USA: Progress in Mercy for Children and Human Rights Must Be Priority in Immigration Policy

As stated numerous times on social media in recent days, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) stands with other non-partisan human rights and charity organizations, such as the National Center on Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) and the Salvation Army, in calling for an end to the separation of children and their parents, during the detention of undocumented aliens who are illegally crossing the U.S. border according to U.S. law. As R.E.A.L, these allies in human rights, and other groups have stated, we must protect vulnerable children and protect their bonds within their families. Such vulnerable children must remain a priority.

A nation that seeks to work as a representative democracy must have mercy as its priority – not only for its own citizens, but also for its fellow human beings of every nationality. Mercy and compassion provide the moral and ethical compass to guide us in making decisions on difficult topics of national safety, dignity, and security. Our mercy must reach beyond our political partisan divisions and find answers to the most difficult problems.

R.E.A.L. urges the U.S. legislators to use mercy as its priority in considering upcoming legislation for immigration. The idea that such legislation should be postponed is based on suspicion and contempt for the politics of other politicians and other Americans. We must find the COURAGE to reach beyond that distrust of the politics of others, and find trust in one another as American human beings; our values of compassion, integrity, and respect for law must be more deeply rooted than our political divisions.

R.E.A.L. does not fail to recognize the difficult and complex issues in the U.S. immigration debate. The safety of American citizens from criminals, the need to protect the vulnerable from human trafficking, and the responsibility of the source nations in creating refugee conditions must not be ignored. These are all legitimate and reasonable human rights concerns that also must be respected.

To those who dismiss such security concerns, a recent MS-13 gang murder stabbing a victim 100 times took place only eight miles from R.E.A.L.’s headquarters. R.E.A.L. is well aware of the very real threat to human rights when criminals are not stopped from threatening the public. But such criminals are not only a U.S. concern; their threat to human rights is a global concern. It is not enough to deal with such root cause issues of refugees in the U.S. or on the U.S. border; these issues must be dealt with in the nations that have allowed such violence and criminal lawlessness to become rampant. The nations of the world must challenge the root causes that drive such refugee conditions. Our compassion and concern for human rights must include a concentrated focus on source problems driving refugees from Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and other nations.

When faced with such extremely complex issues as the U.S. immigration problem, R.E.A.L. challenges U.S. lawmakers to find the moral and ethical courage to accept compromise solutions for progress. We do not protect the safety and human rights of American people, of immigrants, and especially of vulnerable children, by partisan inflexibility. In compromise solutions, no one achieves everything that they seek. But that is how achieving change in governing on complex and difficult issues proceeds. Lawmakers accept compromise to achieve progress, because they cannot represent their public by continuing an endless stalemate on such critical problems.

Human Rights and immigration activists also need to pursue progress and compromise as well. Like U.S. lawmakers, immigration activists have to accept that compromise is necessary to achieve progress. In a complex problem largely ignored for a protracted period, incremental progress and achievements have to be more acceptable than no progress at all.

Such progress requires accepting the need by all sides to communicate messages of concern with honesty, truthfulness, integrity, and civility, which has been increasingly lost in the recent debates.

Those in the debate using misinformation, deception, hate, and divisiveness are not helping the cause of children, progress on immigration issues, or human rights. Our moral compass must be guided by mercy and compassion, not hate and division.

The progress to reunify children with families announced on June 23, 2018 is also progress. As much as activists have condemned children being detained separate from their families, there must also be recognition that there has been change, which needs to be encouraged, not discouraged. There are also very complex issues, which need to be addressed. As R.E.A.L. previously pointed out, the issue of 10,000 unaccompanied children being sent across the U.S. border illegally in a dangerous journey remains a serious human rights issue, which remains to be resolved.

The solution to this complex immigration issue will not be dealt with in soundbites or single, simplistic solutions. Complex problems need complex solutions, which the communications of division will not equitably and honestly convey to the public. This complexity will continue to drive the need for compromise solutions and incremental progress that must be achieved over time.

R.E.A.L. recognizes that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), under Article 14, “Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.” Article 14 also states “this right may not be invoked in the case of prosecutions genuinely arising from non-political crimes or from acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.” The issue of asylum has always remained a complex and vital issue in human rights, and one that requires patience and policies based on mercy and compassion. It is incorrect to apply simplistic views to complex issues; this is why a combination of solutions to achieve progress and address the root causes that create refugee circumstances are essential.

We cannot effectively address such complex issues in a democracy without respect, dignity, honesty, and of course, patience.

The greatest challenge for those in human rights concerns is PATIENCE. But we must have the courage and determination of patience and respect to achieve compromise progress to seek change.

But we will not achieve efforts to promote mercy and compassion with upraised fists or hateful slogans towards each other. We can find courage and determination through a shared commitment in mercy and compassion towards one another as American citizens and fellow human beings. Let us find the strength to achieve progress, not division, to make change together.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty

Global Human Rights Supporters Call for Freedom of Pakistan Christian Woman Asia Bibi

We call for the Pakistan government and Supreme Court of Pakistan to show mercy and release the unjustly imprisoned Pakistan Christian minority woman, Aasiya Noreen “Asia” Bibi, from prison.

Pakistan Christian minority woman, Aasiya Noreen “Asia” Bibi, unjustly arrested and in Pakistan prison for “blasphemy”

Asia Bibi, has spent the past 9 years in a Pakistan prison, charged with blasphemy, after angering majority faith women who objected to her drinking water from the same glass as them because she was a Christian minority. The outraged women that sought vengeance on this persecuted minority woman, used the Pakistan’s “blasphemy” laws to claim that she had defiled the name of Muslim prophet Mohammed, and their testimony was used to have her convicted, put in prison, and sentenced to death in 2010. Efforts to continue to appeal her case have not yet won her freedom, as this Pakistan Christian minority woman has remained in prison for 9 years. The Pakistan Christian minority woman has spent 9 years in prison for the “crime” of having a minority faith and angering women of the majority faith in drinking from the same cup of water, after picking fruit in the fields.

Excerpts from Asia Bibi’s memoir, “Blasphemy,” had been dictated to her husband from jail, who relayed it to French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet. In her memoir, Asia Bibi reported that it was on June 14, 2009, when she went to work in the falsa-berry harvest. She was allowed to participate in the fruit harvest if she picked more fruit than other women, because she was a persecuted Christian minority woman. She needed the money from the fruit picking and in the hot sun; eventually she grew tired and needed a drink of water. In her desperate thirst, she drank from an old metal cup by a bucketful of water, but when she did so the majority faith woman charged at her actions as “haram” and that since this Christian minority woman had drank water from the cup, now she was charged “now the water is unclean and we can’t drink it! Because of her!”

Five days later, on June 19, 2009, according to Asia Bibi’s memoir, she once again went fruit picking to raise money for her survival. But soon she found an angry mob coming after her. In her memoir, Asia Bibi wrote, “They all start yelling: ‘Death! Death to the Christian!’ and ‘We’re taking you back to the village! You insulted our Prophet! You’ll pay for that with your life!’.” Asia Bibi was beaten by a mob and taken to the police for her actions. Asia Bibi stated that she was innocent, but she was manhandled, tossed into a police van, and driven away to be put in Sheikhupura prison, where she has remained ever since.

As the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has documented, Asia Bibi was prosecuted under Section 295 C of the Pakistan Penal Code for blasphemy. She spent more than a year in jail. On November 8, 2010, a district court in Nankana Sahib, Punjab, sentenced her to death for blasphemy, the first such sentence for blasphemy handed down against a woman. The death penalty is permissible under Pakistani law. On October 16, 2014, the Lahore High Court dismissed her appeal and upheld her death sentence. Her lawyers plan to appeal to the Supreme Court. The USCIRF joins NGOs and human groups around the world in calling for Asia Bibi’s release.

Over the years, human rights groups have called for her protection and release from prison. As the anniversary of her June 19, 2009 arrest and imprisonment has come, human rights groups across the world are calling for Pakistan to respect justice, and release this innocent Christian minority woman, whose only “crime” was to seek a drink of water in the hot sun.

Global Human Rights and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) calling for her release have come from the United Kingdom, the United States, Pakistan, Italy, and other countries, with global backing and support from citizens around the world.

The United Kingdom-based British Pakistan Christian Association (BPCA) currently has an online petition calling for Pakistan to release Asia Bibi, signed by global human rights supporters in Pakistan, United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Canada, Switzerland, Ireland, Spain, Norway, Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Malta, Kenya, Japan, Philippines, Chile, Mexico, and Thailand.

Global Human Rights and NGOs calling for the release of Asia Bibi on this tragic anniversary of her 9 years in prison include:
British Pakistan Christian Association (BPCA) – United Kingdom
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) – United States of America
Renaissance Education Foundation (REF) – Pakistan
— Center for Pakistan Christian Human Rights – United States of America
Pakistan Christian Post – United States of America

Other groups that have been active to inform the public or holding events to remember Asia Bibi’s imprisonment have included:
Catholic group “Aid to the Church in Need” – in Italy, U.S., global video, including live link-ups with Aleppo, Syria and Mosul, Iraq
ACS Italia – Aiuto alla Chiesa che Soffre – Onlus – Italy
Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW) – United Kingdom
Centre for Legal Aid, Assistance and Settlement (CLAAS) – Pakistan, United Kingdom
United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) – United States of America
Legal Evangelical Association Development (LEAD) – Pakistan
International Christian Concern – United States of America
American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ) – United States of America

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) supports these international efforts to end the imprisonment and threats against the life of Pakistan Christian minority woman Asia Bibi, and we support her human rights and freedoms under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), signed by Pakistan and other nations of the world.

R.E.A.L. calls for all human rights groups and activists to reach out to the Pakistan government to the Pakistan Supreme Court to end this injustice and to FREE ASIA BIBI.

Under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), Asia Bibi and the people of the world have the universal human rights of freedom of conscience and right to fair and equitable protections in the courts. This includes UDHR Articles 11 and 18.

UDHR Article 11.
“(1) Everyone charged with a penal offence has the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law in a public trial at which he has had all the guarantees necessary for his defence.
(2) No one shall be held guilty of any penal offence on account of any act or omission which did not constitute a penal offence, under national or international law, at the time when it was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed than the one that was applicable at the time the penal offence was committed.”

UDHR Article 18.
“Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”

In the case of Pakistan Christian minority woman Asia Bibi, the Pakistan court system has denied her universal human rights under UDHR Article 11, seeking to try her based on hearsay evidence with no proof and assuming her guilt rather than her innocence. The Pakistan court system has also denied Asia Bibi her universal human rights under UDHR Article 18, seeking to allow targeted persecution of her under the Pakistan “blasphemy law” to oppress her due to her Christian minority faith.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) calls for the Pakistan Supreme Court and the Pakistan nation to uphold its international obligations under its commitment to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which Pakistan is a signatory to. These same UDHR articles are found in the ICCPR Part III, Articles 14 and 18. Nations of the world are part of our shared Earth, our common global society, and international organizations that facilitate global trade, commerce, travel, and exchange of goods. Such nations that enjoy such global standing have a responsibility to adhere to agreed-upon global declarations and covenants on such human rights.

Global human rights activists in Pakistan and around the world are looking for the Pakistan court system to honor such global obligations and standards of human rights, dignity, and freedom for the people of the world. They are calling upon the Pakistan court and justice system to free Asia Bibi after these 9 years of unjust imprisonment.

Free Asia Bibi!

U.S. – 10,000 Unaccompanied Children Taken Across U.S. Border

On June 19, 2019, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen reported at a press conference that 10,000 unaccompanied children had been taken illegally across the U.S. border by people who are not their parents or family. This astounding statement has received limited attention by the U.S. media and immigrant rights activists, but it is an astounding statement of the state of children’s human rights.  Ms. Nielsen stated that 10,000 such children “were sent by their parents with strangers to undertake a completely dangerous and deadly travel alone.”

Responsible for Equality And Liberty and certainly all human rights supporters and fellow human beings should be deeply concerned about the state of these (and other children) who have been detained during illegal border crossings. We hope to obtain additional information on these children and their status. According to American law, based on the “Flores” settlement in a 1997 lawsuit, children must be released within 20 days. But the human rights questions will remain, where will such thousands of “unaccompanied alien children” (UAC) go, and what are the consequences for the many parents who would leave their children in such strangers’ care in such a dangerous situation?

There remains a grave threat of human trafficking and sexual trafficking of such children. Among the many concerns of human rights supporters, we should have a serious concern about how this will be prevented for these thousands of children?