filipino elected. Fa'afiu the first of Pacific descent.[citation needed]

In September 2019, European Commission President-elect Ursula von der Leyen created the new position of "Vice President for Protecting our European Way of Life", who will be responsible for upholding the rule-of-law, internal security and migration.[97] Amnesty International accused the European Union of "using the framing of the far right" by linking migration with security.[98]

At its Board Meeting in October 2019, International Board members appointed Sarah Beamish (Canada) as chairperson. She has been on the Board since 2015 and at age 34 is the youngest IB Chair in its history. She is a human rights lawyer in her homeland.

On 24 November 2019, Anil Raj, a former Amnesty International board member, was killed by a car bomb while working with the United Nations Development Project. U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo announced Raj's death at a briefing 26 Nov, during which he discussed other acts of terrorism.[99]

On 5 December 2019, Kumi Naidoo, the organization's Secretary General, has made the decision to step down from his position due to health-related reasons.[100]

2020s

In August 2020, Amnesty International expressed concerns about what it called the "widespread torture of peaceful protesters" and treatment of detainees in Belarus.[101] The organization also said that more than 1,100 people were killed by bandits in rural communities in northern Nigeria during the first six months of 2020.[102] Amnesty International investigated what it called "excessive" and "unlawful" killings of teenagers by Angolan police who were enforcing restrictions during the coronavirus pandemic.[103]

In May 2020, the organization raised concerns about security flaws in a COVID-19 contact tracing app mandated in Qatar.[104]

In September 2020, Amnesty shut down its India operations after the government froze its bank accounts due to alleged financial irregularities.[105]

On 29 October 2020, Amnesty International launched a human rights learning application called "Amnesty Academy".[106]

On 2 November 2020, Amnesty International reported that 54 people – mostly Amhara women and children and elderly people – were killed by the OLF in the village of Gawa Qanqa, Ethiopia.[107][108]

In April 2021, Amnesty International distanced itself from a tweet by Agnès Callamard, its newly appointed Secretary General, asserting that Israel had killed Yasser Arafat; Callamard herself has not deleted the tweet.[109][110][111]

In June 2021, Amnesty accused the Chinese government of committing crimes against humanity against the Uyghurs in Xinjiang.[112]

In February 2022, Amnesty accused Israel of committing the crime of apartheid against the Palestinians, joining other human rights organizations that had previously accused Israel of the crime against humanity. In 2021, Human Rights Watch and B'tselem had both accused Israel of apartheid in its treatment of the Palestinians in the occupied territories.[113] An Amnesty report stated that Israel maintains "an institutionalized regime of oppression and domination of the Palestinian population for the benefit of Jewish Israelis".[114] The Israeli Foreign Ministry stated that Amnesty was peddling "lies, inconsistencies, and unfounded assertions that originate from well-known anti-Israeli hate organisations". The Palestinian Foreign Ministry called the report a "detailed affirmation of the cruel reality of entrenched racism, exclusion, oppression, colonialism, apartheid, and attempted erasure that the Palestinian people have endured".[114]

In March 2022, Paul O'Brien, the Amnesty International USA Director, speaking to a Women's National Democratic Club audience in the US, stated: "We are opposed to the idea—and this, I think, is an existential part of the debate—that Israel should be preserved as a state for the Jewish people", while adding "Amnesty takes no political views on any question, including the right of the State of Israel to survive."[115][116][117][118][undue weight? ]

On 11 March 2022, Russia's media regulator blocked access to Amnesty International's Russian-language website.[119][non-primary source needed]

On 7 April 2022, six weeks after the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Russian Ministry of Justice announced that the offices of Amnesty International and 14 other well-known international organizations had been closed for "violations of Russian law".[120]

Structure

 
Amnesty International Sections, 2012
 
The Amnesty Canadian headquarters in Ottawa.

Amnesty International is largely made up of voluntary members but retains a small number of paid professionals. In countries in which Amnesty International has a strong presence, members are organized as "sections". Sections co-ordinate basic Amnesty International activities normally with a significant number of members, some of whom will form into "groups", and a professional staff. Each has a board of directors. In 2019 there were 63 sections worldwide. "Structures" are aspiring sections. They also co-ordinate basic activities but have a smaller membership and a limited staff. In countries where no section or structure exists, people can become "international members". Two other organizational models exist: "international networks", which promote specific themes or have a specific identity, and "affiliated groups", which do the same work as section groups but in isolation.[121]

The highest governing body is the Global Assembly which meets annually. Each Section sends its chair and executive director to the GA. The GA process is governed and managed by the PrepCom (Preparatory Committee).

The International Board (formerly known as the International Executive Committee [IEC]), led by the International Board Chairperson (Sarah Beamish) consists of nine members and the International Treasurer. Two members are co-opted.

The IB is elected by, and accountable to, the Global Assembly. The International Board meets at least two times during any one year and in practice meets face to face at least four times a year. Other board and subcommittee meetings are undertaken via video conferencing.

The role of the International Board is to take decisions on behalf of Amnesty International, govern the International Secretariat including regional offices, implement the strategy laid out by the Global Assembly and ensure compliance with the organization's statutes.

The International Secretariat (IS) is responsible for the conduct and daily affairs of Amnesty International under direction from the International Board.[122] It is run by approximately 500 professional staff members and is headed by a Secretary General. The Secretariat operates several work programmes; International Law and Organizations; Research; Campaigns; Mobilization; and Communications. Its offices have been located in London since its establishment in the mid-1960s.

  • Amnesty International Sections, 2005
    Algeria; Argentina; Australia; Austria; Belgium (Dutch-speaking); Belgium (French-speaking); Benin; Bermuda; Canada (English-speaking); Canada (French-speaking); Chile; Côte d'Ivoire; Denmark; Faroe Islands; Finland; France; Germany; Greece; Guyana; Hong Kong; Iceland; Ireland; Israel; Italy; Japan; Korea (Republic of); Luxembourg; Mauritius; Mexico; Morocco; Nepal; Netherlands; New Zealand; Norway; Peru; Philippines; Poland; Portugal; Puerto Rico; Senegal; Sierra Leone; Slovenia; Spain; Sweden; Switzerland; Taiwan; Togo; Tunisia; United Kingdom; United States of America; Uruguay; Venezuela
  • Amnesty International Structures, 2005
    Belarus; Bolivia; Burkina Faso; Croatia; Curaçao; Czech Republic; Gambia; Hungary; Malaysia; Mali; Moldova; Mongolia; Pakistan; Paraguay; Slovakia; South Africa; Thailand; Turkey; Ukraine; Zambia; Zimbabwe
  • International Board (formerly known as "IEC") Chairpersons
    Seán MacBride, 1965–74; Dirk Börner, 1974–17; Thomas Hammarberg, 1977–79; José Zalaquett, 1979–82; Suriya Wickremasinghe, 1982–85; Wolfgang Heinz, 1985–96; Franca Sciuto, 1986–89; Peter Duffy, 1989–91; Anette Fischer, 1991–92; Ross Daniels, 1993–19; Susan Waltz, 1996–98; Mahmoud Ben Romdhane, 1999–2000; Colm O Cuanachain, 2001–02; Paul Hoffman, 2003–04; Jaap Jacobson, 2005; Hanna Roberts, 2005–06; Lilian Gonçalves-Ho Kang You, 2006–07; Peter Pack, 2007–11; Pietro Antonioli, 2011–13; and Nicole Bieske, 2013–2018, Sarah Beamish (2019 to current).
  • Secretaries General
Amnesty International Secretary Generals
Secretary General Office Origin
Peter BenensonPeter Benenson 1961–1966 Britain
Eric BakerEric Baker 1966–1968 Britain
Martin EnnalsMartin Ennals 1968–1980 Britain
Thomas HammarbergThomas Hammarberg 1980–1986 Sweden
Avery BrundageIan Martin 1986–1992 Britain
Pierre SanéPierre Sané 1992–2001 Senegal
Irene Zubaida KhanIrene Khan 2001–2010 Bangladesh
Salil ShettySalil Shetty 2010–2018 India
Kumi NaidooKumi Naidoo 2018–2020[123] South Africa
Julie Verhaar Julie Verhaar 2020–2021 (Acting)
Agnès CallamardAgnès Callamard 2021–present[2] France

Notable national sections

Charitable status

In the UK Amnesty International has two components which are registered charities under English law: Amnesty International Charity[124] and Amnesty International UK Section Charitable Trust.[125]

Principles

The core principle of Amnesty International is a focus on prisoners of conscience, those persons imprisoned or prevented from expressing an opinion by means of violence. Along with this commitment to opposing repression of freedom of expression, Amnesty International's founding principles included non-intervention on political questions, a robust commitment to gathering facts about the various cases and promoting human rights.[126]

One key issue in the principles is in regards to those individuals who may advocate or tacitly support resorting to violence in struggles against repression. AI does not judge whether recourse to violence is justified or not. However, AI does not oppose the political use of violence in itself since The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in its preamble, foresees situations in which people could "be compelled to have recourse, as a last resort, to rebellion against tyranny and oppression". If a prisoner is serving a sentence imposed, after a fair trial, for activities involving violence, AI will not ask the government to release the prisoner.

AI neither supports nor condemns the resort to violence by political opposition groups in itself, just as AI neither supports nor condemns a government policy of using military force in fighting against armed opposition movements. However, AI supports minimum humane standards that should be respected by governments and armed opposition groups alike. When an opposition group tortures or kills its captives, takes hostages, or commits deliberate and arbitrary killings, AI condemns these abuses.[127][dubious ]

Amnesty International considers capital punishment to be the ultimate, irreversible denial of human rights and opposes capital punishment in all cases, regardless of the crime committed, the circumstances surrounding the individual or the method of execution.[128]

Objectives

Amnesty International's vision is of a world in which every person enjoys all of the human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights standards.

In pursuit of this vision, Amnesty International's mission is to undertake research and action focused on preventing and ending grave abuses of the rights to physical and mental integrity, freedom of conscience and expression, and freedom from discrimination, within the context of its work to promote all human rights.

-Statute of Amnesty International, 27th International Council meeting, 2005

Amnesty International primarily targets governments, but also reports on non-governmental bodies and private individuals ("non-state actors").

There are six key areas which Amnesty deals with:[129]

Some specific aims are to: abolish the death penalty,[130] end extra judicial executions and "disappearances", ensure prison conditions meet international human rights standards, ensure prompt and fair trial for all political prisoners, ensure free education to all children worldwide, decriminalize abortion, fight impunity from systems of justice, end the recruitment and use of child soldiers, free all prisoners of conscience, promote economic, social and cultural rights for marginalized communities, protect human rights defenders, promote religious tolerance, protect LGBT rights,[131] stop torture and ill-treatment, stop unlawful killings in armed conflict, uphold the rights of refugees, migrants, and asylum seekers, and protect human dignity. They also support worldwide decriminalisation of prostitution.[132]

 
Amnesty International at the 2009 Marcha Gay in Mexico City, 20 June 2009

Amnesty International launched a free human rights learning mobile application called Amnesty Academy in October 2020. It offered learners across the globe access to courses both, online and offline. All courses are downloadable within the application, which is available for both iOS and Android devices.[133]

Citizen Evidence Lab

Amnesty International, managed by the Evidence Lab in the Crisis Response Programme, created the Citizen Evidence Lab to "support human rights organizations, practitioners and others to take better advantage of the digital data-streams critical for modern fact-finding. It is an online space to share best practices, emerging techniques, and tools for conducting investigations, combating mis- and dis-information, and contributing to a better-informed public,[134]" such as: HOWTOs, Tools, Case Studies, and Stories, about: Digital Verification, Data Science, Remote Sensing, Crowd-Sourcing, Well-Being, and Digital Security.

Country focus

 
Protesting Israel's policy against African refugees, Tel Aviv, 9 December 2011

Amnesty reports disproportionately on relatively more democratic and open countries,[135] arguing that its intention is not to produce a range of reports which statistically represents the world's human rights abuses, but rather to apply the pressure of public opinion to encourage improvements.

The demonstration effect of the behaviour of both key Western governments and major non-Western states is an important factor; as one former Amnesty Secretary-General pointed out, "for many countries and a large number of people, the United States is a model", and according to one Amnesty manager, "large countries influence small countries."[136] In addition, with the end of the Cold War, Amnesty felt that a greater emphasis on human rights in the North was needed to improve its credibility with its Southern critics by demonstrating its willingness to report on human rights issues in a truly global manner.[136]

According to one academic study, as a result of these considerations, the frequency of Amnesty's reports is influenced by a number of factors, besides the frequency and severity of human rights abuses. For example, Amnesty reports significantly more (than predicted by human rights abuses) on more economically powerful states; and on countries that receive US military aid, on the basis that this Western complicity in abuses increases the likelihood of public pressure being able to make a difference.[136] In addition, around 1993–94, Amnesty consciously developed its media relations, producing fewer background reports and more press releases, to increase the impact of its reports. Press releases are partly driven by news coverage, to use existing news coverage as leverage to discuss Amnesty's human rights concerns. This increases Amnesty's focus on the countries the media is more interested in.[136]

In 2012, Kristyan Benedict, Amnesty UK's campaign manager whose main focus is Syria, listed several countries as "regimes who abuse peoples' basic universal rights": Burma, Iran, Israel, North Korea and Sudan. Benedict was criticized for including Israel in this short list on the basis that his opinion was garnered solely from "his own visits", with no other objective sources.[137][138]

Amnesty's country focus is similar to that of some other comparable NGOs, notably Human Rights Watch: between 1991 and 2000, Amnesty and HRW shared eight of ten countries in their "top ten" (by Amnesty press releases; 7 for Amnesty reports).[136] In addition, six of the 10 countries most reported on by Human Rights Watch in the 1990s also made The Economist's and Newsweek's "most covered" lists during that time.[136]

Funding

Amnesty International is financed largely by fees and donations from its worldwide membership. It says that it does not accept donations from governments or governmental organizations. According to the AI website,[139]

"these personal and unaffiliated donations allow Amnesty International (AI) to maintain full independence from any and all governments, political ideologies, economic interests or religions. We neither seek nor accept any funds for human rights research from governments or political parties and we accept support only from businesses that have been carefully vetted. By way of ethical fundraising leading to donations from individuals, we are able to stand firm and unwavering in our defence of universal and indivisible human rights."

However, Amnesty International has received grants over the past ten years from the UK Department for International Development,[140] the European Commission,[141] the United States State Department[142][143] and other governments.[144][145]

Amnesty International USA has received funding from the Rockefeller Foundation,[146] but these funds are only used "in support of its human rights education work."[140] It has also received many grants from the Ford Foundation over the years.[147]

Criticism and controversies

Criticism of Amnesty International includes publishing falsified reports, racist senior staff, secretly cooperating with the U.K government, excessively high pay for management, underprotection of overseas staff jobs, associating with organizations with a dubious record on human rights protection, selection bias, ideological and foreign policy bias against either non-Western countries[148] or Western-supported countries[citation needed], or bias for terrorist groups.[149] A 2019 report also shows an internal toxic work environment.[150]

Numerous governments and their supporters have criticized Amnesty's criticism of their policies, including those of Australia,[151] Czech Republic,[152] China,[153] the Democratic Republic of the Congo,[154] Egypt,[155] India, Iran, Israel,[138] Morocco,[156] Qatar,[157] Saudi Arabia,[158] Vietnam,[159] Russia,[160] Nigeria[161] and the United States,[162] for what they assert is one-sided reporting or a failure to treat threats to security as a mitigating factor. The actions of these governments, and of other governments critical of Amnesty International, have been the subject of human rights concerns voiced by Amnesty.

The Sudan Vision Daily, a daily newspaper in Sudan, compared Amnesty to the US National Endowment for Democracy, and claimed "it is, in essence, a British intelligence organization which is a part of the Government decision-making system."[163][164]

General

1990 Iraq soldiers war crimes

In 1990, when the United States government was deciding whether or not to invade Iraq, a Kuwaiti woman, known to Congress by her first name only, Nayirah, testified to congress that when Iraq invaded Kuwait, she stayed behind after some of her family left the country. She said she was volunteering in a local hospital when Iraqi soldiers stole the incubators with children in them and left them to freeze to death. Amnesty International, which had human rights investigators in Kuwait, confirmed the story and helped spread it. The organization also inflated the number of children who were killed by the robbery to over 300, more than the number of incubators available in the city hospitals of the country. Her testimony aired on ABC's Nightline and NBC Nightly News reaching an estimated audience between 35 and 53 million Americans.[165][166] Seven senators cited Nayirah's testimony in their speeches backing the use of force.[169] President George Bush repeated the story at least ten times in the following weeks.[170] Her account of the atrocities helped to stir American opinion in favor of participation in the Gulf War.[171] It was often cited by people, including the members of Congress who voted to approve the Gulf War, as one of the reasons to fight. After the war, it was found that the woman was lying, the story was made up, and her last name was not given because her father was a delegate for Kuwait's government at the same congressional hearing.[172]

2019 report on workplace bullying

In February 2019, Amnesty International's management team offered to resign after an independent report found what it called a "toxic culture" of workplace bullying. Evidence of bullying, harassment, sexism and racism was uncovered after two 2018 suicides were investigated: that of 30-year Amnesty veteran Gaëtan Mootoo in Paris in May 2018 (who left a note citing work pressures); and that of 28-year-old intern Rosalind McGregor in Geneva in July 2018.[91] An internal survey by the Konterra group with a team of psychologists was conducted in January 2019, after the 2 employees had killed themselves in 2018. The report stated that Amnesty had a toxic work culture and that workers frequently cited mental and physical health issues as a result of their work for the organization. The report found that: "39 per cent of Amnesty International staff reported that they developed mental or physical health issues as the direct result of working at Amnesty". The report concluded, "organisational culture and management failures are the root cause of most staff wellbeing issues."[173]

Elaborating on this the report mentioned that bullying, public humiliation and other abuses of power are commonplace and routine practice by the management. It also claimed the us versus them culture among employees and the severe lack of trust in the senior management at Amnesty.[174][175] By October 2019 five of the seven members of the senior leadership team at Amnesty's international secretariat left the organization with "generous" redundancy packages.[176] Among them, Anna Neistat, who was Gaëtan Mootoo's senior manager directly implicated in the independent report on Mootoo's death. According to Mootoo's former collaborator, Salvatore Saguès, "Gaëtan's case is merely the tip of the iceberg at Amnesty. A huge amount of suffering is caused to employees. Since the days of Salil Shetty, when top management were being paid fabulous salaries, Amnesty has become a multinational where the staff are seen as dispensable. Human resources management is a disaster and nobody is prepared to stand up and be counted. The level of impunity granted to Amnesty's bosses is simply unacceptable."[177] After none of the managers responsible of bullying at Amnesty were held accountable a group of workers petitioned for Amnesty's chief Kumi Naidoo to resign. On 5 December 2019 Naidoo resigned from his post of Amnesty's Secretary General citing ill health[100] and appointing Julie Verhaar as an interim Secretary General. In their petition, workers demanded her immediate resignation as well.

2019 budgetary crisis

In May 2019, Amnesty International's Secretary General Kumi Naidoo admitted to a hole in the organization's budget of up to £17m in donor money to the end of 2020. In order to deal with the budgetary crisis, Naidoo announced to staff that the organization's headquarters would have cut almost 100 jobs as a part of urgent restructuring. Unite the Union, the UK's biggest trade union, said the redundancies were a direct result of "overspending by the organisation's senior leadership team" and have occurred "despite an increase in income".[178] Unite, which represents Amnesty's staff, feared that cuts would fall heaviest on lower-income staff. It said that in the previous year the top 23 highest earners at Amnesty International were paid a total of £2.6m– an average of £113,000 per year. Unite demanded a review of whether it is necessary to have so many managers in the organisation.[179]

Amnesty's budgetary crisis became public after the two staff suicides in 2019. A subsequent independent review of workplace culture found a "state of emergency" at the organization after a restructuring process. Following several reports that labelled Amnesty a toxic workplace, in October 2019 five of the seven high-paid senior directors at Amnesty's international secretariat in London left the organization with "generous" redundancy packages.[180] This included Anna Neistat, who was a senior manager directly implicated in the independent report on the suicide of Amnesty's West Africa researcher Gaëtan Mootoo in the organization's Paris office. The size of exit packages granted to former senior management caused anger among other staff and an outcry among Amnesty's members.

After the resignation of Amnesty International's Secretary General Kumi Naidoo in December 2019, a new International Board was elected. In addition to leading the recovery period of the international secretariat, the Board also has to recruit a new Secretary General, manage costs, develop a new global strategy, and ensure delivery of Amnesty's activities. A new senior director, Chief Financial Officer Nigel Armitt, was appointed to the International Secretariat, to manage the budgetary crisis. The company stated that Armitt "oversees financial management at the International Secretariat and is responsible for supporting and fostering the organisation's financial literacy and capability".[181]

2020 secret payout

In September 2020, The Times reported that Amnesty International paid £800,000 in compensation over the workplace suicide of Gaëtan Mootoo and demanded his family keep the deal secret.[182] The pre-trial agreement between London-based Amnesty's International Secretariat and Motoo's wife was reached on the condition that she keeps the deal secret by signing NDA. This was done particularly to prevent discussing the settlement with the press or on social media. The arrangement led to criticism on social media, with people asking why an organisation such as Amnesty would condone the use of non-disclosure agreements. Shaista Aziz, a co-founder of the feminist advocacy group NGO Safe Space, questioned on Twitter why the "world's leading human rights organisation" was employing such contracts.[183] The source of the money was unknown. Amnesty stated that the payout to Motoo's family "will not be made from donations or membership fees".

2021 accusation of systemic bias

In April 2021, The Guardian reported that the workers of Amnesty International alleged systemic bias and use of racist language by senior staff.[184]

The internal review at Amnesty's international secretariat, the report of which was published in October 2020 but not press released, recorded multiple examples of alleged racism reported by workers—racial slurs, systemic bias, problematic comments towards religious practices, being some of the examples.[184][185]

The staff at the Amnesty International UK based in London also made claims of racial discrimination.[184] The report also documented use of the ethnic slur "nigger" with any objection from employees about its use being downplayed. Vanessa Tsehaye, the Horn of Africa Campaigner based in the UK, has refused to comment as of April 2021.

2022 report on systemic racism

In June 2022, a 106-page independent investigation by the management consultancy firm Global HPO Ltd (GHPO) concluded that Amnesty International UK (AIUK) exhibits institutional and systemic racism. This report was fully accepted by Amnesty International and Amnesty International UK published the findings of the inquiry in April 2022.[186] GHPO's independent investigation found that UKAIUK "has failed to embed principles of anti-racism into its own DNA and faces bullying issues within the organization."[187] The overarching conclusions of the June 2022 investigation by GHPO are that:"

  • Amnesty International UK exhibits institutional/systemic racism;
  • Equality, inclusion and anti-racism are not embedded into the DNA at AIUK; and
  • The organisational culture is not inclusive".[188]

Furthermore, the independent investigation accuses AIUK of the existence of a "white savior and colonialist" complex (p. 20) with an "intolerant, bullying culture" (p. 74). Job applicants of African descent were “screened out of the process at both the shortlisting and interview stage” (p. 56). AIUK "actively harmed staff from ethnic minority backgrounds" (p. 66). Overt racism by senior staff included using the "N-word and micro-aggressive behaviour such as the touching of black colleagues’ hair" (p. 7).[188]

GHPO's report includes recommendations for improvement actions to be taken by the organization. The alghemeiner reports that AIUK stated it “accepted all the recommendations,”[189] and that the "press’ insistence on describing Amnesty as a “leading human rights group” is furthermore problematic given the anti-Jewish racism that the NGO has displayed for years."

Russia

2019 accusations of illegal dismissal

Previously, accusations of Amnesty's management's bias came from a worker at the organization's International Secretariat. In September 2019 a statement circulated at the official website of Amnesty's representative office in Russia (the office is part of the secretariat in London) where Alexandre Sotov, a former staff member, alleged that management “violated labor law, ignores the needs of workers, is biased and altogether unprofessional”. Amnesty's press secretary admitted that Sotov indeed worked as the organization's IT specialist and accused him of hacking Amnesty's website.[190][191] It later emerged that Sotov was illegally dismissed from his post at Amnesty where he worked from 2012 until 2019; he was reinstalled at the organization in May 2020 by court order and paid by Amnesty a judicial compensation of 30 000 usd. Moscow City court, to which Sotov's claim was filed, ruled that Sotov's dismissal was illegal: Amnesty alleged the reason for his dismissal was absence from their office despite the fact that he was for several years a remote worker.[192]

2021 alteration of Alexei Navalny's status

Amnesty International's decision in February 2021 to strip Alexei Navalny's status as a Prisoner of Conscience, due to comments made about migrants in 2007 and 2008 regarded as hate speech,[193] provoked criticism from other human rights organisations and resignations from supporters.[194][195][196] Amnesty stated that a person who has "advocated violence or hatred" is excluded from their current definition of a Prisoner of Conscience and that the use of the term was intended to "emphasize the unjust nature of his detention and our opposition to his unfounded prosecution", but upon reviewing the case, the use of the term Prisoner of Conscience was found to be a mistake. Amnesty apologised for "poor timing" which had allowed the Kremlin to "weaponise" the controversy against Navalny's supporters.[197] Amnesty stated it still considered Navalny a political prisoner.[198]

An anonymous Amnesty employee[199] stated he believed a propaganda campaign was allegedly organized against Navalny, by making his previous controversial comments more prominent. Amnesty's decision was described by western media as "a huge victory for Russian state propaganda" which undermined Amnesty's support of Navalny's release.[200][196] Following those accusations, Amnesty International answered: "Reports that Amnesty’s decision was influenced by the Russian state's smear campaign against Navalny are untrue. At no point were statements falsely attributed to Navalny, or information solely intended to discredit him, taken into consideration. Propaganda by the Russian authorities is recognizable as such."[197]

Amnesty later redesignated Navalny as a Prisoner of Conscience, stating on 7 May 2021 that, as an initial step in a review of its "approach to the use of the term 'Prisoner of Conscience'", it will no longer exclude people from being called Prisoners of Conscience "solely based on their conduct in the past," as they recognize people's "opinions and behaviour may evolve over time."[193][201]

United Kingdom

During the early history of Amnesty International, as it is now proven by various documents, it was secretly supported by the Foreign Office. In 1963, the FO instructed its operatives abroad to provide "discreet support" for Amnesty's campaigns. In the same year, Benenson wrote to Colonial Office Minister Lord Lansdowne a proposal to prop up a "refugee counsellor" on the border between the Bechuanaland Protectorate and apartheid South Africa. Amnesty intended to assist people fleeing across the border from neighbouring South Africa, but not those who were actively engaged in the struggle against apartheid. Benenson wrote:

I would like to reiterate our view that these [British] territories should not be used for offensive political action by the opponents of the South African Government (...) Communist influence should not be allowed to spread in this part of Africa, and in the present delicate situation, Amnesty International would wish to support Her Majesty's Government in any such policy.[17]

The year after, the AI dropped Nelson Mandela as a "prisoner of conscience", because he was convicted of violence by the South African Government. Mandela had also been a member of the South African Communist Party.[202]

In a trip to Haiti, the British FO had also assisted Benenson in his mission to Haiti, where he was disguised because of fear of the Haitians finding out that the British government sponsored his visit. When his disguise was revealed, Benenson was severely criticized by the media.[17]

In the British colony of Aden, Hans Goran Franck, the chairman of Amnesty's Swedish section, wrote a report on allegations of torture at an interrogation centre run by the colonial government. Amnesty refused to publish the report; according to Benenson, Amnesty general-secretary Robert Swann had suppressed it in deference to the Foreign Office. According to co-founder Eric Baker, both Benenson and Swann had met Foreign Secretary George Brown in September and told him that they were willing to hold up publication if the Foreign Office promised no more allegations of torture would surface again. A memo by Lord Chancellor Gerald Gardiner, a Labour Party politician, states that:

Amnesty held the Swedish complaint as long as they could simply because Peter Benenson did not want to do anything to hurt a Labour government.[17]

Benenson then travelled to Aden and reported that he had never seen an "uglier situation" in his life. He then said that British government agents had infiltrated Amnesty and suppress the report's publication. Later, documents surfaced implicating Benenson had connections to the British government, which started the Harry letters affair.[19][17] He then resigned, claiming that British and American intelligence agents had infiltrated Amnesty and subverted its values.[19] After this set of events, which were dubbed by some the "Amnesty Crisis of 1966–67",[203] the relationship between Amnesty and the British Government was suspended. AI vowed that in future, it "must not only be independent and impartial but must not be put into a position where anything else could even be alleged" and the Foreign Office cautioned that "for the time being our attitude to Amnesty International must be one of reserve".[17]

2010 CAGE controversy

Amnesty International suspended Gita Sahgal, its gender unit head, after she criticized Amnesty in February 2010 for its high-profile associations with Moazzam Begg, the director of Cageprisoners, representing men in extrajudicial detention.[204][205]

"To be appearing on platforms with Britain's most famous supporter of the Taliban, Begg, whom we treat as a human rights defender, is a gross error of judgment," she said.[204][206] Sahgal argued that by associating with Begg and Cageprisoners, Amnesty was risking its reputation on human rights.[204][207][208] "As a former Guantanamo detainee, it was legitimate to hear his experiences, but as a supporter of the Taliban it was absolutely wrong to legitimise him as a partner," Sahgal said.[204] She said she repeatedly brought the matter up with Amnesty for two years, to no avail.[209] A few hours after the article was published, Sahgal was suspended from her position.[210] Amnesty's Senior Director of Law and Policy, Widney Brown, later said Sahgal raised concerns about Begg and Cageprisoners to her personally for the first time a few days before sharing them with the Sunday Times.[209]

Sahgal issued a statement saying she felt that Amnesty was risking its reputation by associating with and thereby politically legitimizing Begg, because Cageprisoners "actively promotes Islamic Right ideas and individuals".[210] She said the issue was not about Begg's "freedom of opinion, nor about his right to propound his views: he already exercises these rights fully as he should. The issue is ... the importance of the human rights movement maintaining an objective distance from groups and ideas that are committed to systematic discrimination and fundamentally undermine the universality of human rights."[210] The controversy prompted responses by politicians, the writer Salman Rushdie, and journalist Christopher Hitchens, among others who criticized Amnesty's association with Begg.

After her suspension and the controversy, Sahgal was interviewed by numerous media and attracted international supporters. She was interviewed on the US National Public Radio (NPR) on 27 February 2010, where she discussed the activities of Cageprisoners and why she deemed it inappropriate for Amnesty to associate with Begg.[211] She said that Cageprisoners' Asim Qureshi spoke supporting global jihad at a Hizb ut-Tahrir rally.[211] She stated that a best-seller at Begg's bookshop was a book by Abdullah Azzam, a mentor of Osama bin Laden and a founder of the terrorist organization Lashkar-e-Taiba.[209][211]

In a separate interview for the Indian Daily News & Analysis, Sahgal said that, as Quereshi affirmed Begg's support for global jihad on a BBC World Service programme, "these things could have been stated in his [Begg's] introduction" with Amnesty.[212] She said that Begg's bookshop had published The Army of Madinah, which she characterized as a jihad manual by Dhiren Barot.[213]

2011 Irene Khan payout

In February 2011, newspaper stories in the UK revealed that Irene Khan had received a payment of £533,103 from Amnesty International following her resignation from the organization on 31 December 2009,[214] a fact pointed to from Amnesty's records for the 2009–2010 financial year. The sum paid to her was more than four times her annual salary (£132,490).[214] The deputy secretary general, Kate Gilmore, who also resigned in December 2009, received an ex-gratia payment of £320,000.[214][215] Peter Pack, the chairman of Amnesty's International Executive Committee (IEC), initially stated on 19 February 2011: "The payments to outgoing secretary general Irene Khan shown in the accounts of AI (Amnesty International) Ltd for the year ending 31 March 2010 include payments made as part of a confidential agreement between AI Ltd and Irene Khan"[215] and that "It is a term of this agreement that no further comment on it will be made by either party."[214]

The payment and AI's initial response to its leakage to the press led to a considerable outcry. Philip Davies, the Conservative MP for Shipley, criticized the payments, telling the Daily Express: "I am sure people making donations to Amnesty, in the belief they are alleviating poverty, never dreamed they were subsidising a fat cat payout. This will disillusion many benefactors."[215] On 21 February 2011, Peter Pack issued a further statement, in which he said that the payment was a "unique situation" that was "in the best interest of Amnesty's work" and that there would be no repetition of it.[214] He stated that "the new secretary general, with the full support of the IEC, has initiated a process to review our employment policies and procedures to ensure that such a situation does not happen again."[214] Pack also stated that Amnesty was "fully committed to applying all the resources that we receive from our millions of supporters to the fight for human rights".[214]

On 25 February 2011, Pack sent a letter to Amnesty members and staff. In 2008, it stated, the IEC decided not to prolong Khan's contract for a third term. In the following months, IEC discovered that due to British employment law, it had to choose between three options: offering Khan a third term; discontinuing her post and, in their judgement, risking legal consequences; or signing a confidential agreement and issuing a pay compensation.[216]

2019 Kurdish hunger strike

In April 2019, 30 Kurdish activists, some of whom are on an indefinite hunger strike, occupied Amnesty International's building in London in a peaceful protest, in order to speak out against Amnesty's silence on the isolation of Abdullah Öcalan in a Turkish prison.[217] The hunger strikers have also spoken out about "delaying tactics" by Amnesty, and being denied access to toilets during the occupation, despite this being a human right.[218][219] Two of the hunger strikers, Nahide Zengin and Mehmet Sait Zengin, received paramedic treatment and were taken to hospital during the occupation. Late in the evening of 26 April 2019, the London Met police arrested 21 remaining occupiers.[220]

Ukraine

On 4 August 2022, during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Amnesty International published a report accusing the Armed Forces of Ukraine of endangering civilians through their combat tactics, particularly stating that Ukraine had set up military bases in residential areas (including schools and hospitals) and launched attacks from populated civilian areas.[221] Oksana Pokalchuk, leader of Amnesty Ukraine, said that the report "was compiled by foreign observers, without any assistance from local staff".[222] She resigned from her post and left the organization following the publication of the report.[223]

Human rights lawyers Wayne Jordash and Anna Mykytenko argued that the 4 August report contained "little to none of the military or humanitarian context essential to any reasoned view of what was (or was not) necessary in the prevailing military context" and that the report was "short on facts and analysis and long on intemperate accusation."[224] RUSI researcher Jack Watling stated that "you need to balance military necessity with proportionality, so you need to take reasonable measures to protect civilians but that must be balanced with your orders to defend an area", thus the report's suggestions that Ukrainian forces should relocate to a nearby field or forest "demonstrated a lack of understanding of military operations and damages the credibility of the research."[225] RUSI researcher Natia Seskuria called the report "out of touch with current reality" and stated that the Ukrainian army can legitimately house in the towns they defend, even if they have civilians nearby, because the Ukrainian authorities constantly call for evacuations from frontline towns, and forced relocations of civilian population would violate international humanitarian law.[226] Marc Garlasco, a United Nations war crimes investigator specializing in civilian harm mitigation, said that "Ukraine can place forces in areas they are defending" and "there is no requirement to stand shoulder to shoulder in a field — this isn't the 19th century", and expressed concern that the report could endanger Ukrainian civilians by giving Russian forces an excuse to "expand their targeting of civilian areas".[227]

Journalist Tom Mutch stated that he had participated in and reported on an evacuation of civilians in one of Amnesty's cases, which he contrasted with Amnesty's statement that it was "not aware that the Ukrainian military who located themselves in civilian structures in residential areas asked or assisted civilians to evacuate nearby buildings".[225] The Kyiv Independent editorial team strongly criticized the report, pointing out flaws in reasoning and stating that the "Amnesty [International] could not properly articulate who the main perpetrator of violence in Ukraine was".[228]

The report sparked outrage in Ukraine and the West. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Amnesty of trying to "amnesty the terrorist state and shift the responsibility from the aggressor to the victim", while Ukraine's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dmytro Kuleba, stated that the report creates "a false balance between the oppressor and the victim".[227][229][230] The report was praised by several Russian and pro-Russian figures, including the Russian embassy in London, causing further criticism against the organization.[231]

On 4 August, Callamard dismissed critics of the report as "trolls",[232] and the next day said the organization "fully stands by our research" and that the findings "were based on evidence gathered during extensive investigations which were subject to the same rigorous standards and due diligence processes as all of Amnesty International's work".[233] On 7 August, Amnesty stated that it "deeply regret[ted] the distress and anger" that the report "ha[d] caused".[234] On 12 August, Amnesty International reported that "the conclusions were not conveyed with the delicacy and accuracy that should be expected from Amnesty", and said that "this also applies to the subsequent communication and reaction of the International Secretariat to public criticism." The organization condemned "the instrumentalization of the press release by the Russian authorities" and promised that the report will be verified by independent experts.[235][236]

Awards and honours

 
In 2018, AI stripped Myanmar's leader Aung San Suu Kyi of her highest honour, the Ambassador of Conscience Award.

In 1977, Amnesty International was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for "having contributed to securing the ground for freedom, for justice, and thereby also for peace in the world".[237]

In 1984, Amnesty International received the Four Freedoms Award in the category of Freedom of Speech.[238]

In 1991, Amnesty International was awarded the journalistic prize Golden Doves for Peace by the "Archivio Disarmo" Research Center in Italy.[239]

Cultural impact

Human rights concerts

 
Opening stages of the 19 September 1988 show at Philadelphia's John F. Kennedy Stadium.

A Conspiracy of Hope was a short tour of six benefit concerts on behalf of Amnesty International that took place in the United States during June 1986. The purpose of the tour was not to raise funds but rather to increase awareness of human rights and of Amnesty's work on its 25th anniversary. The shows were headlined by U2, Sting and Bryan Adams and also featured Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed, Joan Baez, and The Neville Brothers. The last three shows featured a reunion of The Police. At a press conference in each city, at related media events, and through their music at the concerts themselves, the artists engaged with the public on themes of human rights and human dignity. The six concerts were the first of what subsequently became known collectively as the Human Rights Concerts – a series of music events and tours staged by Amnesty International USA between 1986 and 1998.

Human Rights Now! was a worldwide tour of twenty benefit concerts on behalf of Amnesty International that took place over six weeks in 1988. Held not to raise funds but to increase awareness of both the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on its 40th anniversary and the work of Amnesty International, the shows featured Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, Sting, Peter Gabriel, Tracy Chapman, and Youssou N'Dour, plus guest artists from each of the countries where concerts were held.

Artists for Amnesty

Amnesty International, through its "Artists for Amnesty" programme, has also endorsed various cultural media works for what its leadership often consider accurate or educational treatments of real-world topics that fall within the range of Amnesty's concern:

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b The anthropologist Linda Rabben refers to the origin of Amnesty as a "creation myth" with a "kernel of truth": "The immediate impetus to form Amnesty did come from Peter Benenson's righteous indignation while reading a newspaper in the London tube on 19 November 1960."[241] The historian Tom Buchanan traced the origins story to a radio broadcast by Peter Benenson in 1962. The 4 March 1962 BBC news story did not refer to a "toast to liberty", but Benenson said his tube ride was on 19 December 1960. Buchanan was unable to find the newspaper article about the Portuguese students in The Daily Telegraph for either month. Buchanan found many news stories reporting on the repressive Portuguese political arrests in The Times for November 1960.[96]

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Further reading

  • Ganzfried, Miriam (2021). Amnesty International and Women's Rights Feminist Strategies, Leadership Commitment and Internal Resistances. transcript Verlag. ISBN 978-3-8376-6008-1.
  • Clark, Anne Marie (2001). Diplomacy of Conscience: Amnesty International and Changing Human Rights Norms. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-05743-9.
  • Girot, Marc (2011). Amnesty International, Enquête sur une organisation génétiquement modifiée. Editions du Cygne. ISBN 9782849242469..
  • Habibe, K. A. R. A. "Human Rights in China In The Xi Jinping Era: From The Perspective of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International." Doğu Asya Araştırmaları Dergisi 2.1: 66–96. online
  • Hopgood, Stephen (2006). Keepers of the Flame: Understanding Amnesty International. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-4402-9.
  • Neier, Aryeh. "Amnesty International." in The International Human Rights Movement (Princeton UP, 2020) pp. 186–203.
  • Power, Jonathan (1981). Amnesty International: The Human Rights Story. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-08-028902-1.
  • Sellars, Kirsten (April 2002). The Rise and Rise of Human Rights. Sutton Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7509-2755-0.
  • Savelsberg, Joachim J. "Global Human Rights Organizations and National Patterns: Amnesty International’s Responses to Darfur." Societies Without Borders 12.2 (2021): 13+. online
  • Srivastava, Swati. 2021. "Navigating NGO–Government Relations in Human Rights: New Archival Evidence from Amnesty International, 1961–1986." International Studies Quarterly.

External links

amnesty, international, also, referred, amnesty, international, governmental, organization, focused, human, rights, with, headquarters, united, kingdom, organization, says, more, than, million, members, supporters, around, world, stated, mission, organization,. Amnesty International also referred to as Amnesty or AI is an international non governmental organization focused on human rights with its headquarters in the United Kingdom The organization says it has more than ten million members and supporters around the world 1 The stated mission of the organization is to campaign for a world in which every person enjoys all of the human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights instruments 3 The organization has played a notable role on human rights issues due to its frequent citation in media and by world leaders 4 5 Amnesty InternationalFoundedJuly 1961 61 years ago 1961 07 United KingdomFoundersPeter Benenson Eric BakerTypeNonprofit INGOHeadquartersLondon WC1United KingdomLocationGlobalServicesProtecting human rightsFieldsMedia attention direct appeal campaigns research lobbyingMembersMore than ten million members and supporters 1 Secretary GeneralAgnes Callamard 2 Websiteamnesty orgAI was founded in London in 1961 by the lawyer Peter Benenson 6 Its original focus was prisoners of conscience with its remit widening in the 1970s under the leadership of Sean MacBride and Martin Ennals to include miscarriages of justice and torture In 1977 it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize In the 1980s its secretary general was Thomas Hammarberg succeeded in the 1990s by Pierre Sane In the 2000s it was led by Irene Khan Amnesty draws attention to human rights abuses and campaigns for compliance with international laws and standards It works to mobilize public opinion to generate pressure on governments where abuse takes place 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 1960s 1 2 1970s 1 3 1980s 1 4 1990s 1 5 2000s 1 6 2010s 1 6 1 2010 1 6 2 2011 1 6 3 2012 1 6 4 2014 1 6 5 2015 1 6 6 2016 1 6 7 2017 1 6 8 2018 1 6 9 2019 1 7 2020s 2 Structure 2 1 Notable national sections 2 2 Charitable status 3 Principles 4 Objectives 4 1 Citizen Evidence Lab 4 2 Country focus 5 Funding 6 Criticism and controversies 6 1 General 6 1 1 1990 Iraq soldiers war crimes 6 1 2 2019 report on workplace bullying 6 1 3 2019 budgetary crisis 6 1 4 2020 secret payout 6 1 5 2021 accusation of systemic bias 6 1 6 2022 report on systemic racism 6 2 Russia 6 2 1 2019 accusations of illegal dismissal 6 2 2 2021 alteration of Alexei Navalny s status 6 3 United Kingdom 6 3 1 2010 CAGE controversy 6 3 2 2011 Irene Khan payout 6 3 3 2019 Kurdish hunger strike 6 4 Ukraine 7 Awards and honours 8 Cultural impact 8 1 Human rights concerts 8 2 Artists for Amnesty 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Notes 10 2 Citations 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory Edit1960s Edit Peter Benenson the founder of Amnesty International He worked for Britain s GC amp CS at Bletchley Park during World War II Amnesty International was founded in London in July 1961 by English barrister Peter Benenson who had previously been a founding member of the UK law reform organisation JUSTICE 8 Benenson was influenced by his friend Louis Blom Cooper who led a political prisoners campaign 9 10 According to Benenson s own account he was travelling on the London Underground on 19 November 1960 when he read that two Portuguese students from Coimbra had been sentenced to seven years of imprisonment in Portugal for allegedly having drunk a toast to liberty a 11 Researchers have never traced the alleged newspaper article in question a In 1960 Portugal was ruled by the Estado Novo government of Antonio de Oliveira Salazar 12 The government was authoritarian in nature and strongly anti communist suppressing enemies of the state as anti Portuguese In his significant newspaper article The Forgotten Prisoners Benenson later described his reaction as follows Open your newspaper any day of the week and you will find a story from somewhere of someone being imprisoned tortured or executed because his opinions or religion are unacceptable to his government The newspaper reader feels a sickening sense of impotence Yet if these feelings of disgust could be united into common action something effective could be done 6 Benenson worked with his friend Eric Baker Baker was a member of the Religious Society of Friends who had been involved in funding the British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament as well as becoming head of Quaker Peace and Social Witness and in his memoirs Benenson described him as a partner in the launching of the project 13 In consultation with other writers academics and lawyers and in particular Alec Digges they wrote via Louis Blom Cooper to David Astor editor of The Observer newspaper who on 28 May 1961 published Benenson s article The Forgotten Prisoners The article brought the reader s attention to those imprisoned tortured or executed because his opinions or religion are unacceptable to his government 6 or put another way to violations by governments of articles 18 and 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights UDHR The article described these violations occurring on a global scale in the context of restrictions to press freedom to political oppositions to timely public trial before impartial courts and to asylum It marked the launch of Appeal for Amnesty 1961 the aim of which was to mobilize public opinion quickly and widely in defence of these individuals whom Benenson named Prisoners of Conscience The Appeal for Amnesty was reprinted by a large number of international newspapers In the same year Benenson had a book published Persecution 1961 which detailed the cases of nine prisoners of conscience investigated and compiled by Benenson and Baker Maurice Audin Ashton Jones Agostinho Neto Patrick Duncan Olga Ivinskaya Luis Taruc Constantin Noica Antonio Amat and Hu Feng 14 In July 1961 the leadership had decided that the appeal would form the basis of a permanent organization Amnesty with the first meeting taking place in London Benenson ensured that all three major political parties were represented enlisting members of parliament from the Labour Party the Conservative Party and the Liberal Party 15 On 30 September 1962 it was officially named Amnesty International Between the Appeal for Amnesty 1961 and September 1962 the organization had been known simply as Amnesty 16 What started as a short appeal soon became a permanent international movement working to protect those imprisoned for non violent expression of their views and to secure worldwide recognition of Articles 18 and 19 of the UDHR From the very beginning research and campaigning were present in Amnesty International s work A library was established for information about prisoners of conscience and a network of local groups called THREES groups was started Each group worked on behalf of three prisoners one from each of the then three main ideological regions of the world communist capitalist and developing By the mid 1960s Amnesty International s global presence was growing and an International Secretariat and International Executive Committee were established to manage Amnesty International s national organizations called Sections which had appeared in several countries They were secretly supported by the British government at the time 17 The international movement was starting to agree on its core principles and techniques For example the issue of whether or not to adopt prisoners who had advocated violence like Nelson Mandela 18 brought unanimous agreement that it could not give the name of Prisoner of Conscience to such prisoners Aside from the work of the library and groups Amnesty International s activities were expanding to helping prisoners families sending observers to trials making representations to governments and finding asylum or overseas employment for prisoners Its activity and influence were also increasing within intergovernmental organizations it would be awarded consultative status by the United Nations the Council of Europe and UNESCO before the decade ended In 1966 Benenson suspected that the British government in collusion with some Amnesty employees had suppressed a report on British atrocities in Aden 19 He began to suspect that many of his colleagues were part of a British intelligence conspiracy to subvert Amnesty but he could not convince anybody else at AI 20 Later in the same year there were further allegations when the US government reported that Sean MacBride the former Irish foreign minister and Amnesty s first chairman had been involved with a Central Intelligence Agency funding operation 19 MacBride denied knowledge of the funding but Benenson became convinced that MacBride was a member of a CIA network 20 Benenson resigned as Amnesty s president on the grounds that it was bugged and infiltrated by the secret services and said that he could no longer live in a country where such activities were tolerated 17 See Relationship with the British Government 1970s Edit During the 1970s Sean MacBride and Martin Ennals led Amnesty International While continuing to work for prisoners of conscience Amnesty International s purview widened to include fair trial and opposition to long detention without trial UDHR Article 9 and especially to the torture of prisoners UDHR Article 5 Amnesty International believed that the reasons underlying torture of prisoners by governments were either to acquire and obtain information or to quell opposition by the use of terror or both Also of concern was the export of more sophisticated torture methods equipment and teaching by the superpowers to client states for example by the United States through some activities of the CIA Amnesty International drew together reports from countries where torture allegations seemed most persistent and organized an international conference on torture It sought to influence public opinion to put pressure on national governments by organizing a campaign for the Abolition of Torture which ran for several years Amnesty International s membership increased from 15 000 in 1969 21 to 200 000 by 1979 22 This growth in resources enabled an expansion of its program outside of the prison walls to include work on disappearances the death penalty and the rights of refugees A new technique the Urgent Action aimed at mobilizing the membership into action rapidly was pioneered The first was issued on 19 March 1973 on behalf of Luiz Basilio Rossi a Brazilian academic arrested for political reasons At the intergovernmental level Amnesty International pressed for the application of the UN s Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners and of existing humanitarian conventions to secure ratifications of the two UN Covenants on Human Rights in 1976 and was instrumental in obtaining additional instruments and provisions forbidding the practice of maltreatment Consultative status was granted at the Inter American Commission on Human Rights in 1972 In 1976 Amnesty s British Section started a series of fund raising events that came to be known as The Secret Policeman s Balls series They were staged in London initially as comedy galas featuring what The Daily Telegraph called the creme de la creme of the British comedy world 23 including members of comedy troupe Monty Python and later expanded to also include performances by leading rock musicians The series was created and developed by Monty Python alumnus John Cleese and entertainment industry executive Martin Lewis working closely with Amnesty staff members Peter Luff assistant director of Amnesty 1974 1978 and subsequently with Peter Walker Amnesty Fund Raising Officer 1978 1982 Cleese Lewis and Luff worked together on the first two shows 1976 and 1977 Cleese Lewis and Walker worked together on the 1979 and 1981 shows the first to carry what The Daily Telegraph described as the rather brilliantly re christened Secret Policeman s Ball title 23 The organization was awarded the 1977 Nobel Peace Prize for its defence of human dignity against torture 24 and the United Nations Prize in the Field of Human Rights in 1978 25 1980s Edit By 1980 Amnesty International was drawing more criticism from governments The Soviet Union alleged that Amnesty International conducted espionage the Moroccan government denounced it as a defender of lawbreakers and the Argentinian government banned Amnesty International s 1983 annual report 26 Throughout the 1980s Amnesty International continued to campaign against torture and on behalf of prisoners of conscience New issues emerged including extrajudicial killings military security and police transfers political killings and disappearances Towards the end of the decade the growing number of refugees worldwide became a focus for Amnesty International While many of the world s refugees of the time had been displaced by war and famine in adherence to its mandate Amnesty International concentrated on those forced to flee because of the human rights violations it was seeking to prevent It argued that rather than focusing on new restrictions on entry for asylum seekers governments were to address the human rights violations which were forcing people into exile Apart from a second campaign on torture during the first half of the decade two major musical events took place to increase awareness of Amnesty and of human rights particularly among younger generations during the mid to late 1980s The 1986 Conspiracy of Hope tour which played five concerts in the US and culminated in a daylong show featuring some thirty odd acts at Giants Stadium and the 1988 Human Rights Now world tour Human Rights Now which was timed to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights UDHR played a series of concerts on five continents over six weeks Both tours featured some of the most famous musicians and bands of the day 1990s Edit Throughout the 1990s Amnesty continued to grow to a membership of over seven million in over 150 countries and territories 1 led by Senegalese Secretary General Pierre Sane Amnesty continued to work on a wide range of issues and world events For example South African groups joined in 1992 and hosted a visit by Pierre Sane to meet with the apartheid government to press for an investigation into allegations of police abuse an end to arms sales to the African Great Lakes region and the abolition of the death penalty In particular Amnesty International brought attention to violations committed on specific groups including refugees racial ethnic religious minorities women and those executed or on Death Row The death penalty report When the State Kills 27 and the Human Rights are Women s Rights campaign were key actions for the latter two issues During the 1990s Amnesty International was forced to react to human rights violations occurring in the context of a proliferation of armed conflict in Angola East Timor the Persian Gulf Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia Amnesty International took no position on whether to support or oppose external military interventions in these armed conflicts It did not reject the use of force even lethal force or ask those engaged to lay down their arms Instead it questioned the motives behind external intervention and selectivity of international action in relation to the strategic interests of those who sent troops It argued that action should be taken to prevent human rights problems from becoming human rights catastrophes and that both intervention and inaction represented a failure of the international community In 1995 when AI wanted to promote how Shell Oil Company was involved with the execution of an environmental and human rights activist Ken Saro Wiwa in Nigeria it was stopped Newspapers and advertising companies refused to run AI s ads because Shell Oil was a customer of theirs as well Shell s main argument was that it was drilling oil in a country that already violated human rights and had no way to enforce human rights policies To combat the buzz that AI was trying to create it immediately publicized how Shell was helping to improve overall life in Nigeria Salil Shetty the director of Amnesty said Social media re energises the idea of the global citizen 15 James M Russell notes how the drive for profit from private media sources conflicts with the stories that AI wants to be heard 28 Amnesty International was proactive in pushing for recognition of the universality of human rights The campaign Get Up Sign Up marked 50 years of the UDHR Thirteen million pledges were collected in support and the Decl music concert was held in Paris on 10 December 1998 Human Rights Day At the intergovernmental level Amnesty International argued in favour of creating a United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights established 1993 and an International Criminal Court established 2002 After his arrest in London in 1998 by the Metropolitan Police Amnesty International became involved in the legal battle of Senator Augusto Pinochet former Chilean dictator who sought to avoid extradition to Spain to face charges Lord Hoffman had an indirect connection with Amnesty International and this led to an important test for the appearance of bias in legal proceedings in UK law There was a suit 29 against the decision to release Senator Pinochet taken by the then British Home Secretary Jack Straw before that decision had actually been taken in an attempt to prevent the release of Senator Pinochet The English High Court refused 30 the application and Senator Pinochet was released and returned to Chile 2000s Edit After 2000 Amnesty International s primary focus turned to the challenges arising from globalization and the reaction to the 11 September 2001 attacks in the United States The issue of globalization provoked a major shift in Amnesty International policy as the scope of its work was widened to include economic social and cultural rights an area that it had declined to work on in the past Amnesty International felt this shift was important not just to give credence to its principle of the indivisibility of rights but because of what it saw as the growing power of companies and the undermining of many nation states as a result of globalization 31 In the aftermath of 11 September attacks the new Amnesty International Secretary General Irene Khan reported that a senior government official had said to Amnesty International delegates Your role collapsed with the collapse of the Twin Towers in New York 32 In the years following the attacks some who believe that the gains made by human rights organizations over previous decades had possibly been eroded 33 Amnesty International argued that human rights were the basis for the security of all not a barrier to it Criticism came directly from the Bush administration and The Washington Post when Khan in 2005 likened the US government s detention facility at Guantanamo Bay Cuba to a Soviet Gulag 34 35 During the first half of the new decade Amnesty International turned its attention to violence against women controls on the world arms trade concerns surrounding the effectiveness of the UN and ending torture 36 With its membership close to two million by 2005 37 Amnesty continued to work for prisoners of conscience In 2007 AI s executive committee decided to support access to abortion within reasonable gestational limits for women in cases of rape incest or violence or where the pregnancy jeopardizes a mother s life or health 38 Amnesty International reported concerning the Iraq War on 17 March 2008 that despite claims the security situation in Iraq has improved in recent months the human rights situation is disastrous after the start of the war five years earlier in 2003 39 In 2009 Amnesty International accused Israel and the Palestinian Hamas movement of committing war crimes during Israel s January offensive in Gaza called Operation Cast Lead that resulted in the deaths of more than 1 400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis 40 The 117 page Amnesty report charged Israeli forces with killing hundreds of civilians and wanton destruction of thousands of homes Amnesty found evidence of Israeli soldiers using Palestinian civilians as human shields A subsequent United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict was carried out Amnesty stated that its findings were consistent with those of Amnesty s own field investigation and called on the UN to act promptly to implement the mission s recommendations 41 42 2010s Edit Amnesty International 19 March 2011 Japanese branch of Amnesty International 23 May 2014 2010 Edit In February 2010 Amnesty suspended Gita Sahgal its gender unit head after she criticized Amnesty for its links with Moazzam Begg director of Cageprisoners She said it was a gross error of judgment to work with Britain s most famous supporter of the Taliban 43 44 Amnesty responded that Sahgal was not suspended for raising these issues internally Begg speaks about his own views not Amnesty International s 45 Among those who spoke up for Sahgal were Salman Rushdie 46 Member of Parliament Denis MacShane Joan Smith Christopher Hitchens Martin Bright Melanie Phillips and Nick Cohen 44 47 48 49 50 51 52 2011 Edit In February 2011 Amnesty requested that Swiss authorities start a criminal investigation of former US President George W Bush and arrest him 53 In July 2011 Amnesty International celebrated its 50 years with an animated short film directed by Carlos Lascano produced by Eallin Motion Art and Dreamlife Studio with music by Academy Award winner Hans Zimmer and nominee Lorne Balfe 54 2012 Edit In August 2012 Amnesty International s chief executive in India sought an impartial investigation led by the United Nations to render justice to those affected by war crimes in Sri Lanka 55 In November 2012 Amnesty International initiated disciplinary proceedings against Kirstyan Benedict one of its UK campaigns managers for a tweet singling out three female Jewish MPs in a manner that critics asserted was antisemitic Benedict defended the tweet as a joke 56 2014 Edit Supporters of Amnesty International at Cologne Pride Parade 2014 On 18 August 2014 in the wake of demonstrations sparked by people protesting the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown an unarmed 18 year old who assaulted a police officer and then resisted arrest and subsequent acquittal of Darren Wilson the officer who shot him Amnesty International sent a 13 person contingent of human rights activists to seek meetings with officials as well as to train local activists in non violent protest methods 57 This was the first time that the organization has deployed such a team to the United States 58 59 60 In a press release AI USA director Steven W Hawkins said The U S cannot continue to allow those obligated and duty bound to protect to become those who their community fears most 61 2015 Edit On 19 April 2015 Amnesty International voted against a motion proposing that it fight against antisemitism in the UK which reached then record levels in the previous year despite its extensive attention to the single issue of Islamophobia in earlier years Amnesty stated that it would be inappropriate to campaign for an issue with a single focus and that Amnesty fights against discrimination in all its forms 62 63 64 In August 2015 The Times reported that Yasmin Hussein then Amnesty s director of faith and human rights and previously its head of international advocacy and a prominent representative at the United Nations had undeclared private links to men alleged to be key players in a secretive network of global Islamists including the Muslim Brotherhood and Hamas 65 66 The Times also detailed instances where Hussein was alleged to have had inappropriately close relationships with the al Qazzaz family members of which were high ranking government ministers in the administration of Mohammed Morsi and Muslim Brotherhood leaders at the time 65 66 Ms Hussein denied supporting the Muslim Brotherhood and told Amnesty that any connections are purely circumstantial 65 2016 Edit In February 2016 Amnesty International launched its annual report of human rights around the world titled The State of the World s Human Rights It warns from the consequences of us vs them speech which divided human beings into two camps It states that this speech enhances a global pushback against human rights and makes the world more divided and more dangerous It also states that in 2016 governments turned a blind eye to war crimes and passed laws that violate free expression Elsewhere China Egypt Ethiopia India Iran Thailand and Turkey carried out massive crackdowns while authorities in other countries continued to implement security measures represent an infringement on rights 67 In June 2016 Amnesty International has called on the United Nations General Assembly to immediately suspend Saudi Arabia from the UN Human Rights Council 68 69 Richard Bennett head of Amnesty s UN Office said The credibility of the U N Human Rights Council is at stake Since joining the council Saudi Arabia s dire human rights record at home has continued to deteriorate and the coalition it leads has unlawfully killed and injured thousands of civilians in the conflict in Yemen 70 In November 2016 Amnesty International conducted an internal investigation of Kirstyan Benedict its UK campaign manager for comparing Israel to the Islamic state 71 72 In December 2016 Amnesty International revealed that Voiceless Victims a fake non profit organization which claims to raise awareness for migrant workers who are victims of human rights abuses in Qatar had been trying to spy on their staff 73 74 2017 Edit Amnesty International sign at the WorldPride Madrid in July 2017 Amnesty International published its annual report for the year 2016 2017 on 21 February 2017 Secretary General Salil Shetty s opening statement in the report highlighted many ongoing international cases of abuse as well as emerging threats Shetty drew attention among many issues to the Syrian Civil War the use of chemical weapons in the War in Darfur outgoing United States President Barack Obama s expansion of drone warfare and the successful 2016 presidential election campaign of Obama s successor Donald Trump Shetty stated that the Trump election campaign was characterized by poisonous discourse in which he frequently made deeply divisive statements marked by misogyny and xenophobia and pledged to roll back established civil liberties and introduce policies which would be profoundly inimical to human rights In his opening summary Shetty stated that the world in 2016 became a darker and more unstable place 75 In July 2017 Turkish police detained 10 human rights activists during a workshop on digital security at a hotel near Istanbul Eight people including Idil Eser Amnesty International director in Turkey as well as German Peter Steudtner and Swede Ali Gharavi were arrested Two others were detained but released pending trial They were accused of aiding armed terror organizations in alleged communications with suspects linked to Kurdish and left wing militants as well as the movement led by US based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen 76 Amnesty International supported the UN treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons James Lynch Head of Arms Control and Human Rights at Amnesty International said This historic treaty brings us a step closer to a world free from the horrors of nuclear weapons the most destructive and indiscriminate weapons ever created 77 2018 Edit A protest calling for the release of detained Saudi women s rights activists in May 2018 Amnesty International published its 2017 2018 report in February 2018 78 In October 2018 an Amnesty International researcher was abducted and beaten while observing demonstrations in Magas the capital of Ingushetia Russia 79 On 25 October federal officers raided the Bengaluru office for 10 hours on a suspicion that the organization had violated foreign direct investment guidelines on the orders of the Enforcement Directorate Employees and supporters of Amnesty International say this is an act to intimidate organizations and people who question the authority and capabilities of government leaders Aakar Patel the executive director of the Indian branch claimed The Enforcement Directorate s raid on our office today shows how the authorities are now treating human rights organizations like criminal enterprises using heavy handed methods On Sep 29 the Ministry of Home Affairs said Amnesty International using glossy statements about humanitarian work etc as a ploy to divert attention from their activities which were in clear contravention of laid down Indian laws Amnesty International received permission only once in Dec 2000 since then it had been denied Foreign Contribution permission under the Foreign Contribution Act by successive Governments However in order to circumvent the FCRA regulations Amnesty UK remitted large amounts of money to four entities registered in India by classifying it as Foreign Direct Investment FDI 80 The current Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi has been criticized by foreign medias for harming civil society in India specifically by targeting advocacy groups 81 82 83 India has cancelled the registration of about 15 000 nongovernmental organisations under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act FCRA the U N has issued statements against the policies that allow these cancellations to occur 84 85 Though nothing was found to confirm these accusations the government plans on continuing the investigation and has frozen the bank accounts of all the offices in India A spokesperson for the Enforcement Directorate has said the investigation could take three months to complete 84 On 30 October 2018 Amnesty called for the arrest and prosecution of Nigerian security forces claiming that they used excessive force against Shi a protesters during a peaceful religious procession around Abuja Nigeria At least 45 were killed and 122 were injured during the event 86 In November 2018 Amnesty reported the arrest of 19 or more rights activists and lawyers in Egypt The arrests were made by the Egyptian authorities as part of the regime s ongoing crackdown on dissent One of the arrested was Hoda Abdel Monaim a 60 year old human rights lawyer and former member of the National Council for Human Rights Amnesty reported that following the arrests Egyptian Coordination for Rights and Freedoms ECRF decided to suspend its activities due to the hostile environment towards civil society in the country 87 On 5 December 2018 Amnesty International strongly condemned the execution of Ihar Hershankou and Siamion Berazhnoy in Belarus 88 They were shot despite UN Human Rights Committee request for a delay 89 90 2019 Edit Amnesty International sign in Rouen 4 May 2019 In February 2019 Amnesty International s management team offered to resign after an independent report found what it called a toxic culture of workplace bullying and found evidence of bullying harassment sexism and racism after being asked to investigate the suicides of 30 year Amnesty veteran Gaetan Mootoo in Paris in May 2018 who left a note citing work pressures and 28 year old intern Rosalind McGregor in Geneva in July 2018 91 In April 2019 Amnesty International s deputy director for research in Europe Massimo Moratti warned that if extradited to the United States WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange would face the risk of serious human rights violations namely detention conditions which could violate the prohibition of torture 92 On 24 April 2019 protestors occupied the reception of Amnesty s London offices to protest against what they saw as Amnesty s inaction in on human rights abuses against Kurds in Turkey including the incarceration and isolation of a founding member of the Kurdistan Workers Party Abdullah Ocalan A hunger strike was declared by the occupiers 93 better source needed There were claims by whom that Amnesty s inaction had been driven by undue deference to the Turkish and Qatari regimes On 26 April Amnesty called on the Police forcibly to eject the demonstrators and the offices were cleared On 14 May 2019 Amnesty International filed a petition with the District Court of Tel Aviv Israel seeking a revocation of the export licence of surveillance technology firm NSO Group 94 The filing states that staff of Amnesty International have an ongoing and well founded fear they may continue to be targeted and ultimately surveilled 95 by NSO technology Other lawsuits have also been filed against NSO in Israeli courts over alleged human rights abuses including a December 2018 filing by Saudi dissident Omar Abdulaziz who claimed NSO s software targeted his phone during a period in which he was in regular contact with murdered journalist Jamal Kashoggi 96 In August 2019 the Global Assembly elected five new Members to the International Board Tiumalu Peter Fa afiu New Zealand Dr Anjhula Singh Bais Malaysia Ritz Lee Santos III The Philippines Lulu Barera Mexico and Aniket Shah USA as Treasurer Given Fa afiu received the most votes his term will be for four years and others three years Bais and Santos become the first Malaysian and Filipino elected Fa afiu the first of Pacific descent citation needed In September 2019 European Commission President elect Ursula von der Leyen created the new position of Vice President for Protecting our European Way of Life who will be responsible for upholding the rule of law internal security and migration 97 Amnesty International accused the European Union of using the framing of the far right by linking migration with security 98 At its Board Meeting in October 2019 International Board members appointed Sarah Beamish Canada as chairperson She has been on the Board since 2015 and at age 34 is the youngest IB Chair in its history She is a human rights lawyer in her homeland On 24 November 2019 Anil Raj a former Amnesty International board member was killed by a car bomb while working with the United Nations Development Project U S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Raj s death at a briefing 26 Nov during which he discussed other acts of terrorism 99 On 5 December 2019 Kumi Naidoo the organization s Secretary General has made the decision to step down from his position due to health related reasons 100 2020s Edit In August 2020 Amnesty International expressed concerns about what it called the widespread torture of peaceful protesters and treatment of detainees in Belarus 101 The organization also said that more than 1 100 people were killed by bandits in rural communities in northern Nigeria during the first six months of 2020 102 Amnesty International investigated what it called excessive and unlawful killings of teenagers by Angolan police who were enforcing restrictions during the coronavirus pandemic 103 In May 2020 the organization raised concerns about security flaws in a COVID 19 contact tracing app mandated in Qatar 104 In September 2020 Amnesty shut down its India operations after the government froze its bank accounts due to alleged financial irregularities 105 On 29 October 2020 Amnesty International launched a human rights learning application called Amnesty Academy 106 On 2 November 2020 Amnesty International reported that 54 people mostly Amhara women and children and elderly people were killed by the OLF in the village of Gawa Qanqa Ethiopia 107 108 In April 2021 Amnesty International distanced itself from a tweet by Agnes Callamard its newly appointed Secretary General asserting that Israel had killed Yasser Arafat Callamard herself has not deleted the tweet 109 110 111 In June 2021 Amnesty accused the Chinese government of committing crimes against humanity against the Uyghurs in Xinjiang 112 In February 2022 Amnesty accused Israel of committing the crime of apartheid against the Palestinians joining other human rights organizations that had previously accused Israel of the crime against humanity In 2021 Human Rights Watch and B tselem had both accused Israel of apartheid in its treatment of the Palestinians in the occupied territories 113 An Amnesty report stated that Israel maintains an institutionalized regime of oppression and domination of the Palestinian population for the benefit of Jewish Israelis 114 The Israeli Foreign Ministry stated that Amnesty was peddling lies inconsistencies and unfounded assertions that originate from well known anti Israeli hate organisations The Palestinian Foreign Ministry called the report a detailed affirmation of the cruel reality of entrenched racism exclusion oppression colonialism apartheid and attempted erasure that the Palestinian people have endured 114 In March 2022 Paul O Brien the Amnesty International USA Director speaking to a Women s National Democratic Club audience in the US stated We are opposed to the idea and this I think is an existential part of the debate that Israel should be preserved as a state for the Jewish people while adding Amnesty takes no political views on any question including the right of the State of Israel to survive 115 116 117 118 undue weight discuss On 11 March 2022 Russia s media regulator blocked access to Amnesty International s Russian language website 119 non primary source needed On 7 April 2022 six weeks after the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine the Russian Ministry of Justice announced that the offices of Amnesty International and 14 other well known international organizations had been closed for violations of Russian law 120 Structure Edit Amnesty International Sections 2012 The Amnesty Canadian headquarters in Ottawa Amnesty International is largely made up of voluntary members but retains a small number of paid professionals In countries in which Amnesty International has a strong presence members are organized as sections Sections co ordinate basic Amnesty International activities normally with a significant number of members some of whom will form into groups and a professional staff Each has a board of directors In 2019 there were 63 sections worldwide Structures are aspiring sections They also co ordinate basic activities but have a smaller membership and a limited staff In countries where no section or structure exists people can become international members Two other organizational models exist international networks which promote specific themes or have a specific identity and affiliated groups which do the same work as section groups but in isolation 121 The highest governing body is the Global Assembly which meets annually Each Section sends its chair and executive director to the GA The GA process is governed and managed by the PrepCom Preparatory Committee The International Board formerly known as the International Executive Committee IEC led by the International Board Chairperson Sarah Beamish consists of nine members and the International Treasurer Two members are co opted The IB is elected by and accountable to the Global Assembly The International Board meets at least two times during any one year and in practice meets face to face at least four times a year Other board and subcommittee meetings are undertaken via video conferencing The role of the International Board is to take decisions on behalf of Amnesty International govern the International Secretariat including regional offices implement the strategy laid out by the Global Assembly and ensure compliance with the organization s statutes The International Secretariat IS is responsible for the conduct and daily affairs of Amnesty International under direction from the International Board 122 It is run by approximately 500 professional staff members and is headed by a Secretary General The Secretariat operates several work programmes International Law and Organizations Research Campaigns Mobilization and Communications Its offices have been located in London since its establishment in the mid 1960s Amnesty International Sections 2005Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Belgium Dutch speaking Belgium French speaking Benin Bermuda Canada English speaking Canada French speaking Chile Cote d Ivoire Denmark Faroe Islands Finland France Germany Greece Guyana Hong Kong Iceland Ireland Israel Italy Japan Korea Republic of Luxembourg Mauritius Mexico Morocco Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Norway Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Senegal Sierra Leone Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Togo Tunisia United Kingdom United States of America Uruguay Venezuela Amnesty International Structures 2005Belarus Bolivia Burkina Faso Croatia Curacao Czech Republic Gambia Hungary Malaysia Mali Moldova Mongolia Pakistan Paraguay Slovakia South Africa Thailand Turkey Ukraine Zambia Zimbabwe International Board formerly known as IEC ChairpersonsSean MacBride 1965 74 Dirk Borner 1974 17 Thomas Hammarberg 1977 79 Jose Zalaquett 1979 82 Suriya Wickremasinghe 1982 85 Wolfgang Heinz 1985 96 Franca Sciuto 1986 89 Peter Duffy 1989 91 Anette Fischer 1991 92 Ross Daniels 1993 19 Susan Waltz 1996 98 Mahmoud Ben Romdhane 1999 2000 Colm O Cuanachain 2001 02 Paul Hoffman 2003 04 Jaap Jacobson 2005 Hanna Roberts 2005 06 Lilian Goncalves Ho Kang You 2006 07 Peter Pack 2007 11 Pietro Antonioli 2011 13 and Nicole Bieske 2013 2018 Sarah Beamish 2019 to current Secretaries GeneralAmnesty International Secretary Generals Secretary General Office OriginPeter Benenson Peter Benenson 1961 1966 BritainEric Baker Eric Baker 1966 1968 BritainMartin Ennals Martin Ennals 1968 1980 BritainThomas Hammarberg Thomas Hammarberg 1980 1986 SwedenAvery Brundage Ian Martin 1986 1992 BritainPierre Sane Pierre Sane 1992 2001 SenegalIrene Zubaida Khan Irene Khan 2001 2010 BangladeshSalil Shetty Salil Shetty 2010 2018 IndiaKumi Naidoo Kumi Naidoo 2018 2020 123 South AfricaJulie Verhaar Julie Verhaar 2020 2021 Acting Agnes Callamard Agnes Callamard 2021 present 2 FranceNotable national sections Edit Amnesty International Ghana Amnesty International Australia Amnesty International India Amnesty International Ireland Amnesty International New Zealand Amnesty International Philippines Amnesty International South Africa Amnesty International Thailand Amnesty International USACharitable status Edit In the UK Amnesty International has two components which are registered charities under English law Amnesty International Charity 124 and Amnesty International UK Section Charitable Trust 125 Principles EditThe core principle of Amnesty International is a focus on prisoners of conscience those persons imprisoned or prevented from expressing an opinion by means of violence Along with this commitment to opposing repression of freedom of expression Amnesty International s founding principles included non intervention on political questions a robust commitment to gathering facts about the various cases and promoting human rights 126 One key issue in the principles is in regards to those individuals who may advocate or tacitly support resorting to violence in struggles against repression AI does not judge whether recourse to violence is justified or not However AI does not oppose the political use of violence in itself since The Universal Declaration of Human Rights in its preamble foresees situations in which people could be compelled to have recourse as a last resort to rebellion against tyranny and oppression If a prisoner is serving a sentence imposed after a fair trial for activities involving violence AI will not ask the government to release the prisoner AI neither supports nor condemns the resort to violence by political opposition groups in itself just as AI neither supports nor condemns a government policy of using military force in fighting against armed opposition movements However AI supports minimum humane standards that should be respected by governments and armed opposition groups alike When an opposition group tortures or kills its captives takes hostages or commits deliberate and arbitrary killings AI condemns these abuses 127 dubious discuss Amnesty International considers capital punishment to be the ultimate irreversible denial of human rights and opposes capital punishment in all cases regardless of the crime committed the circumstances surrounding the individual or the method of execution 128 Objectives EditAmnesty International s vision is of a world in which every person enjoys all of the human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights standards In pursuit of this vision Amnesty International s mission is to undertake research and action focused on preventing and ending grave abuses of the rights to physical and mental integrity freedom of conscience and expression and freedom from discrimination within the context of its work to promote all human rights Statute of Amnesty International 27th International Council meeting 2005Amnesty International primarily targets governments but also reports on non governmental bodies and private individuals non state actors There are six key areas which Amnesty deals with 129 Women s children s minorities and indigenous rights Ending torture Abolition of the death penalty Rights of refugees Rights of prisoners of conscience Protection of human dignity Some specific aims are to abolish the death penalty 130 end extra judicial executions and disappearances ensure prison conditions meet international human rights standards ensure prompt and fair trial for all political prisoners ensure free education to all children worldwide decriminalize abortion fight impunity from systems of justice end the recruitment and use of child soldiers free all prisoners of conscience promote economic social and cultural rights for marginalized communities protect human rights defenders promote religious tolerance protect LGBT rights 131 stop torture and ill treatment stop unlawful killings in armed conflict uphold the rights of refugees migrants and asylum seekers and protect human dignity They also support worldwide decriminalisation of prostitution 132 Amnesty International at the 2009 Marcha Gay in Mexico City 20 June 2009 Amnesty International launched a free human rights learning mobile application called Amnesty Academy in October 2020 It offered learners across the globe access to courses both online and offline All courses are downloadable within the application which is available for both iOS and Android devices 133 Citizen Evidence Lab Edit Amnesty International managed by the Evidence Lab in the Crisis Response Programme created the Citizen Evidence Lab to support human rights organizations practitioners and others to take better advantage of the digital data streams critical for modern fact finding It is an online space to share best practices emerging techniques and tools for conducting investigations combating mis and dis information and contributing to a better informed public 134 such as HOWTOs Tools Case Studies and Stories about Digital Verification Data Science Remote Sensing Crowd Sourcing Well Being and Digital Security Country focus Edit Protesting Israel s policy against African refugees Tel Aviv 9 December 2011 Amnesty reports disproportionately on relatively more democratic and open countries 135 arguing that its intention is not to produce a range of reports which statistically represents the world s human rights abuses but rather to apply the pressure of public opinion to encourage improvements The demonstration effect of the behaviour of both key Western governments and major non Western states is an important factor as one former Amnesty Secretary General pointed out for many countries and a large number of people the United States is a model and according to one Amnesty manager large countries influence small countries 136 In addition with the end of the Cold War Amnesty felt that a greater emphasis on human rights in the North was needed to improve its credibility with its Southern critics by demonstrating its willingness to report on human rights issues in a truly global manner 136 According to one academic study as a result of these considerations the frequency of Amnesty s reports is influenced by a number of factors besides the frequency and severity of human rights abuses For example Amnesty reports significantly more than predicted by human rights abuses on more economically powerful states and on countries that receive US military aid on the basis that this Western complicity in abuses increases the likelihood of public pressure being able to make a difference 136 In addition around 1993 94 Amnesty consciously developed its media relations producing fewer background reports and more press releases to increase the impact of its reports Press releases are partly driven by news coverage to use existing news coverage as leverage to discuss Amnesty s human rights concerns This increases Amnesty s focus on the countries the media is more interested in 136 In 2012 Kristyan Benedict Amnesty UK s campaign manager whose main focus is Syria listed several countries as regimes who abuse peoples basic universal rights Burma Iran Israel North Korea and Sudan Benedict was criticized for including Israel in this short list on the basis that his opinion was garnered solely from his own visits with no other objective sources 137 138 Amnesty s country focus is similar to that of some other comparable NGOs notably Human Rights Watch between 1991 and 2000 Amnesty and HRW shared eight of ten countries in their top ten by Amnesty press releases 7 for Amnesty reports 136 In addition six of the 10 countries most reported on by Human Rights Watch in the 1990s also made The Economist s and Newsweek s most covered lists during that time 136 Funding EditAmnesty International is financed largely by fees and donations from its worldwide membership It says that it does not accept donations from governments or governmental organizations According to the AI website 139 these personal and unaffiliated donations allow Amnesty International AI to maintain full independence from any and all governments political ideologies economic interests or religions We neither seek nor accept any funds for human rights research from governments or political parties and we accept support only from businesses that have been carefully vetted By way of ethical fundraising leading to donations from individuals we are able to stand firm and unwavering in our defence of universal and indivisible human rights However Amnesty International has received grants over the past ten years from the UK Department for International Development 140 the European Commission 141 the United States State Department 142 143 and other governments 144 145 Amnesty International USA has received funding from the Rockefeller Foundation 146 but these funds are only used in support of its human rights education work 140 It has also received many grants from the Ford Foundation over the years 147 Criticism and controversies EditMain article Criticism of Amnesty International Criticism of Amnesty International includes publishing falsified reports racist senior staff secretly cooperating with the U K government excessively high pay for management underprotection of overseas staff jobs associating with organizations with a dubious record on human rights protection selection bias ideological and foreign policy bias against either non Western countries 148 or Western supported countries citation needed or bias for terrorist groups 149 A 2019 report also shows an internal toxic work environment 150 Numerous governments and their supporters have criticized Amnesty s criticism of their policies including those of Australia 151 Czech Republic 152 China 153 the Democratic Republic of the Congo 154 Egypt 155 India Iran Israel 138 Morocco 156 Qatar 157 Saudi Arabia 158 Vietnam 159 Russia 160 Nigeria 161 and the United States 162 for what they assert is one sided reporting or a failure to treat threats to security as a mitigating factor The actions of these governments and of other governments critical of Amnesty International have been the subject of human rights concerns voiced by Amnesty The Sudan Vision Daily a daily newspaper in Sudan compared Amnesty to the US National Endowment for Democracy and claimed it is in essence a British intelligence organization which is a part of the Government decision making system 163 164 General Edit 1990 Iraq soldiers war crimes Edit Main article Nayirah testimony In 1990 when the United States government was deciding whether or not to invade Iraq a Kuwaiti woman known to Congress by her first name only Nayirah testified to congress that when Iraq invaded Kuwait she stayed behind after some of her family left the country She said she was volunteering in a local hospital when Iraqi soldiers stole the incubators with children in them and left them to freeze to death Amnesty International which had human rights investigators in Kuwait confirmed the story and helped spread it The organization also inflated the number of children who were killed by the robbery to over 300 more than the number of incubators available in the city hospitals of the country Her testimony aired on ABC s Nightline and NBC Nightly News reaching an estimated audience between 35 and 53 million Americans 165 166 Seven senators cited Nayirah s testimony in their speeches backing the use of force 169 President George Bush repeated the story at least ten times in the following weeks 170 Her account of the atrocities helped to stir American opinion in favor of participation in the Gulf War 171 It was often cited by people including the members of Congress who voted to approve the Gulf War as one of the reasons to fight After the war it was found that the woman was lying the story was made up and her last name was not given because her father was a delegate for Kuwait s government at the same congressional hearing 172 2019 report on workplace bullying Edit Main article Criticism of Amnesty International 2019 Bullying Report In February 2019 Amnesty International s management team offered to resign after an independent report found what it called a toxic culture of workplace bullying Evidence of bullying harassment sexism and racism was uncovered after two 2018 suicides were investigated that of 30 year Amnesty veteran Gaetan Mootoo in Paris in May 2018 who left a note citing work pressures and that of 28 year old intern Rosalind McGregor in Geneva in July 2018 91 An internal survey by the Konterra group with a team of psychologists was conducted in January 2019 after the 2 employees had killed themselves in 2018 The report stated that Amnesty had a toxic work culture and that workers frequently cited mental and physical health issues as a result of their work for the organization The report found that 39 per cent of Amnesty International staff reported that they developed mental or physical health issues as the direct result of working at Amnesty The report concluded organisational culture and management failures are the root cause of most staff wellbeing issues 173 Elaborating on this the report mentioned that bullying public humiliation and other abuses of power are commonplace and routine practice by the management It also claimed the us versus them culture among employees and the severe lack of trust in the senior management at Amnesty 174 175 By October 2019 five of the seven members of the senior leadership team at Amnesty s international secretariat left the organization with generous redundancy packages 176 Among them Anna Neistat who was Gaetan Mootoo s senior manager directly implicated in the independent report on Mootoo s death According to Mootoo s former collaborator Salvatore Sagues Gaetan s case is merely the tip of the iceberg at Amnesty A huge amount of suffering is caused to employees Since the days of Salil Shetty when top management were being paid fabulous salaries Amnesty has become a multinational where the staff are seen as dispensable Human resources management is a disaster and nobody is prepared to stand up and be counted The level of impunity granted to Amnesty s bosses is simply unacceptable 177 After none of the managers responsible of bullying at Amnesty were held accountable a group of workers petitioned for Amnesty s chief Kumi Naidoo to resign On 5 December 2019 Naidoo resigned from his post of Amnesty s Secretary General citing ill health 100 and appointing Julie Verhaar as an interim Secretary General In their petition workers demanded her immediate resignation as well 2019 budgetary crisis Edit In May 2019 Amnesty International s Secretary General Kumi Naidoo admitted to a hole in the organization s budget of up to 17m in donor money to the end of 2020 In order to deal with the budgetary crisis Naidoo announced to staff that the organization s headquarters would have cut almost 100 jobs as a part of urgent restructuring Unite the Union the UK s biggest trade union said the redundancies were a direct result of overspending by the organisation s senior leadership team and have occurred despite an increase in income 178 Unite which represents Amnesty s staff feared that cuts would fall heaviest on lower income staff It said that in the previous year the top 23 highest earners at Amnesty International were paid a total of 2 6m an average of 113 000 per year Unite demanded a review of whether it is necessary to have so many managers in the organisation 179 Amnesty s budgetary crisis became public after the two staff suicides in 2019 A subsequent independent review of workplace culture found a state of emergency at the organization after a restructuring process Following several reports that labelled Amnesty a toxic workplace in October 2019 five of the seven high paid senior directors at Amnesty s international secretariat in London left the organization with generous redundancy packages 180 This included Anna Neistat who was a senior manager directly implicated in the independent report on the suicide of Amnesty s West Africa researcher Gaetan Mootoo in the organization s Paris office The size of exit packages granted to former senior management caused anger among other staff and an outcry among Amnesty s members After the resignation of Amnesty International s Secretary General Kumi Naidoo in December 2019 a new International Board was elected In addition to leading the recovery period of the international secretariat the Board also has to recruit a new Secretary General manage costs develop a new global strategy and ensure delivery of Amnesty s activities A new senior director Chief Financial Officer Nigel Armitt was appointed to the International Secretariat to manage the budgetary crisis The company stated that Armitt oversees financial management at the International Secretariat and is responsible for supporting and fostering the organisation s financial literacy and capability 181 2020 secret payout Edit In September 2020 The Times reported that Amnesty International paid 800 000 in compensation over the workplace suicide of Gaetan Mootoo and demanded his family keep the deal secret 182 The pre trial agreement between London based Amnesty s International Secretariat and Motoo s wife was reached on the condition that she keeps the deal secret by signing NDA This was done particularly to prevent discussing the settlement with the press or on social media The arrangement led to criticism on social media with people asking why an organisation such as Amnesty would condone the use of non disclosure agreements Shaista Aziz a co founder of the feminist advocacy group NGO Safe Space questioned on Twitter why the world s leading human rights organisation was employing such contracts 183 The source of the money was unknown Amnesty stated that the payout to Motoo s family will not be made from donations or membership fees 2021 accusation of systemic bias Edit In April 2021 The Guardian reported that the workers of Amnesty International alleged systemic bias and use of racist language by senior staff 184 The internal review at Amnesty s international secretariat the report of which was published in October 2020 but not press released recorded multiple examples of alleged racism reported by workers racial slurs systemic bias problematic comments towards religious practices being some of the examples 184 185 The staff at the Amnesty International UK based in London also made claims of racial discrimination 184 The report also documented use of the ethnic slur nigger with any objection from employees about its use being downplayed Vanessa Tsehaye the Horn of Africa Campaigner based in the UK has refused to comment as of April 2021 2022 report on systemic racism Edit In June 2022 a 106 page independent investigation by the management consultancy firm Global HPO Ltd GHPO concluded that Amnesty International UK AIUK exhibits institutional and systemic racism This report was fully accepted by Amnesty International and Amnesty International UK published the findings of the inquiry in April 2022 186 GHPO s independent investigation found that UKAIUK has failed to embed principles of anti racism into its own DNA and faces bullying issues within the organization 187 The overarching conclusions of the June 2022 investigation by GHPO are that Amnesty International UK exhibits institutional systemic racism Equality inclusion and anti racism are not embedded into the DNA at AIUK and The organisational culture is not inclusive 188 Furthermore the independent investigation accuses AIUK of the existence of a white savior and colonialist complex p 20 with an intolerant bullying culture p 74 Job applicants of African descent were screened out of the process at both the shortlisting and interview stage p 56 AIUK actively harmed staff from ethnic minority backgrounds p 66 Overt racism by senior staff included using the N word and micro aggressive behaviour such as the touching of black colleagues hair p 7 188 GHPO s report includes recommendations for improvement actions to be taken by the organization The alghemeiner reports that AIUK stated it accepted all the recommendations 189 and that the press insistence on describing Amnesty as a leading human rights group is furthermore problematic given the anti Jewish racism that the NGO has displayed for years Russia Edit 2019 accusations of illegal dismissal Edit Previously accusations of Amnesty s management s bias came from a worker at the organization s International Secretariat In September 2019 a statement circulated at the official website of Amnesty s representative office in Russia the office is part of the secretariat in London where Alexandre Sotov a former staff member alleged that management violated labor law ignores the needs of workers is biased and altogether unprofessional Amnesty s press secretary admitted that Sotov indeed worked as the organization s IT specialist and accused him of hacking Amnesty s website 190 191 It later emerged that Sotov was illegally dismissed from his post at Amnesty where he worked from 2012 until 2019 he was reinstalled at the organization in May 2020 by court order and paid by Amnesty a judicial compensation of 30 000 usd Moscow City court to which Sotov s claim was filed ruled that Sotov s dismissal was illegal Amnesty alleged the reason for his dismissal was absence from their office despite the fact that he was for several years a remote worker 192 2021 alteration of Alexei Navalny s status Edit Amnesty International s decision in February 2021 to strip Alexei Navalny s status as a Prisoner of Conscience due to comments made about migrants in 2007 and 2008 regarded as hate speech 193 provoked criticism from other human rights organisations and resignations from supporters 194 195 196 Amnesty stated that a person who has advocated violence or hatred is excluded from their current definition of a Prisoner of Conscience and that the use of the term was intended to emphasize the unjust nature of his detention and our opposition to his unfounded prosecution but upon reviewing the case the use of the term Prisoner of Conscience was found to be a mistake Amnesty apologised for poor timing which had allowed the Kremlin to weaponise the controversy against Navalny s supporters 197 Amnesty stated it still considered Navalny a political prisoner 198 An anonymous Amnesty employee 199 stated he believed a propaganda campaign was allegedly organized against Navalny by making his previous controversial comments more prominent Amnesty s decision was described by western media as a huge victory for Russian state propaganda which undermined Amnesty s support of Navalny s release 200 196 Following those accusations Amnesty International answered Reports that Amnesty s decision was influenced by the Russian state s smear campaign against Navalny are untrue At no point were statements falsely attributed to Navalny or information solely intended to discredit him taken into consideration Propaganda by the Russian authorities is recognizable as such 197 Amnesty later redesignated Navalny as a Prisoner of Conscience stating on 7 May 2021 that as an initial step in a review of its approach to the use of the term Prisoner of Conscience it will no longer exclude people from being called Prisoners of Conscience solely based on their conduct in the past as they recognize people s opinions and behaviour may evolve over time 193 201 United Kingdom EditDuring the early history of Amnesty International as it is now proven by various documents it was secretly supported by the Foreign Office In 1963 the FO instructed its operatives abroad to provide discreet support for Amnesty s campaigns In the same year Benenson wrote to Colonial Office Minister Lord Lansdowne a proposal to prop up a refugee counsellor on the border between the Bechuanaland Protectorate and apartheid South Africa Amnesty intended to assist people fleeing across the border from neighbouring South Africa but not those who were actively engaged in the struggle against apartheid Benenson wrote I would like to reiterate our view that these British territories should not be used for offensive political action by the opponents of the South African Government Communist influence should not be allowed to spread in this part of Africa and in the present delicate situation Amnesty International would wish to support Her Majesty s Government in any such policy 17 The year after the AI dropped Nelson Mandela as a prisoner of conscience because he was convicted of violence by the South African Government Mandela had also been a member of the South African Communist Party 202 In a trip to Haiti the British FO had also assisted Benenson in his mission to Haiti where he was disguised because of fear of the Haitians finding out that the British government sponsored his visit When his disguise was revealed Benenson was severely criticized by the media 17 In the British colony of Aden Hans Goran Franck the chairman of Amnesty s Swedish section wrote a report on allegations of torture at an interrogation centre run by the colonial government Amnesty refused to publish the report according to Benenson Amnesty general secretary Robert Swann had suppressed it in deference to the Foreign Office According to co founder Eric Baker both Benenson and Swann had met Foreign Secretary George Brown in September and told him that they were willing to hold up publication if the Foreign Office promised no more allegations of torture would surface again A memo by Lord Chancellor Gerald Gardiner a Labour Party politician states that Amnesty held the Swedish complaint as long as they could simply because Peter Benenson did not want to do anything to hurt a Labour government 17 Benenson then travelled to Aden and reported that he had never seen an uglier situation in his life He then said that British government agents had infiltrated Amnesty and suppress the report s publication Later documents surfaced implicating Benenson had connections to the British government which started the Harry letters affair 19 17 He then resigned claiming that British and American intelligence agents had infiltrated Amnesty and subverted its values 19 After this set of events which were dubbed by some the Amnesty Crisis of 1966 67 203 the relationship between Amnesty and the British Government was suspended AI vowed that in future it must not only be independent and impartial but must not be put into a position where anything else could even be alleged and the Foreign Office cautioned that for the time being our attitude to Amnesty International must be one of reserve 17 2010 CAGE controversy Edit Amnesty International suspended Gita Sahgal its gender unit head after she criticized Amnesty in February 2010 for its high profile associations with Moazzam Begg the director of Cageprisoners representing men in extrajudicial detention 204 205 To be appearing on platforms with Britain s most famous supporter of the Taliban Begg whom we treat as a human rights defender is a gross error of judgment she said 204 206 Sahgal argued that by associating with Begg and Cageprisoners Amnesty was risking its reputation on human rights 204 207 208 As a former Guantanamo detainee it was legitimate to hear his experiences but as a supporter of the Taliban it was absolutely wrong to legitimise him as a partner Sahgal said 204 She said she repeatedly brought the matter up with Amnesty for two years to no avail 209 A few hours after the article was published Sahgal was suspended from her position 210 Amnesty s Senior Director of Law and Policy Widney Brown later said Sahgal raised concerns about Begg and Cageprisoners to her personally for the first time a few days before sharing them with the Sunday Times 209 Sahgal issued a statement saying she felt that Amnesty was risking its reputation by associating with and thereby politically legitimizing Begg because Cageprisoners actively promotes Islamic Right ideas and individuals 210 She said the issue was not about Begg s freedom of opinion nor about his right to propound his views he already exercises these rights fully as he should The issue is the importance of the human rights movement maintaining an objective distance from groups and ideas that are committed to systematic discrimination and fundamentally undermine the universality of human rights 210 The controversy prompted responses by politicians the writer Salman Rushdie and journalist Christopher Hitchens among others who criticized Amnesty s association with Begg After her suspension and the controversy Sahgal was interviewed by numerous media and attracted international supporters She was interviewed on the US National Public Radio NPR on 27 February 2010 where she discussed the activities of Cageprisoners and why she deemed it inappropriate for Amnesty to associate with Begg 211 She said that Cageprisoners Asim Qureshi spoke supporting global jihad at a Hizb ut Tahrir rally 211 She stated that a best seller at Begg s bookshop was a book by Abdullah Azzam a mentor of Osama bin Laden and a founder of the terrorist organization Lashkar e Taiba 209 211 In a separate interview for the Indian Daily News amp Analysis Sahgal said that as Quereshi affirmed Begg s support for global jihad on aBBC World Service programme these things could have been stated in his Begg s introduction with Amnesty 212 She said that Begg s bookshop had published The Army of Madinah which she characterized as a jihad manual by Dhiren Barot 213 2011 Irene Khan payout Edit In February 2011 newspaper stories in the UK revealed that Irene Khan had received a payment of 533 103 from Amnesty International following her resignation from the organization on 31 December 2009 214 a fact pointed to from Amnesty s records for the 2009 2010 financial year The sum paid to her was more than four times her annual salary 132 490 214 The deputy secretary general Kate Gilmore who also resigned in December 2009 received an ex gratia payment of 320 000 214 215 Peter Pack the chairman of Amnesty s International Executive Committee IEC initially stated on 19 February 2011 The payments to outgoing secretary general Irene Khan shown in the accounts of AI Amnesty International Ltd for the year ending 31 March 2010 include payments made as part of a confidential agreement between AI Ltd and Irene Khan 215 and that It is a term of this agreement that no further comment on it will be made by either party 214 The payment and AI s initial response to its leakage to the press led to a considerable outcry Philip Davies the Conservative MP for Shipley criticized the payments telling the Daily Express I am sure people making donations to Amnesty in the belief they are alleviating poverty never dreamed they were subsidising a fat cat payout This will disillusion many benefactors 215 On 21 February 2011 Peter Pack issued a further statement in which he said that the payment was a unique situation that was in the best interest of Amnesty s work and that there would be no repetition of it 214 He stated that the new secretary general with the full support of the IEC has initiated a process to review our employment policies and procedures to ensure that such a situation does not happen again 214 Pack also stated that Amnesty was fully committed to applying all the resources that we receive from our millions of supporters to the fight for human rights 214 On 25 February 2011 Pack sent a letter to Amnesty members and staff In 2008 it stated the IEC decided not to prolong Khan s contract for a third term In the following months IEC discovered that due to British employment law it had to choose between three options offering Khan a third term discontinuing her post and in their judgement risking legal consequences or signing a confidential agreement and issuing a pay compensation 216 2019 Kurdish hunger strike Edit In April 2019 30 Kurdish activists some of whom are on an indefinite hunger strike occupied Amnesty International s building in London in a peaceful protest in order to speak out against Amnesty s silence on the isolation of Abdullah Ocalan in a Turkish prison 217 The hunger strikers have also spoken out about delaying tactics by Amnesty and being denied access to toilets during the occupation despite this being a human right 218 219 Two of the hunger strikers Nahide Zengin and Mehmet Sait Zengin received paramedic treatment and were taken to hospital during the occupation Late in the evening of 26 April 2019 the London Met police arrested 21 remaining occupiers 220 Ukraine Edit On 4 August 2022 during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Amnesty International published a report accusing the Armed Forces of Ukraine of endangering civilians through their combat tactics particularly stating that Ukraine had set up military bases in residential areas including schools and hospitals and launched attacks from populated civilian areas 221 Oksana Pokalchuk leader of Amnesty Ukraine said that the report was compiled by foreign observers without any assistance from local staff 222 She resigned from her post and left the organization following the publication of the report 223 Human rights lawyers Wayne Jordash and Anna Mykytenko argued that the 4 August report contained little to none of the military or humanitarian context essential to any reasoned view of what was or was not necessary in the prevailing military context and that the report was short on facts and analysis and long on intemperate accusation 224 RUSI researcher Jack Watling stated that you need to balance military necessity with proportionality so you need to take reasonable measures to protect civilians but that must be balanced with your orders to defend an area thus the report s suggestions that Ukrainian forces should relocate to a nearby field or forest demonstrated a lack of understanding of military operations and damages the credibility of the research 225 RUSI researcher Natia Seskuria called the report out of touch with current reality and stated that the Ukrainian army can legitimately house in the towns they defend even if they have civilians nearby because the Ukrainian authorities constantly call for evacuations from frontline towns and forced relocations of civilian population would violate international humanitarian law 226 Marc Garlasco a United Nations war crimes investigator specializing in civilian harm mitigation said that Ukraine can place forces in areas they are defending and there is no requirement to stand shoulder to shoulder in a field this isn t the 19th century and expressed concern that the report could endanger Ukrainian civilians by giving Russian forces an excuse to expand their targeting of civilian areas 227 Journalist Tom Mutch stated that he had participated in and reported on an evacuation of civilians in one of Amnesty s cases which he contrasted with Amnesty s statement that it was not aware that the Ukrainian military who located themselves in civilian structures in residential areas asked or assisted civilians to evacuate nearby buildings 225 The Kyiv Independent editorial team strongly criticized the report pointing out flaws in reasoning and stating that the Amnesty International could not properly articulate who the main perpetrator of violence in Ukraine was 228 The report sparked outrage in Ukraine and the West Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Amnesty of trying to amnesty the terrorist state and shift the responsibility from the aggressor to the victim while Ukraine s Minister of Foreign Affairs Dmytro Kuleba stated that the report creates a false balance between the oppressor and the victim 227 229 230 The report was praised by several Russian and pro Russian figures including the Russian embassy in London causing further criticism against the organization 231 On 4 August Callamard dismissed critics of the report as trolls 232 and the next day said the organization fully stands by our research and that the findings were based on evidence gathered during extensive investigations which were subject to the same rigorous standards and due diligence processes as all of Amnesty International s work 233 On 7 August Amnesty stated that it deeply regret ted the distress and anger that the report ha d caused 234 On 12 August Amnesty International reported that the conclusions were not conveyed with the delicacy and accuracy that should be expected from Amnesty and said that this also applies to the subsequent communication and reaction of the International Secretariat to public criticism The organization condemned the instrumentalization of the press release by the Russian authorities and promised that the report will be verified by independent experts 235 236 Awards and honours Edit In 2018 AI stripped Myanmar s leader Aung San Suu Kyi of her highest honour the Ambassador of Conscience Award In 1977 Amnesty International was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for having contributed to securing the ground for freedom for justice and thereby also for peace in the world 237 In 1984 Amnesty International received the Four Freedoms Award in the category of Freedom of Speech 238 In 1991 Amnesty International was awarded the journalistic prize Golden Doves for Peace by the Archivio Disarmo Research Center in Italy 239 Cultural impact EditHuman rights concerts Edit Main article Human rights concerts Opening stages of the 19 September 1988 show at Philadelphia s John F Kennedy Stadium A Conspiracy of Hope was a short tour of six benefit concerts on behalf of Amnesty International that took place in the United States during June 1986 The purpose of the tour was not to raise funds but rather to increase awareness of human rights and of Amnesty s work on its 25th anniversary The shows were headlined by U2 Sting and Bryan Adams and also featured Peter Gabriel Lou Reed Joan Baez and The Neville Brothers The last three shows featured a reunion of The Police At a press conference in each city at related media events and through their music at the concerts themselves the artists engaged with the public on themes of human rights and human dignity The six concerts were the first of what subsequently became known collectively as the Human Rights Concerts a series of music events and tours staged by Amnesty International USA between 1986 and 1998 Human Rights Now was a worldwide tour of twenty benefit concerts on behalf of Amnesty International that took place over six weeks in 1988 Held not to raise funds but to increase awareness of both the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on its 40th anniversary and the work of Amnesty International the shows featured Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Sting Peter Gabriel Tracy Chapman and Youssou N Dour plus guest artists from each of the countries where concerts were held Artists for Amnesty Edit Amnesty International through its Artists for Amnesty programme has also endorsed various cultural media works for what its leadership often consider accurate or educational treatments of real world topics that fall within the range of Amnesty s concern A is for Auschwitz At the Death House Door Blood Diamond 240 Bordertown Catch a Fire In Prison My Whole Life Invictus Lord of War Rendition The Constant Gardener Tibet Beyond Fear Trouble the Water 12 Years a Slave Django Unchained The HelpSee also EditAmbassador of Conscience Award 100 Days Campaign Amnesty International UK Media Awards List of Amnesty International UK Media Awards winners List of peace activists World Coalition Against the Death Penalty Scholars at RiskReferences EditNotes Edit a b The anthropologist Linda Rabben refers to the origin of Amnesty as a creation myth with a kernel of truth The immediate impetus to form Amnesty did come from Peter Benenson s righteous indignation while reading a newspaper in the London tube on 19 November 1960 241 The historian Tom Buchanan traced the origins story to a radio broadcast by Peter Benenson in 1962 The 4 March 1962 BBC news story did not refer to a toast to liberty but Benenson said his tube ride was on 19 December 1960 Buchanan was unable to find the newspaper article about the Portuguese students in The Daily Telegraph for either month Buchanan found many news stories reporting on the repressive Portuguese political arrests in The Times for November 1960 96 Citations Edit a b c Who we are Amnesty International Retrieved 16 March 2015 a b Dr Agnes Callamard appointed as Secretary General of Amnesty International amnesty org 29 March 2021 Retrieved 4 April 2021 Amnesty International s Statute www amnesty org Wong Wendy 2012 Internal Affairs How the Structure of NGOs Transforms Human Rights Cornell University Press p 84 doi 10 7591 j cttq43kj inactive 31 December 2022 ISBN 978 0 8014 5079 2 JSTOR 10 7591 j cttq43kj 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of December 2022 link Srivastava Swati 2022 Shadowing for Human Rights through Amnesty International Hybrid Sovereignty in World Politics Cambridge University Press pp 185 228 doi 10 1017 9781009204453 007 ISBN 978 1 009 20445 3 a b c Benenson Peter 28 May 1961 The Forgotten Prisoners The Observer Retrieved 28 May 2011 About Amnesty International Amnesty International Retrieved 20 July 2008 Childs Peter Storry Mike eds 2002 Amnesty International Encyclopedia of Contemporary British Culture London Routledge pp 22 23 AGNI Online Amnesty International Myth and Reality by Linda Rabben agnionline bu edu 15 October 2001 Retrieved 10 June 2021 McKinney Seamus 29 September 2018 Sir Louis Blom Cooper Campaigning lawyer had strong links with Northern Ireland The Irish News Retrieved 10 June 2021 Keane Elizabeth 2006 An Irish Statesman and Revolutionary The Nationalist and Internationalist Politics of Sean MacBride I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 125 0 Wheeler Douglas L Opello Walter C 2010 Historical Dictionary of Portugal Scarecrow Press p xxvi Benenson P 1983 Memoir Buchanan T 2002 The Truth Will Set You Free The Making of Amnesty International Journal of Contemporary History 37 4 575 97 doi 10 1177 00220094020370040501 JSTOR 3180761 S2CID 154183908 a b McVeigh Tracy 29 May 2011 Amnesty International marks 50 years of fighting for free speech The Observer London Report 1962 Amnesty International 1963 a b c d e f g Sellars Kirsten January 2009 Peter Benenson in David P Forsythe ed New York Oxford University Press 2009 pp 162 165 The Encyclopaedia of Human Rights Larsen Egon 1979 A flame in barbed wire the story of Amnesty International 1st American ed New York Norton ISBN 978 0393012132 OCLC 4832507 a b c d Peter Benenson The Independent 28 February 2005 Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 23 October 2020 a b Power Jonathan 1981 Amnesty International the Human Rights Story McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 050597 1 Amnesty International Report 1968 69 Amnesty International 1969 Amnesty International Report 1979 Amnesty International 1980 a b Monahan Mark 4 October 2008 Hot ticket The Secret Policeman s Ball at the Royal Albert Hall London The Daily Telegraph UK Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 The Nobel Peace Prize 1977 Presentation Speech Nobel Prize United Nations Prize in the field of Human Rights PDF Amnesty International is accused of espionage PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 March 2009 When the State Kills The Death Penalty Vs Human Rights Amnesty International 1989 ISBN 978 0862101640 Russell James M 2002 The Ambivalence about the Globalization of Telecommunications The Story of Amnesty International Shell Oil Company and Nigeria Journal of Human Rights 1 3 405 416 doi 10 1080 14754830210156625 S2CID 144174755 Retrieved 3 March 2013 Legal lessons of Pinochet case BBC News 2 March 2000 Retrieved 23 April 2010 uncredited 31 January 2000 Pinochet appeal fails BBC News Retrieved 9 February 2009 Amnesty International News Service Amnesty International 26th International Council Meeting Media briefing 15 August 2003 Retrieved 9 January 2011 Amnesty International Report 2002 Amnesty International 2003 Saunders Joe 19 November 2001 Revisiting Humanitarian Intervention Post September 11 Carnegie Council for Ethics in international Affairs Retrieved 24 April 2016 American Gulag The Washington Post 26 May 2005 Retrieved 2 October 2006 Bush says Amnesty report absurd BBC News 31 May 2005 Retrieved 2 October 2006 endtorture org International Campaign against Torture PDF Amnesty International Report 2005 the state of the world s human rights Amnesty International 2004 ISBN 978 1 887204 42 2 Women s Rights PDF Amnesty International USA Archived from the original PDF on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 5 November 2009 Reports Disastrous Iraqi humanitarian crisis CNN 17 March 2008 Archived from the original on 21 March 2008 Retrieved 17 March 2008 Koutsoukis Jason 3 July 2009 Israel used human shields Amnesty Melbourne Fairfax Digital Retrieved 3 July 2009 UN must ensure Goldstone inquiry recommendations are implemented Amnesty International 15 September 2009 Turkmenistan Amnesty International Bright Martin 7 February 2010 Gita Sahgal A Statement The Spectator Retrieved 18 March 2010 a b Smith Joan Joan Smith Amnesty shouldn t support men like Moazzam Begg A prisoner of conscience can turn into an apologist for extremism The Independent 11 February 2010 Retrieved 17 February 2010 Amnesty International on its work with Moazzam Begg and Cageprisoners Amnesty International 11 February 2010 Retrieved 18 March 2010 Salman Rushdie s statement on Amnesty International The Sunday Times 21 February 2010 MacShane Denis 10 February 2010 Letter To Amnesty International from Denis MacShane Member of British Parliament Archived from the original on 16 February 2010 Retrieved 17 February 2010 Phillips Melanie 14 February 2010 The human wrongs industry spits out one of its own The Spectator UK Retrieved 23 February 2010 Plait Phil 15 February 2010 Amnesty International loses sight of its original purpose Slate Bright Martin Amnesty International Moazzam Begg and the Bravery of Gita Sahgal Archived 11 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Spectator 7 February 2010 Misalliance Amnesty has lent spurious legitimacy to extremists who spurn its values The Times 12 February 2010 Retrieved 17 February 2010 Cohen Nick We abhor torture but that requires paying a price Spineless judges third rate politicians and Amnesty prefer an easy life to fighting for liberty The Observer 14 February 2010 Retrieved 17 February 2010 President Bush cancels visit to Switzerland Amnesty International 6 February 2011 Retrieved 8 February 2011 Amnesty International 50 years on Vimeo Vimeo 23 May 2011 Kumar S Vijay 11 August 2012 Amnesty wants U N probe into Sri Lanka war crimes The Hindu Chennai India Gur Haviv Rettig Amnesty UK official in hot water over Jewish MPs tweet www timesofisrael com Retrieved 2 February 2022 Wulfhorst Ellen 18 August 2014 National Guard called to Missouri town roiled by police shooting of teen Reuters Retrieved 18 August 2014 Geidner Chris 14 August 2014 Amnesty International Takes Unprecedented U S Action In Ferguson Buzzfeed Retrieved 18 August 2014 Pearce Matt Molly Hennessy Fiske Tina Susman 16 August 2014 Some warn that Gov Jay Nixon s curfew for Ferguson Mo may backfire Los Angeles Times Retrieved 18 August 2014 Reilly Mollie 17 August 2014 Amnesty International Calls For Investigation Of Ferguson Police Tactics The Huffington Post Retrieved 18 August 2014 Amnesty International Sends Human Rights Delegation to Ferguson Missouri Amnesty International Retrieved 19 August 2014 Amnesty Votes Down Proposal for U K Campaign Against anti Semitism Haaretz Retrieved 2 February 2022 Winer Stuart Amnesty International rejects call to fight anti Semitism www timesofisrael com Retrieved 2 February 2022 Amnesty International Rejects Motion to Fight Anti Semitism at Annual Conference Tablet Magazine 27 April 2015 Retrieved 2 February 2022 a b c Norfolk Andrew Amnesty director s links to global network of Islamists The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 23 February 2022 a b Norfolk Andrew A shadowy web traced back to Bradford The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 23 February 2022 Politics of demonization breeding division and fear Amnesty International 22 February 2017 Retrieved 26 February 2017 Suspend Saudi Arabia from UN Human Rights Council Amnesty International 29 June 2016 UN Shameful pandering to Saudi Arabia over children killed in Yemen conflict Amnesty International 7 June 2016 Rights groups Suspend Saudi Arabia from U N Human Rights Council over war crimes Salon 29 June 2016 Amnesty campaigns manager equates Israel with Islamic State www jewishnews co uk Retrieved 2 February 2022 Amnesty manager compares Israel to Islamic State www thejc com Retrieved 2 February 2022 Untersinger Martin 22 December 2016 Comment une ONG fantome a tente d espionner Amnesty International Le Monde Retrieved 27 December 2016 Fox Brewster Thomas 21 December 2016 This Fake Nonprofit Has Been Accused Of Spying On Real Human Rights Activists Forbes Retrieved 27 December 2016 Shetty Salil February 2017 Amnesty International Report 2016 17 Part 1 Foreword and Regional Overviews p 12 Amnesty International s director in Turkey charged with helping terror groups Canadian Broadcasting Corporation The Associated Press 8 October 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint others link UN Nuclear weapons ban is an antidote to cynical brinkmanship Amnesty International 7 July 2017 Amnesty International Report 2017 18 The state of the world s human rights Amnesty International Luhn Alec 15 October 2018 Amnesty International activist abducted beaten and faced mock execution in Russia The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Amnesty International s statement far from truth attempt to influence probe into its illegalities MHA The Economic Times Retrieved 5 February 2021 Mohan Rohini 9 January 2017 Opinion Narendra Modi s Crackdown on Civil Society in India The New York Times Retrieved 29 October 2018 Bhalla Nita India uses foreign funding law to harass charities rights groups U S Retrieved 29 October 2018 Kazmin Amy 30 July 2018 Indians sound alarm over Orwellian data collection system Financial Times Retrieved 29 October 2018 a b Das Krishna N 26 October 2018 Amnesty India says raid and frozen accounts aimed at silencing government critics The Japan Times Online ISSN 0447 5763 Retrieved 29 October 2018 The UN wants India to stop trying to starve charities that are critical of the government Business Insider Retrieved 29 October 2018 Abiodun Eromosele November 2018 Amnesty International Wants Nigerian Security Forces Held Accountable for Killing Shiites Egypt arrests 19 rights activists lawyers Amnesty Deutsche Welle 1 November 2018 Retrieved 23 December 2018 BELARUS AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CONDEMNS EXECUTION OF TWO MORE PRISONERS Amnesty International 5 December 2018 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Black realtors case One more executed in Belarus BelSat 28 November 2018 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Belarus Amnesty International condemns execution of two more prisoners Viasna 96 5 December 2018 Retrieved 7 December 2018 a b Amnesty management team offers to resign over toxic culture of bullying RTE News 23 February 2019 Retrieved 24 February 2019 UK s Labour Party calls for PM to prevent Assange s extradition Al Jazeera 12 April 2019 Amnesty and ITV offices occupied to break the silence over jailed Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan The Canary date 24 April 2019 24 April 2019 Amnesty supports legal action to stop chilling spy web www amnesty org 13 May 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Sabbagh Dan 18 May 2019 Israeli firm linked to WhatsApp spyware attack faces lawsuit The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 6 June 2019 a b Buchanan Tom October 2002 The Truth Will Set You Free The Making of Amnesty International Journal of Contemporary History 37 4 575 597 doi 10 1177 00220094020370040501 JSTOR 3180761 S2CID 154183908 Retrieved 25 September 2008 New EU post to protect European Way of Life slammed as grotesque Reuters 10 September 2019 EU chief under fire over protecting way of life portfolio BBC News 11 September 2019 1 Archived 6 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine India West News a b Amnesty International s Secretary General steps down www amnesty org 5 December 2019 Retrieved 5 December 2019 Homan Timothy R 15 August 2020 Pressure builds on US to respond to brutal crackdown in Belarus The Hill Retrieved 19 August 2020 More than 1 100 villagers killed in Nigeria this year Amnesty www aljazeera com 24 August 2020 Retrieved 25 August 2020 Teens killed by Angolan police enforcing virus curbs Amnesty Aljazeera 25 August 2020 Retrieved 25 August 2020 Anwar Nessa 17 August 2020 Governments have collected large amounts of data to fight the coronavirus That s raising privacy concerns CNBC Retrieved 19 August 2020 Amnesty International to halt India operations BBC News 29 September 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2020 Amnesty launches human rights learning app to equip next generation of activists Amnesty International 29 October 2020 Retrieved 29 October 2020 At least 54 killed in Ethiopia massacre says Amnesty The Guardian 2 November 2020 Retrieved 3 November 2020 Ethiopia over 50 killed in horrendous attack on village by armed group Amnesty International 2 November 2020 Retrieved 3 November 2020 Amnesty denounces S G s tweet that alluded Israel assassinated Arafat The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 2 February 2022 Pfeffer Anshel Israel leaks Amnesty report on apartheid against Palestinians The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Daventry Michael Amnesty International chief retracts Israel murdered Arafat claim www jewishnews co uk Retrieved 2 February 2022 China Draconian repression of Muslims in Xinjiang amounts to crimes against humanity Amnesty International 10 June 2021 Retrieved 19 January 2022 Berger Miriam 1 February 2022 Amnesty International joining other human rights groups says Israel is committing the crime of apartheid Washington Post Retrieved 2 February 2022 a b Israeli policies against Palestinians amount to apartheid Amnesty BBC News 1 February 2022 Retrieved 2 February 2022 Deutch Gabby 11 March 2022 Israel shouldn t exist as a Jewish state Amnesty USA director tells Democratic group Jewish Insider Retrieved 12 March 2022 Amnesty USA Head Criticized for Saying Israel Shouldn t Exist As a Jewish State Jewish Journal 11 March 2022 Retrieved 12 March 2022 Amnesty International official is opposed to Israel as a Jewish state Jewish Telegraphic Agency 11 March 2022 Retrieved 12 March 2022 Amnesty s US director Israel shouldn t be Jewish state rather safe Jewish space report www timesofisrael com Retrieved 12 March 2022 Russia Authorities close down Amnesty International s Moscow Office Amnesty International 8 April 2022 Retrieved 11 October 2022 AFP Russland schliesst parteinahe deutsche Stiftungen Statute of Amnesty International Amnesty International Amnesty International Founding Structure and Lost Vision NGO Monitor Retrieved 4 December 2014 New Secretary General Kumi Naidoo pledges support for African human rights defenders to hold the powerful to account Amnesty International 17 August 2018 Retrieved 26 September 2018 AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL CHARITY registered charity no 294230 Charity Commission for England and Wales AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL UK SECTION CHARITABLE TRUST registered charity no 1051681 Charity Commission for England and Wales Clarke Anne Marie 2001 Diplomacy of Conscience Amnesty International and Changing Human Rights Norms Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05743 9 AI s Focus Amnesty volunteer org Death Penalty www amnesty org Nagengast Carole 1997 Women Minorities and Indigenous Peoples Universalism and Cultural Relativity Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 53 3 349 369 JSTOR 3630958 Why Amnesty opposes the death penalty without exception www amnesty org Retrieved 17 June 2019 LGBTI rights www amnesty org Archived from the original on 19 June 2018 Retrieved 30 May 2018 Bolton Doug 11 August 2015 Amnesty International backs worldwide decriminalisation of prostitution The Independent Archived from the original on 13 August 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2019 Amnesty launches human rights learning app to equip next generation of activists Amnesty International 29 October 2020 Retrieved 29 October 2020 About Amnesty s Citizen Evidence Lab CITIZEN EVIDENCE LAB 27 August 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2021 Colombia Amnesty International response to Andres Ballesteros et al Archived 6 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine AMR 23 006 2007 21 February 2007 Retrieved on 20 January 2012 a b c d e f Ronand James Ramos Howard Rodgers Kathleen 2005 Transnational Information Politics NGO Human Rights Reporting 1986 2000 PDF International Studies Quarterly pp 557 587 Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Dysch Marcus 19 July 2012 Amnesty International defends official accused of anti Israel bias Amnesty International Retrieved 27 February 2013 a b Peretz Martin 26 August 2010 Amnesty International Official Calls Israel A Scum State The New Republic Retrieved 5 July 2016 Who finances Amnesty International s work Amnesty International 28 May 1961 Archived from the original on 10 February 2015 Retrieved 4 December 2016 a b Amnesty International Charity Limited Report and financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2011 p 8 Paragraph 10 Amnesty International Limited and Amnesty International Charity Limited Report and financial statements for the year ended 31 March 2007 PDF p 45 Note 17 Report of Government Foreign Funding in Hebrew 2009 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2012 Report of Government Foreign Funding in Hebrew 2008 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2012 Amnesty International 2010 Report Page 10 Indicator 8 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2012 Amnesty International INGO Accountability Charter Global Compliance Report 2009 Page 3 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2012 ORDERS OF MAGNITUDE 4 March 2016 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 10 June 2021 Grants All Ford Foundation Retrieved 27 October 2020 Bernstein Dennis 2002 Interview Amnesty on Jenin Dennis Bernstein and Dr Francis Boyle Discuss the Politics of Human Rights Covert Action Quarterly Archived from the original on 16 April 2008 Retrieved 5 August 2009 Amnesty Int s lies about mass executions in Iran in 1988 UK Scribd McVeigh Karen 6 February 2019 Amnesty International has toxic working culture report finds The Guardian Australia rejects Amnesty s bribery allegations as slur on border police Deutsche Welle 29 October 2015 The Amnesty International 2015 Report alleging discrimination in primary schools is unfounded but not criminal says the Czech prosecutor Archived 12 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine New Europe 11 March 2016 The U S and China This Week U S China Policy Foundation 16 February 2001 Retrieved 15 May 2006 DR Congo blasts Amnesty International report on repression The Namibian 14 January 2000 Retrieved 15 May 2006 Egypt says Amnesty International s accusations are biased and politicized Ahram Online 28 September 2019 Retrieved 10 September 2021 In Absence of Evidence Morocco Questions Context of Latest Amnesty International Report FM www mapnews ma Retrieved 2 July 2020 Qatar rejects rights group report on rampant labour abuse Reuters 2 December 2015 Saudi Arabia outraged by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch s criticism Ya Libnan 1 July 2016 The Cream of The Diplomatic Crop from Ha Noi Thien Ly Bửu Toa Retrieved 15 May 2006 Russian official blasts Amnesty International over Chechnya refugees Human Rights Violations in Chechnya 22 August 2003 Retrieved 15 May 2006 Adebayo Bukola Amnesty accuses Nigerian troops of raping women rescued from Boko Haram CNN Retrieved 15 July 2018 Press Briefing By Scott McClellan The White House 25 May 2005 Retrieved 30 May 2006 Amnesty An Unmasked Intelligence Face of the British Diplomacy 2 2 Archived 5 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Sudan Vision Daily December 2016 Retrieved 4 October 2017 Amnesty And UK Supreme Court An Unmasked Intelligence Face Of The British Diplomacy Modern Ghana Retrieved 14 August 2018 Sriramesh p 864 Rowse How to build support for war Walton p 772 Eemeren p 70 This was viewed as important since the January 10 1991 authorization to use force passed by only 5 senate votes 167 168 Walton p 771 Krauss Clifford 12 January 1992 CONGRESSMAN SAYS GIRL WAS CREDIBLE The New York Times How False Testimony and a Massive U S Propaganda Machine Bolstered George H W Bush s War on Iraq archived from the original on 21 December 2021 retrieved 11 December 2018 Radical change needed at Amnesty International after new report reveals toxic work culture Unite the Union 7 February 2019 McVeigh Karen 6 February 2019 Amnesty International has toxic working culture report finds The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 September 2019 Document www amnesty org Retrieved 20 September 2019 O Neill Sean 28 May 2019 Anger over big payoffs for bosses at toxic Amnesty The Times Retrieved 18 October 2019 Can Amnesty recover from this tragic death RFI 26 May 2019 Amnesty International to make almost 100 staff redundant The Guardian 9 June 2019 Amnesty International staff braced for redundancies The Guardian 27 April 2019 O Neill Sean 28 May 2019 Anger over big payoffs for bosses at toxic Amnesty The Times Retrieved 30 January 2020 Secretary General and Coalition Leadership Team Amnesty International 31 January 2020 Amnesty s secret 800 000 payout after suicide of Gaetan Mootoo www thetimes co uk Retrieved 11 October 2020 Amnesty International criticised for using non disclosure agreement in relation to alleged 800k payment www thirdsector co uk Retrieved 11 October 2020 a b c Amnesty International has culture of white privilege report finds The Guardian 20 April 2021 Retrieved 20 April 2021 Document www amnesty org Retrieved 20 April 2021 Statement Racism inquiry Bozinovska Elizabeta 18 June 2022 Global HPO Amnesty International UK is Institutionally Racist Focus Washington Navigating the Swamp Retrieved 20 July 2022 a b Good people Doing good things Who cannot do bad things An Inquiry into institutional racism at Amnesty International UK PDF amnesty org uk Global HPO Ltd Retrieved 20 July 2022 Algemeiner The 22 June 2022 Where Was the Media When an Independent Investigation Found Amnesty Int l to Be Institutionally Racist Algemeiner com Algemeiner com Retrieved 20 July 2022 Rossijskoe otdelenie Amnesty International zayavilo o zahvate svoego sajta RBC in Russian Retrieved 28 January 2022 Rossijskoe otdelenie Amnesty International zayavilo o zahvate sajta organizacii Kommersant in Russian Retrieved 28 January 2022 Sud obyazal Amnesty International vyplatit 2 3 mln rublej eks sotrudniku RIA in Russian Retrieved 28 January 2022 a b Statement on Alexei Navalny s status as Prisoner of Conscience Amnesty International 7 May 2021 Retrieved 9 May 2021 Amnesty redesignates Russia s Navalny as prisoner of conscience Human Rights News Al Jazeera 7 May 2021 Retrieved 10 May 2021 White Megan 25 February 2021 Amnesty strips Alexei Navalny of prisoner of conscience status LBC Retrieved 10 May 2021 a b Brown David Supporters quit Amnesty International over betrayal of Alexei Navalny The Times Retrieved 28 February 2021 a b Amnesty International statement on Aleksei Navalny Amnesty International 25 February 2021 Retrieved 28 February 2021 How the Kremlin outwitted Amnesty International The Economist 4 March 2021 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Navalny s Failure To Renounce His Nationalist Past May Be Straining His Support rferl org 25 February 2021 Archived from the original on 14 April 2021 Amnesty strips Alexei Navalny of prisoner of conscience status BBC News 24 February 2021 Retrieved 28 February 2021 Amnesty apologises to Alexei Navalny over prisoner of conscience status BBC News 7 May 2021 Retrieved 10 May 2021 Mandela and the South African Communist Party www sahistory org za Retrieved 27 October 2020 Buchanan Tom Amnesty International in Crisis 1966 7 Oxford Academic a b c d Kerbaj Richard 7 February 2010 Amnesty International is damaged by Taliban link An official at the human rights charity deplores its work with a jihadist The Sunday Times London Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2010 Gupta Rahila Double standards on human rights Where does Amnesty International stand on women s rights after suspending Gita Sahgal for criticising links with Moazzam Begg The Guardian 9 February 2010 Retrieved 11 February 2010 Aaronovitch David 9 February 2010 How Amnesty chose the wrong poster boy Collaboration with Moazzam Begg an extremist who has supported jihadi movements looks like a serious mistake The Times London Archived from the original on 10 May 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2010 Bright Martin Gita Sahgal A Statement Spectator 7 February 2010 Retrieved 10 February 2010 The Spectator 7 February 2010 Archived from the original on 16 March 2010 Retrieved 18 March 2010 Joan Smith Amnesty shouldn t support men like Moazzam Begg A prisoner of conscience can turn into an apologist for extremism The Independent 11 February 2010 Retrieved 11 February 2010 a b c Guttenplan D D Margaronis Maria Who Speaks for Human Rights The Nation Retrieved 12 March 2016 a b c Sahgal Gita 13 May 2010 Gita Sahgal A Statement The New York Review of Books Retrieved 30 September 2015 a b c Is Amnesty International Supporting a Jihadist All Things Considered NPR 27 February 2010 Retrieved 28 February 2010 Chakraberty Sumit Gita Sahgal talks about human wrongs Daily News amp Analysis 21 February 2010 Retrieved 28 February 2010 Dangerous liaisons Daily News and Analysis 18 April 2010 Retrieved 27 April 2010 a b c d e f g Mason Tania Charity Commission has no jurisdiction over board member s payment from Amnesty civilsociety co uk 21 February 2011 Retrieved 21 February 2011 a b c Chapman John Amnesty boss gets secret 500 000 payout Daily Express 19 February 2011 Retrieved 21 February 2011 Pack Peter A letter to all AI members and staff from the International Executive Committee PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Protest at Amnesty International office www amnesty org 25 April 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Kurdish Hunger Strikers Occupy Amnesty International HQ Byline Times 26 April 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Sabin Lamiat 26 April 2019 Hunger strikers accuse Amnesty International of hypocrisy Morning Star Retrieved 17 June 2019 Glynn Sarah 26 April 2019 Solidarity with the activists occupying the offices of Amnesty International in London Scottish Solidarity with Kurdistan Retrieved 17 June 2019 Ukraine Ukrainian fighting tactics endanger civilians Amnesty International 4 August 2022 Archived from the original on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 9 August 2022 Hayda Julian 5 August 2022 Amnesty International s report criticizing Ukraine is dividing the rights group NPR Retrieved 6 August 2022 Pietsch Bryan 8 August 2022 Amnesty International s Ukraine chief resigns after report criticizes Kyiv The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Jordash Wayne Mykytenko Anna 5 August 2022 What is wrong with Amnesty International s Conclusions that Ukrainian fighting tactics endanger civilians Ukrainska Pravda Archived from the original on 7 August 2022 Retrieved 7 August 2022 a b Mutch Tom 8 August 2022 Why did Amnesty International Ignore My Warnings about their Ukraine Investigation Byline Times Archived from the original on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 9 August 2022 Skandal vokrug obvinenij Amnesty protiv Ukrainy mogut li VSU ispolzovat shkoly i bolnicy BBC News Russian a b Hopkins Valerie Gibbons Neff Thomas 7 August 2022 Amnesty International Assessment That Ukraine Put Civilians in Harm s Way Stirs Outrage The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 12 August 2022 Retrieved 13 August 2022 Editorial It is Amnesty International s report that endangers Ukrainian civilians The Kyiv Independent 8 August 2022 Retrieved 10 August 2022 Askew Joshua 5 August 2022 Outrage in Kyiv after Amnesty accuses it of endangering civilian life Euronews Grynszpan Emmanuel 6 August 2022 Amnesty International in turmoil after publication of its report on the war in Ukraine Le Monde Pro Moscow Figures Hail Controversial Amnesty Report on Kyiv War Tactics The Moscow Times 5 August 2022 Amnesty got it terribly wrong Politico 15 August 2022 Staff The New Arab 5 August 2022 Amnesty stands by accusation Ukraine endangering civilians The New Arab Statement on publication of press release on Ukrainian fighting tactics Amnesty International 7 August 2022 Archived from the original on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 9 August 2022 Doklad Amnesty International o VS Ukrainy proveryat nezavisimye eksperty Deutsche Welle 13 August 2022 Amnesty to review controversial statement on Ukrainian Army Euromaidan Press 13 August 2022 The Nobel Peace Prize 1977 Nobel Foundation Retrieved 29 March 2018 Franklin D Roosevelt Four Freedoms Awards Roosevelt Institute Roosevelt Institute 29 September 2015 The Journalism Prize Archivio Disarmo Golden Doves For Peace PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 April 2022 Retrieved 1 November 2019 About this film Blood Diamond Amnesty USA Archived from the original on 9 October 2009 Retrieved 21 June 2010 Rabben Linda 2001 Amnesty International Myth and Reality AGNI 54 Archived from the original on 12 October 2008 Retrieved 25 September 2008 Further reading EditGanzfried Miriam 2021 Amnesty International and Women s Rights Feminist Strategies Leadership Commitment and Internal Resistances transcript Verlag ISBN 978 3 8376 6008 1 Clark Anne Marie 2001 Diplomacy of Conscience Amnesty International and Changing Human Rights Norms Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05743 9 Girot Marc 2011 Amnesty International Enquete sur une organisation genetiquement modifiee Editions du Cygne ISBN 9782849242469 Habibe K A R A Human Rights in China In The Xi Jinping Era From The Perspective of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International Dogu Asya Arastirmalari Dergisi 2 1 66 96 online Hopgood Stephen 2006 Keepers of the Flame Understanding Amnesty International Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4402 9 Neier Aryeh Amnesty International in The International Human Rights Movement Princeton UP 2020 pp 186 203 Power Jonathan 1981 Amnesty International The Human Rights Story McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 08 028902 1 Sellars Kirsten April 2002 The Rise and Rise of Human Rights Sutton Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7509 2755 0 Savelsberg Joachim J Global Human Rights Organizations and National Patterns Amnesty International s Responses to Darfur Societies Without Borders 12 2 2021 13 online Srivastava Swati 2021 Navigating NGO Government Relations in Human Rights New Archival Evidence from Amnesty International 1961 1986 International Studies Quarterly External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amnesty International Wikiquote has quotations related to Amnesty International Amnesty International official site Is Amnesty International Biased 2002 discussion by Dennis Bernstein and Dr Francis Boyle Catalogue of the Amnesty International archives held at the Modern Records Centre University of Warwick Amnesty International Head Irene Khan on The Unheard Truth Poverty and Human Rights video by Democracy Now Amnesty International Promotion to Eliminate the Death Penalty video by TBWA Paris and Pleix for Amnesty International France Amnesty International Poster Collection at the International Institute of Social History Amnesty International on Nobelprize org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amnesty International amp oldid 1134992277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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