December 10: Human Rights Day Videos

Online videos of National Press Club addresses on Human Rights Day, December 10, 2009:

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) – Jeffrey Imm
Jeffrey Imm – Online Video – Part 1 – Our Universal Human Rights
Jeffrey Imm – Online Video – Part 2 – Our Responsibility for Equality And Liberty
Jeffrey Imm – Online Video – Part 3 – The Supremacist Challenge to Human Rights
Jeffrey Imm – Online Video – Part 4 – Why Love is The Answer to All Supremacist Hate

Pakistan Christian Congress – Dr. Nazir Bhatti
Dr. Nazir Bhatti – Online Video – Part 1
Dr. Nazir Bhatti – Online Video – Part 2

Falun Gong – Lisa Tao and Pang Jin

Lisa Tao and Pang Jin – Online Video – Part 1
Lisa Tao and Pang Jin – Online Video – Part 2
Lisa Tao and Pang Jin – Online Video – Part 3

Epoch Times: “International Human Rights Day – Comments Made At National Press Club”

Epoch Times: “International Human Rights Day – Comments Made At National Press Club”

The Epoch Times
December 12, 2009
By Gary Feuerberg
Epoch Times Staff
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/26390/

Jeffrey Imm, from Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), said nations and individuals should uphold the principles of equality and liberty.

Jeffrey Imm, from Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), said nations and individuals should uphold the principles of equality and liberty. (Lisa Fan/Epoch Times)

WASHINGTON — International Human Rights Day, December 10, received scant world attention this year, apart from a handful of people and cities around the globe. In the nation’s capital, a few people spoke at a forum at the National Press Club, using this occasion to call attention to what they said were particularly egregious violations of human rights.

Sixty-one years ago, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was adopted and proclaimed by the General Assembly of the United Nations, following the horrors and human tragedies associated with World War II and the Holocaust.

“Universal human rights” has become an accepted concept that encompasses all nations, religions and elasticities. Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, said last year that the UDHR acknowledged the “inherent dignity and equality of all human beings.”

On Dec 10, we not only remember to support universal human rights, “but also we remember those who have denied them, including totalitarian and supremacist nations and ideologies of the world…,” said Jeffrey Imm, representing “Responsible for Equality and Liberty (R.E.A.L.),” which sponsored the event held at the National Press Club.

R.E.A.L., consisting of all volunteers from the U.S. Canada, UK, and Europe, is a new organization that started this year. R.E.A.L. also sponsored a public meeting acknowledging human rights day in Nuremberg, Germany as well as private meetings in Chicago and Los Angeles. [edit: note I stated New York, not Chicago].

Many Islamic countries in violation of universal human rights

Individuals and nations violate universal human rights when they don’t make “equality and liberty” their number one priority, according to Imm. This is a high standard to meet in today’s world. This forum focused on two major violators of universal human rights: the governments of Moslem majority countries enforcing religious or Sharia law, and totalitarian communist China.

Two countries mentioned most frequently in this event, Pakistan and China, were declared by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), as Countries of Particular Concern (CPC) — a list of 13 nations that are the worst offenders of religious freedom. Egypt, also mentioned often, is on the Commission’s “Watch List.”

The use of blasphemy laws against Christians in Pakistan beginning in the 1980s has damaged the harmony among religious communities, according to Nazir Bhatti, President of Pakistan Christian Congress. Bhatti cited more than 7000 cases of these laws that occurred from 1984 to 2009. “Thirty-two [persons] accused of blasphemy were murdered in jails, police lockups or in streets by hands of radical Islamic elements,” said Bhatti.

Pakistan was declared an Islamic Republic in 1973, and their constitution and legislation proclaimed Pakistan to be home to Muslims only, according to Bhatti. The USCIRF states that Pakistan’s blasphemy laws “commonly involve false accusations and result in the lengthy detention of and violence against Ahmadis, Christians, Hindus, and Muslims on account of their religious beliefs.”

In the 1980s, amendments were added to the blasphemy laws that imposed capital punishment, said Bhatti. Apparently, the law may influence public opinion. Imm cited a Pew Global Research poll conducted in Pakistan last Aug, which found that 78 percent believe in the death penalty for those who made the choice to leave Islam.

“The blasphemy law was used by the Muslim majority in Pakistan to settle personal disputes and business rivalries against Christians…after 1986, said Bhatti. Christian villages “were attacked by Muslim mobs and hundreds of homes set on fire.” He cited 10 towns where the churches were attacked and worshippers gunned down. The Holy Bibles were desecrated, pastors were gunned down and moreover children and women were burnt alive,” said Bhatti. He would like to see the rppeal of the blasphemy laws and the Sharia law on the 20 million Pakistani Christians.

No less incensed by the imposition of Sharia law was Ashraf Ramelah, President of Voice of the Copts, and an Egyptian. He spoke on behalf of Christians of Egypt (known as Copts). “We demand an end to kidnapping minor Christian girls, forcing them to convert to Islam. Those girls are often raped and tortured using inhuman techniques by Muslim extremists.”

Ramelah said: “Any crime committed against a Coptic woman[in Egypt] is treated without morality, conscience and legal deterrence….In examining what happened only in [Egyptian President Hosni] Mubarak’s era, it’s effortless to point out no single kidnapper was brought to justice, in spite of the gravity of the crime and its frequency.”

Ramelah charged that the reason that nothing is done and why there is no official count of the number of girls harmed is due to the complicity on the part of Egyptian law enforcement and the kidnappers.

Imm expressed his strong disapproval of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) — an organization of 57 nations with mostly Moslem majorities — when in 1990, it created the Cairo Declaration of Human Rights in Islam (CDHRI). Imm said the CDHRI is an attack on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Bhatti said the adoption of the CDHRI was expressing “no confidence in UDHR” and the supremacy of Sharia law.

“[The OIC] made a conscious decision to deny our unqualified universal human rights, other than those rights allowed by interpretations of Islamic Sharia law,” said Imm.

Recently, the OIC has attempted to pass at the UN a “defamation of religion” resolution, which Leonard A. Leo, chair of USCIRF, called an attempt to “create a global blasphemy law.” Leo said on Oct. 24 that this resolution really “promotes intolerance” and would be used to empowered repressive governments and religious extremists to suppress and punish members of minority religions and sects.

Many of the OIC nations were signatory to the Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989), which is a document that applies UDHR principles to children. These OIC countries are on record expressing “reservations” on those rights, according to Imm.

“We have seen a growing problem of child marriages, arranged marriages, and ‘honor killing’ violence in many of these nations that claim to be advocates of children’s rights. …Somalia is a nation where a 13-year-old girl has been publicly stoned to death as punishment by an Islamic Sharia so-called court for being the victim of gang rape. But an epidemic of violence against children is also found in many other OIC countries,” said Imm.

Falun Gong practitioners share experiences of Chinese Communist torture

A local Falun Dafa practitioner, Lisa Tao, discussed some of the ordeals she and other practitioners suffered when they lived in Communist China. Ms. Tao grew up in China and lived through the Great Cultural Revolution, when her father and four other members of her family were killed.

“I was also frequently beaten and many times I was close to being beaten to death,” said Tao. Tao was “guilty” of being born into a wealthy family which the communist regime targeted for special humiliations and punishments.

Lisa Tao (l) and Jin Pang (r) spoke about torture and deaths by the Chinese Communist Party.

Lisa Tao (l) and Jin Pang (r) spoke about torture and deaths by the Chinese Communist Party. (Jenny Jing/Epoch Times)

After immigrating to the United States, Ms. Tao became a practitioner of Falun Gong, which China has persecuted since 1999. Tao has become involved in daily protests at the Chinese Embassy in Washington.

Tao brought with her to the conference evidence in the form of real people who suffered under the current Chinese regime or are relatives of such persons. Tao introduced Ms. Quiying Wang, who was sent to a labor camp for practicing Falun Gong.

“One day in June 2000 at the Tuanhe Deployment Center in Beijing, police ordered her to take off all her clothes and squat in the sun, from 10 a.m. in the morning until 11. p.m. In the days that followed, she was also forced to stand still from 5 a.m. to 10:30 p.m., 17 hours everyday, for nine days,” said Tao.

Tao introduced Jin Pang, who said that her mother and aunt were sentenced in October 2008 to 10 and 9 years, respectively, for practicing Falun Gong. Ms. Pang described the interrogation when her mother was arrested in August 2008 during the Beijing Olympics. Over10,000 Falun Gong practitioners were arrested before and during the Olympics, according to the  Falun Gong Human Rights Working Group, not because the regime was concerned about practitioners interfering with the Olympics, but so it could use the Olympics as a pretext to intensify its persecution of Falun Gong.

Pang said her mother’s interrogation in the Weifang detention center lasted five days. “Six people took turns to interrogate her. During these 100 plus hours, she was not allowed to close her eyes even for a second, and if she did, they would pour cold or hot water on her. They also forced her to continually sit on an iron chair. She was tortured so badly that she lost control of her bowels,” said Pang. They stopped for a day and then resumed the torture for another three nights.

“The Chinese Communist regime is a devil,” said Tao. “Its destructive nature can never change. As long as it exists, it will not stop killing. This persecution can be stopped only if the [Communist] Party dissolves.”
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Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
https://www.realcourage.org

In Washington DC, R.E.A.L. held a press conference at the National Press Club, which included speakers:

* Jeffrey Imm, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), on women’s and children’s rights, the dual challenge of religious extremism and freedom, the challenges to human liberty by totalitarian ideologies, and growing challenges to racial equality by supremacists
— Jeffrey Imm Human Rights Day Remarks:  Adobe Acobat format, Microsoft Word format

* Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Pakistan Christian Congress, on Pakistan’s blasphemy law, threats, attacks, and killings of Christian religious minorities in Pakistan
— Dr. Nazir S. Bhatti remarks: “US administration urged to condition Pakistan Aid with Repeal of Blasphemy Law”

* Ashraf Ramelah, The Voice of the Copts, on the suppression of Christian religious minorities in Egypt, including kidnapping and forced conversion of Coptic Christian women and girls
— Ashraf Ramelah Remarks: “Suppression of Christian religious minorities in Egypt”

* Lisa Tao, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong), on human rights atrocities against the Falun Gong over the past 10 years in Communist China (in Chinese with English Interpreter).
— Lisa Tao Human Rights Day Remarks:  Microsoft Word format (English), Microsoft Word format (Chinese)

DC Examiner: Protection of religious minorities is major theme of 2009 Human Rights Day News Conference

Protection of religious minorities is major theme of 2009 Human Rights Day News Conference

December 10, 11:15 PM DC Human Rights Examiner Justina Uram

Justina Urman in the DC Human Rights Examiner reports:

“DC-based human rights activists and advocates commemorated Human Rights Day 2009 with a well-attended Human Rights News Conference sponsored by Responsible for Equality And Liberty (REAL) at the National Press Club in Washington, DC. ”

” ‘Not only do we recognize our declaration in support of such universal human rights, but also we remember those who have denied them, including the totalitarian and supremacist nations and ideologies of the world that seek to continue to deny such universal rights today.’ ”

“In his opening remarks, REAL founder Jeffrey Imm called for US ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the end of violence against women as priorities in defending human rights. He also focused on the human rights challenges presented by religious supremacism. ‘We really need a human rights dialogue on the challenges of religious extremist threats to our universal human rights.’ ”

“In his presentation on the persecution of Pakistani Christians by the Muslim majority, Dr. Nazir Bhatti, of the Pakistan Christian Congress, explained that Pakistan’s strict blasphemy laws allow the killing of religious minorities to go unchecked.”

” ‘Christians [in Pakistan] are in the process of genocide…The situation of human rights is worsening and persecution of Christians is at a rise in Pakistan.’ ”

“Bhatti warned that Pakistan will continue to breed terrorism unless the United States’ government puts conditions on further aid to Pakistan that include the repeal of their blasphemy laws and an amendment to Article 2 of the Constitution of Pakistan, which declares Islam as the state religion of Pakistan.”

“Following Bhatti’s presentation, Dr. Ashraf Ramelah, President of the Voice of the Copts, remarked on the oppression of Egypt’s Christians, particularly women and young girls.”

” ‘Coptic women and girls are targeted for a specific plan of forced Islamization in Egypt…the abduction of Coptic women is not just a passing phenomenon but is part of a widespread plan aimed to clean the Middle East of Christians.’ ”

“In addition to denouncing the forced conversion of Coptic women, Ramelah also called for a repeal of Article 2 of the Egyptian Constitution, which declares Islam as the state religion of Egypt.”

“Though both Bhatti and Ramelah’s remarks focused on the human rights abuses faced by religious minorities at the hand of Islam, Imm reminded the group, ‘we do not attack or condemn Islam or all Muslims, but we do challenge all human beings to recognize that we face an extremist challenge to human rights in the world today.’ ”

“The final speaker, Lisa Tao of Falun Dafa turned the conference’s focus in a different direction. Giving a heartfelt presentation in her native language, Tao described the human rights abuses she faced as a young girl at the hands of the Chinese Communist Party.”

” ‘My father was tortured to death. I was called ‘a child of the Five Black Categories.’ My life was full of humiliation and I had to struggle for many years just to stay alive.’ ”

“Tao, who is now an American citizen, explained that she and her husband began practicing Falun Gong to help them heal from the torture they suffered in China. Tao’s translator, 25-year old Pang Jin, relayed the recent arrest, torture, and prolonged detainment of her mother and aunt for their adherence to Falun Gong. ”

” ‘My aunt was abducted on July 9, 2009 and has been detained since then. On October 18, I was informed that the Weifang City district court, after delaying for a year, sentenced my Mom, Cao Junping, to 10 years.’ ”

“Tao then shared numerous examples of human rights violations by the Chinese government against Falun Gong practitioners and thanked Americans for their support and willingness to hear her story. ”

” ‘I feel that these practitioners are just like my brothers and sisters…We hope Americans, who are kind and righteous, will give a hand to rescue our brothers and sisters and stop this brutal persecution.’ ”

“Clearly, the 2009 Human Rights Day News Conference provided a forum for the discussion of human rights stories and perspectives not often covered by mainstream media. For more detailed information about The Human Rights Day News Conference, please contact the author at The Human Rights Blog. ”

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December 10, 2009 - Washington DC - National Press Club Human Rights Day Speakers: Voice of the Copts Ashraf Ramelah, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)'s Jeffrey Imm, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong)'s Lisa Tao, Pakistan Christian Congress' Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Lisa Tao's Translator Pan Jin
December 10, 2009 - Washington DC - National Press Club Human Rights Day Speakers (left to right): Voice of the Copts Ashraf Ramelah, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)'s Jeffrey Imm, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong)'s Lisa Tao, Pakistan Christian Congress' Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Lisa Tao's Translator Pang Jin

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* Jeffrey Imm, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), on women’s and children’s rights, the dual challenge of religious extremism and freedom, the challenges to human liberty by totalitarian ideologies, and growing challenges to racial equality by supremacists
— Jeffrey Imm Human Rights Day Remarks:  Adobe Acobat format, Microsoft Word format

* Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Pakistan Christian Congress, on Pakistan’s blasphemy law, threats, attacks, and killings of Christian religious minorities in Pakistan
— Dr. Nazir S. Bhatti remarks: “US administration urged to condition Pakistan Aid with Repeal of Blasphemy Law”

* Ashraf Ramelah, The Voice of the Copts, on the suppression of Christian religious minorities in Egypt, including kidnapping and forced conversion of Coptic Christian women and girls
— Ashraf Ramelah Remarks: “Suppression of Christian religious minorities in Egypt”

* Lisa Tao, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong), on human rights atrocities against the Falun Gong over the past 10 years in Communist China (in Chinese with English Interpreter).
— Lisa Tao Human Rights Day Remarks:  Microsoft Word format (English), Microsoft Word format (Chinese)

R.E.A.L. Global Human Rights Day Events

In Washington DC, New York City, and in Europe, supporters of Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) all held events promoting our universal human rights on December 10, Human Rights Day.   The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the United Nations on December 10, 1948, and Human Rights Day is an international event held annually to address human rights issues.    At all three R.E.A.L. events around the globe, human rights activists pointed to the ongoing threats from nations and those who ideologies that reject the universal human rights defined in the UDHR.

The world continues to face a challenge from totalitarian and supremacist ideologies and nations, and R.E.A.L.’s Human Rights Day events were to publicize these ongoing challenges and discuss areas where our commitment to our universal human rights must be improved.  This included challenging ideologies of hate, including racial supremacism, misogyny, extremism, other religious extremism, and Communist totalitarianism.  R.E.A.L. members asked the public to embrace these challenges as our own – as others human rights are our human rights.  Our goal was to urge the public to make a renewed personal commitment to be Responsible for Equality And Liberty.

nuremberg2

In Europe, the day’s events kicked off in Nuremberg, Germany with speakers:
— R.E.A.L.’s Steven Gerson from the United Kingdom addressing the importance of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the plight of Jewish refugees
— R.E.A.L.’s Puneet Madaan from Germany addressing the oppression of religious minorities
—  Karmen Wynick from the United States on women’s right violations in Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, and other areas.
— Thomas P. Gross, From CSI Germany will be speaking about copts in Egypt.
— R.E.A.L.’s Jeffrey Imm from the United States (via weblink) addressing the challenge of religious extremism threats to human liberties
— Tehmina Kazi from the United Kingdom, the Director of British Muslims for Secular Democracy

December 10, 2009 - Washington DC - National Press Club Human Rights Day Speakers: Voice of the Copts Ashraf Ramelah, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)'s Jeffrey Imm, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong)'s Lisa Tao, Pakistan Christian Congress' Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Lisa Tao's Translator Pan Jin
December 10, 2009 - Washington DC - National Press Club Human Rights Day Speakers: Voice of the Copts Ashraf Ramelah, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)'s Jeffrey Imm, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong)'s Lisa Tao, Pakistan Christian Congress' Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Lisa Tao's Translator Pan Jin

In Washington DC, R.E.A.L. held a press conference at the National Press Club, which included speakers:

* Jeffrey Imm, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), on women’s and children’s rights, the dual challenge of religious extremism and freedom, the challenges to human liberty by totalitarian ideologies, and growing challenges to racial equality by supremacists
— Jeffrey Imm Human Rights Day Remarks:  Adobe Acobat format, Microsoft Word format

* Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Pakistan Christian Congress, on Pakistan’s blasphemy law, threats, attacks, and killings of Christian religious minorities in Pakistan
— Dr. Nazir S. Bhatti remarks: “US administration urged to condition Pakistan Aid with Repeal of Blasphemy Law”

* Ashraf Ramelah, The Voice of the Copts, on the suppression of Christian religious minorities in Egypt, including kidnapping and forced conversion of Coptic Christian women and girls
— Ashraf Ramelah Remarks: “Suppression of Christian religious minorities in Egypt”

* Lisa Tao, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong), on human rights atrocities against the Falun Gong over the past 10 years in Communist China (in Chinese with English Interpreter).
— Lisa Tao Human Rights Day Remarks:  Microsoft Word format (English), Microsoft Word format (Chinese)

R.E.A.L.'s Racquel Coordinating NYC Human Rights Day Event
R.E.A.L.'s Racquel Coordinating NYC Human Rights Day Event

In New York City, R.E.A.L. speakers addressed concerns about the ideological brainwashing of children and the inconsistencies in dealing with supremacist threats:

— Brooke Goldstein discussed the hate incitement by extremist media and schools, and the international law concerning a child’s right to life, addressing children she interviewed in her film, The Making of a Martyr
Heather Robinson spoke about how Hamas’ human rights abuses have been ignored and of the challenges of internation groups in demonizing Israel
— Joel Mowbray addressed the challenges of how UNRWA schools (which service 1/3 of Palestinian children) contain textbooks that contain hate propoganda.

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) is a group that seeks to reach out to the public to rebuild a culture where our universal human rights are a priority, not an afterthought.  We believe that our standard of living as human beings — begins with our standard of human rights for one another. In a world where compromise has become a way of life, R.E.A.L.’s mission is to focus on consistency in human rights, and to offer a consistent vision on the largest threats to human equality and liberty.  R.E.A.L. promotes a culture of co-existence is dependent on our shared universal human rights around the world.  R.E.A.L. believes that such consistency requires challenging those ideologies of supremacism and totalitarianism that would defy our universal human rights.

For information on future events, contact usa@realcourage.org

As we have additional information on these global Human Rights Day events, including YouTube videos, we will update these web pages.

Where Our Universal Human Rights Apply...
Where Our Universal Human Rights Apply...

Human Rights Day – Pakistan Christian Congress Address and Video

Remarks by Pakistan Christian Congress’ Dr. Nazir Bhatti on Oppression of Christians in Pakistan

Pakistan Christian Congress – Dr. Nazir Bhatti
Dr. Nazir Bhatti – Online Video – Part 1
Dr. Nazir Bhatti – Online Video – Part 2

— Dr. Nazir S. Bhatti remarks: “US administration urged to condition Pakistan Aid with Repeal of Blasphemy Law”

Epoch Times: “International Human Rights Day – Comments Made At National Press Club”

DC Examiner: Protection of religious minorities is major theme of 2009 Human Rights Day News Conference

Pakistan Christian Congress' Dr. Nazir Bhatti - Human Rights Day - National Press Club, Washington DC
Pakistan Christian Congress' Dr. Nazir Bhatti - Human Rights Day - National Press Club, Washington DC

December 10, 2009 – Human Rights Day Remarks – Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)

Human Rights Day Remarks – Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
December 10, 2009

Jeffrey Imm – Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.),  usa@realcourage.org
Website:  https://www.realcourage.org

Why December 10 Matters

December 10, 1948 was an important date in the history of humanity.  On that day, the nations of the world came together amidst the global crimes against humanity during World War II, and were determined to create an international declaration of our most basic rights as human beings to be respected by the nations of the world – universally.  Their efforts became known as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

In many ways, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was the world’s way of saying “Never Again.”  Those who would stand defiant against the forces of apathy, hate, and hopelessness to defend humanity’s most basic rights as human beings took courage in this international declaration.  As the years went by, other declarations of human courage continued around the world.

“Never Again” was followed by “Ich bin ein Berliner,” then “I Have A Dream,” then “There is No Such Thing as Part Freedom.”  From person to person, from city to city, from nation to nation, there has been a continuing march for human freedom.  In every step, the advocates for human equality and liberty share a common message to those who would deny such human rights – “We Shall Overcome.”

The true context of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is not just about the times in which it was created, but by the human beings that have dared to stand for it.

They are the human beings who recognize the truths that we hold self-evident that all men and women are created equal and that all deserve the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty. They are the human beings that understand that we are one race… the human race.  They understand there is truly one omni-culture of shared humanity.  They understand there is just one home that we all share – where our universal human rights extend to every part of that home – of our planet Earth.

December 10 was designated as “Human Rights Day” by the United Nations in remembrance of the December 10, 1948 adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  But not only do we recognize our declaration in support of such universal human rights, but also we remember those who have denied them, including the totalitarian and supremacist nations and ideologies of the world that seek to continue to deny such universal human rights today.

But in challenging those who would deny our universal human rights we do not offer an upraised fist, but instead we offer an outstretched hand from the family of humanity.  Our human rights are their human rights.  We urge those would use their hatred of others to justify denying their human rights, to drop the burden of hate from their hearts, and join their brothers and sisters in humanity.

We believe that…

Love Wins.

Our Goal to be Responsible for Equality and Liberty

Too many hearts are hardened and numb by the endless stream of human tragedy that is broadcast around the world on a daily basis.   Too many ears have been shut to the cries of anguish of our suffering fellow human beings, and have been focused instead on our differences and our quarrels, rather than on what brings us together as a single and as a singular human race. Too many minds have become closed to the infinite possibilities of peace, dignity, and human co-existence grounded on a consistent approach to defending our universal human rights.

We come here today to rise above such numbness, such indifference and divisions, and such inflexibility on this December 10, “Human Rights Day,” to join the chorus of past declarations of courage and declare our support for our Universal Human Rights for all of humanity.

Our volunteer group, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), seeks to reach out to the public to rebuild a culture where our universal human rights are a priority, not an afterthought.  We believe that our standard of living as human beings — begins with our standard of human rights for one another.

In a world where compromise has become a way of life, R.E.A.L.’s mission is to focus on consistency in human rights, and to offer a consistent vision on the largest threats to human equality and liberty.  While we celebrate our diversity as individual human beings, we must recognize that a culture of co-existence is dependent on our shared universal human rights around the world.

Among the nations that did not adopt the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on December 10, 1948 were the Communist bloc nations and the Islamic Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.    The Communist leaders who took control of China in 1949 led to the creation of one of the world’s worst human rights abusers in Communist China, with 1.3 billion human beings whose liberty and human rights are routinely denied today.  Communist China is a nation with over 1,000 forced labor camps.  Saudi Arabia set the standard for rejecting universal human rights among “Islamic” nations, which led to a rejection of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights among such nations, replaced by a Sharia-based Cairo Declaration of Human Rights, under which all human rights are solely dependent on Islamic Sharia law.  The Sharia-based Cairo Declaration was formed by the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), which continues to refuse to accept unqualified universal human rights for women, children, non-Muslims, and even other Muslims.

But the challenge to our human rights does not only extend to those nations that have rejected the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or the spirit of such universal human rights.  It has extended as well to too many of those nations that adopted the UDHR as well.  That is why we have seen the continuing global threat of misogyny, the global threat of child abuse, the global problem of racial supremacism, and the global issue of anti-freedom ideologies based on hate.

In the Congo, 1,100 rapes of women are reported every month, and in Uganda, Sudan, Liberia and other parts of the world – hate crimes against women continue to rise.  But it is not just the misogynist violence of rape or “honor killings” that remain the only threat to women’s human rights. Even in the United States, women still are waiting for Constitutional equality.  If we ever hope to be consistent on human rights, we must be determined to end the human rights abuses of women – representing half of humanity – whether they are in Communist China, Saudi Arabia, the Congo, or even the United States.  This must be a consistent priority to restore a standard of human rights to our world.  We must recognize that misogyny – hate against women – is a global human rights abuse.

Our children are our future.  But in Communist China, 400 million children are never born, through abusive and coercive measures against women that have included forced abortions.   Communist China claims to be proud of its role as a signatory to the November 20, 1989 UN Convention on Children’s Rights, while it ignores horrific practices in promoting the death of infants.  Many of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) nations also claim to be signatories to the November 20, 1989 Convention on Children’s Rights, which is dependent on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that such OIC nations reject.  Not surprisingly, these OIC nations also have numerous “reservations” on the Convention of Children’s Rights as well, based on Sharia law.  We have seen the growing problem of child marriages, arranged marriages, and “honor killing” violence in many of these nations that claim to be advocates of children’s human rights.   One of the OIC nations that is not a signatory to the Convention on Children’s Rights is Somalia.  Somalia is a nation where a 13 year old girl has been publicly stoned to death as punishment by an Islamic Sharia “court” for being the victim of gang rape.  But an epidemic of violence against children is also found in many other OIC nations. The other country that is not a signatory to the Convention on Children’s Rights is the United States.  We take this opportunity on Human Rights Day to demand that the American government end the international disgrace in not being a signatory to the UN Convention on Children’s Rights.

We cannot begin to build a culture of human rights without an international prohibition on human slavery.  But too many  are part of the global slave trade that continues around the world today, including children and women, with significant abuses in Africa, in Communist China and other Communist nations, and in many of the OIC nations.   The next time you buy a product “Made in China,” shouldn’t you ask yourself when it is time to be responsible for calling for an end to Communist China’s forced labor camps?   In the June 2009 U.S. State Department report on human trafficking, 17 of the OIC nations are among the nations on the State Department’s watch list as not meeting the Trafficking Victim Protection Act’s (TVPA) minimum standards.  They are:   Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria, Sudan, Kuwait, Malaysia, Mauritania, Pakistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Algeria, Yemen, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Afghanistan, Jordan, and Turkey.  In some nations, such human trafficking is linked to religious extremism and abuse toward religious minorities.   In the Sudan and Egypt, religious minorities are kidnapped and often forcibly converted to Islam.  In Egypt, such kidnapping of girls and young women is part of a larger abuse toward Coptic Christian religious minorities.    In Pakistan, a recent news report describes how de facto slavery was continuing in Pakistan, and rights activists have urged the Pakistan government to acknowledge “internal human trafficking” as a crime in Pakistan.  Ending slavery must be a priority in defending our universal human rights.

But such slavery — physical, spiritual, and mental — flourishes in those areas where human rights are not viewed as either unqualified or universal.  We are here today on this Human Rights Day to defy those who would view our brothers and sisters as something less than human beings, having something less than human rights.  But in challenging such ideologies of hate, we must recognize the pervasive nature of such hate against human rights.

Even in America, we see a growing intolerance against individuals of other races, ethnicities, genders, and religions.   When America has over 900 racial hate groups, we know that hate remains a pervasive problem.  When churches, mosques, and synagogues are attacked in America, we know that intolerance remains a pervasive problem.  We must challenge this by denying the view that there is “the other” that is used to justify hate in America and around the world.  There is no “other” – there is only us – our brothers and sisters in humanity – anywhere and everywhere in the world.  Human rights are our rights, and it is our obligation to be Responsible for Equality And Liberty.

The Supremacist Challenge to Human Rights

Being responsible for our inalienable human rights begins within each of us as individuals.  If we can’t be responsible for human rights, how can we expect our governments, our nations, and other nations to be responsible?   The change we seek comes first from within.  The change we seek comes from our friends, family, neighbors, and co-workers.  The change we seek comes from members of our identity group – whether it is our race, our religion, our ethnicity, our gender, or even our political party.

America offers a historic lesson on the need for personal responsibility in confronting the supremacist challenge to human rights.  America was once home to the largest known terrorist organization – the Ku Klux Klan.  At one point, the Ku Klux Klan boasted 4 million members.  But in the 1950s and 1960s, Americans came to realize that something had to change.  We came to realize that we cannot have liberty without equality.  Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. challenged Americans to take personal responsibility for confronting the ideology that he called “white supremacy.”

Dr. King did not attack or condemn all white Americans, but he did challenge all Americans to recognize that we had a white supremacist challenge to human rights in America that we needed to put behind us to live in support of the truths that we hold self-evident.  While we still have a problem with racial supremacism in America today, in 40 years there has been a sea-change of thought, action, and policy in this country.  We have a black president in a nation where black Americans once were denied the right to vote.  That is what taking personal responsibility for equality and liberty can do.

The ideology of supremacism is dependent on the lie that some identity groups are inherently superior to others and therefore deserve preferential treatment and preferential rights.  On Human Rights Day, and every day, we must defy the supremacist challenge to our universal human rights.  We believe in equal rights for every man and every woman.

We face a complex problem in the world today where religious freedom is under attack by religious extremists.  Certainly, every religion views that its perspective is right, and even directed by a higher being. But when individuals, groups, and nations use their religious views to rationalize denying the universal human rights and freedom of conscience of others, then we are faced with a challenge of religious extremism.  We don’t like to talk about this issue today, any more than in the 1960s many Americans wanted to talk about white supremacism.  But we really need a human rights dialogue on the challenges of religious extremist threats to our universal human rights.

In its 1990 creation of the Cairo Declaration of Human Rights to replace the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that we celebrate today, the Organization of Islamic Conference made a conscious decision to deny our unqualified universal human rights, other than those rights allowed by interpretations of Islamic Sharia law.  We continue to see the consequences of this decision by those with an extremist view around the world daily, with untold acts of violence, abuse of women, abuse of children, denial of human rights, and denial of freedom of religion — all rationalized by extremist claims.

Like Dr. King addressed “white supremacy” without attacking or condemning all white Americans, we do not attack or condemn Islam or all Muslims, but we do challenge all human beings to recognize that we face an extremist challenge to human rights in the world today.  We cannot continue to ignore this global threat to our universal human rights and simply wish that it would go away.  We cannot be consistent in our defense of universal human rights and ignore such global issues.

Thousands of women are murdered around the world in so-called “honor killings,” where many of its perpetrators rationalize their actions based on extremism.  We see such atrocities on a regular basis, which happen even in the United States, with the November 2009 “honor killing” in Arizona of a young girl named Noor Almaleki.   Such extremist rejection of universal human rights has become a global phenomenon, and this is much more than isolated incidents of criminals and “extremists.”  On August 13, 2009, the Pew Global Research organization conducted a poll in Pakistan which showed that 78 percent believed in the death penalty for those who chose freedom of religion to leave Islam.  (Pakistan has a population of 170 million.) But widespread rejection of the universal human right of religious freedom and freedom of conscience is not just limited to Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Egypt, or others.  In the United States on July 2009, I stood in a conference with 700 others in Chicago at a Hizb ut-Tahrir event, where extremist Hizb ut-Tahrir leaders denounced democracy and distributed pamphlets supporting the “death penalty” for “traitors” who leave Islam.  The challenge of extremism is truly a global threat to human rights.

But the challenge of extremism does not justify hate or discrimination against Muslims, any more than white supremacism justified acts of violence against white Americans by black separatists in the 1960s.  Two wrongs do not make a right.  If we are in support of religious freedom and challenging religious extremism, then we must be consistent in our support of human rights for all people.  Those who would harass, intimidate, and discriminate against Muslims make the same mistake as those who believe that extremism would justify denying our universal human rights.

Furthermore, I implore the religious communities of the world to recognize that religious extremism is not limited to extremism.  In the Christian churches of the world, there must be condemnation of those who would rationalize hate and denial of our universal human rights based on Christian extremism.  In Uganda, there is an ongoing problem with a group known as the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) that rationalizes its violence, hate, and terrorism based on its Christian extremist views, while killing other Christians.  In New York, the Westboro Baptist Church conducted hate rallies in front of Jewish synagogues in September.  In Texas, renegade Mormon leaders have been convicted for child abuse, as has another anti-Catholic “evangelist” in Arkansas.  In California and Arizona, Christian pastors have called for the death of President Barack Obama.

So I urge the Christian community to be vigilant and active in challenging those who justify hate based on their religion as well.  Christians cannot ask Muslims to challenge extremists, if they are not willing to challenge those who would use Christian extremism to rationalize defying our universal human rights. Our commitment to our universal human rights must be demonstrated by our actions and example.

I have first-hand experience with such Christian extremist hate in Ohio.  Five years ago, as a former Presbyterian Christian, I was stunned to discover that a group affiliated with the Presbyterian Church USA held a meeting at Wooster College where the anti-Semitic screed of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion was presented as a fact.  This was the result of individuals who allowed their challenges with policies in Israel to rationalize hate against Jews.  Once again, this demonstrates the pervasiveness of hate.  Along with leaders from the Simon Wiesenthal Foundation, I went to Wooster College to ask such leaders to reject such hate.  Five years later, I have yet to see a well-publicized apology from the Presbyterian Church USA on this issue.  One response I did get was from a pastor, who asked why I was so concerned, and if I was Jew-lover.

I can answer that here without reservation.  Yes, I love Jews, Christians, Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims, whites, blacks, Asians, Hispanics, and people of all religions, races and nationalities.  They are my brothers and sisters in humanity.  It is because I love my fellow human beings that I cannot deny my responsibility to defend their universal human rights.

On this Human Rights Day, I ask my fellow human beings to have confidence that “Love Wins.”

Pakistan Daily Times: “Gojra report proposes amending blasphemy laws”

Pakistan Daily Times: “Gojra report proposes amending blasphemy laws”
— “An inquiry tribunal – headed by Lahore High Court Judge Iqbal Hameedur Rehman and tasked with looking into the tragedy that killed seven people – also warned the government on Sunday that ‘the Gojra tragedy must be taken seriously and the needful [should] be done on war-footing without further loss of time’ ”
— “The 258-page report recommends action ‘without any discrimination against those responsible for commission and omission’ ”
— “The report also proposes amendments to Pakistan Penal Code sections 295, 295-A, 295-B, 295-C, 296, 297, 298, 298-A, 298-B, 298-C, anti-blasphemy laws, relevant provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code and the Police Order 2002.”

R.E.A.L. reports on blasphemy law

December 10, 2009 – Human Rights Day News Conference

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Press Release

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
Jeffrey Imm,  usa@realcourage.org


Human Rights Day News Conference

December 10, 2009, 12:30 p.m., National Press Club, 529 14th Street, NW 13th Floor, Washington, DC
https://www.realcourage.org/news-conference/

Time: 12:30 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.
Event Type: News Conference
Sponsored by: Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
Event Location: Zenger Room

Details: Human rights activists discuss importance of religious, racial, ethnic, and gender equality and liberty on “Human Rights Day,” addressing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

Please join us at the National Press Club for a thought-provoking briefing and panel discussion that will address threats to universal human rights from ideologies that seek to deny both human equality and liberty.

The speakers will focus special attention on human rights challenges to women and children. Emphasis will be on increased individual responsibility in defending universal human rights as a shared social priority.

Panelists will include:

* Jeffrey Imm, Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), on women’s and children’s rights, the dual challenge of religious extremism and freedom, the challenges to human liberty by totalitarian ideologies, and growing challenges to racial equality by supremacists
* Dr. Nazir Bhatti, Pakistan Christian Congress, on Pakistan’s blasphemy law, threats, attacks, and killings of Christian religious minorities in Pakistan
* Lisa Tao, Falun Dafa (Falun Gong), on human rights atrocities against the Falun Gong over the past 10 years in Communist China (in Chinese with English Interpreter).

Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) has support in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Europe for the mission of renewed focus on national and international policies designed for consistent support of our universal human rights.  The press conference will be a part of other international public outreach events on December 10, Human Rights Day. Jeffrey Imm has spoken at the George Washington University’s Homeland Security Policy Institute (HSPI) on the challenge of the ideology of extremism, which was reportedly attended by Fort Hood attack suspect Major Nidal Hasan.

Visit www.realcourage.org.

Contact:
Jeffrey Imm
usa@realcourage.org

Pakistan Christians Fear More Violence After Militant Attacks

Pakistan Christians Fear More Violence After Militant Attacks
— BOSNews reports:
— “Christians in several volatile areas of Pakistan feared more violence Monday, November 30, amid reports that Christians are hiding after attacks by angry Muslims in which at least one person died.”
— “Tensions remained high in Pakistan’s largest province Punjab where details emerged that a Christian security guard of a factory was allegedly shot dead by his Muslim colleague following a dispute over his Christian faith.”
— “Irfan Masih, 20, was killed at the packaging manufacturing plant in the Green Town  area of the provincial capital Lahore after a 12-hour shift when he woke up guard Ishfaq Niazi from his sleep, a factory official told BosNewsLife.”
— “Niazi, 31, allegedly shot the Christian in the early morning hours of October 5. “When he touched the Muslim guard,  Niazi got furious and said: ‘how dare you Christian untouchable to touch my foot?’ He pulled his gun and shot multiple times at Irfan Masih, who died on the spot,’ a factory spokesperson said.”

Pakistan: “Make slavery history, civil society urges government”

Pakistan: “Make slavery history, civil society urges government”
— Pakistan Daily Times
: “Activists maintain that slavery still exists in Pakistan in the form of bonded labour, human trafficking, forced marriages, and the exploitation of women and chiuldren. They stressed that legislation outlawing slavery should be properly implemented.”
— “They also urged the government to legislate to stop internal human trafficking, which was still not acknowledged as a crime in Pakistan.”
— “They urged parliament to assert its authority to improve the human rights condition of the country and to end slavery. Talking to Daily Times, HRCP Vice Chairman Dr Mehdi Hasan said that slavery did not exist on paper, but in reality it was very much present in Pakistan. Dr Mehdi said that laws outlawing such activities did exist, but were unfortunately not implemented. He said civil society, the media and parliament needed to shift their priorities, they needed to talk more about the issues of the common man.”