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Friday, December 21, 2012
EAST AND HORN OF AFRICA: REPORT BY EHAHRDP “DEFENDING HUMAN RIGHTS: A RESOURCE BOOK FOR HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS (2ND ED.)” (EHAHRDP)
20 DECEMBER 2012
2012
Five years have passed since the East and Horn of Africa
Human Rights Defenders Project published the first edition of Defending Human
Rights: A Resource Book for Human Rights Defenders. Over that time new
challenges have evolved and shaped the context in which human rights defenders
work.
States continue to employ restrictive legislation
limiting the space to conduct human rights work. Anti-terror measures broadly
conceived to bolster discretionary and heavy-handed law enforcement with
reduced or delayed judicial oversight is increasingly being used to clamp down
on legitimate forms of inquiry and dissent from civil society actors.
Cross-border cooperation means that human rights defenders forced into exile
may continue to face state harassment even in their country of asylum.
Restrictive legislation for NGOs have in some cases been utilized to restrict
both funding opportunities and human rights activities, while media laws are
often interpreted and utilized arbitrarily to selectively stifle freedom of
expression.
Sexual minority defenders continue to fight to secure recognition that LGBTI rights are
human rights, while threats from state and non-state actors have created a
hostile space for these defenders.
While these challenges change, the tools human rights
defenders have at their disposal also evolve and become more sophisticated and
effective. Fully utilizing these tools in a strategic way is the challenge and
the potential strength for effective human rights defenders.
Engagement with international and regional human rights
mechanisms is one of the most effective ways of creating recognition of human
rights issues and even requiring duty-bearing stakeholders to officially
respond. Chapter 1 contains a discussion of these mechanisms and their
effective usage.
Personal care and professional safety for human rights
defenders is essential in order for their endeavours to be sustainable.
Chapters 2 and 3 respectively cover security management and stress reduction
for human rights defenders.
Strategies for campaigning are considered in Chapter 4,
which has been updated with a discussion of social media tools for achieving
advocacy goals in Chapter 4.5.
The particular challenges and strategies of defending
women’s rights and the rights of sexual minorities are examined in Chapters 5
and 6 respectively.
Finally the resource annexes have been updated to include
the most relevant publications and organizations for human rights defenders.
We are pleased to be able to make this book available in
English, French, Arabic, Swahili, Amharic, and Somali, thereby making it
accessible to most populations in this sub-region. We thank our key donor in
this project, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency.
EHAHRDP gratefully acknowledges all the contributors to
this resource book for their submissions, as well as for their continued work
in the service of human rights.
EHAHRDP dedicates this book to all those who have lost
their lives in the struggle for human rights. Let us be united in making a
better future.
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