city:jurist

  • JURIST - Paper Chase : UN rights expert urges US to release prisoner from indefinite solitary confinement
    http://jurist.org/paperchase/2013/10/un-rights-expert-urges-us-to-release-prisoner-from-indefinite-solitary-confi

    UN rights expert urges US to release prisoner from indefinite solitary confinement
    Theresa Donovan at 10:26 AM ET

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    [JURIST] UN Special Rapporteur on torture Juan Mendez [official profile] on Monday urged [press release] the US to immediately end the solitary confinement imposed in 1972 on a former Black Panther. Albert Woodfox [AI backgrounder] was serving a prison sentence for armed robbery in 1972, when he and another inmate Herman Wallace were charged and convicted [AP report] of fatally stabbing a guard. The men were first moved to isolation in the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, and later to “closed-cell restriction” at state jails. Woodfox typically spends 23 hours a day in solitary confinement, in a cell that is approximately 8 feet by 12 feet. Mendez stated that the “use of solitary confinement in the US penitentiary system goes far beyond what is acceptable under international human rights law,” and he has repeatedly requested an invitation to visit US jails, including state prisons in California, in order to make a personal assessment of prison conditions within the country. Regarding solitary confinement in general, Mendez said, “Persons held in solitary confinement should always be allowed to challenge the reasons and the length of the regime, and should always have access to legal counsel and medical assistance.” Mendez also reiterated his call on the US to adopt concrete measures that will eliminate the use of prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement in any circumstances.

    The legality of solitary confinement has been an ongoing debate in the US. Last month Mendez stated in a report to the UN General Assembly that governments should ban solitary confinement [JURIST report] for juveniles and prisoners with mental disabilities. Mendez told the assembly members that governments should impose solitary confinement only in exceptional circumstances and for short periods of time. In June at least 400 inmates at Pelican Bay State Prison in California initiated a hunger strike [JURIST report] in protest of solitary confinement. Inmates of Pelican Bay’s Security Housing Unit (SHU), a long-term isolation ward where one-third of the prison’s population is held in solitary confinement, are the instigators of the strike, and most of the strikers from other prisons are inmates in solitary confinement. In January 2011 the Washington Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that holding death row inmates in solitary confinement indefinitely is not an impermissible increase [JURIST report] in the severity of punishment.

  • JURIST - Paper Chase : UN Commission adopts agreement on gender equality, reproductive health
    http://jurist.org/paperchase/2013/09/un-commission-adopts-agreement-on-gender-equality-reproductive-health.php

    UN Commission adopts agreement on gender equality, reproductive health
    Julie Deisher at 4:16 PM ET

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    [JURIST] Participants of the Sixth Asian and Pacific Population Conference (APPC) [official website] hosted by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) [official website] declared Sunday that gender equality and reproductive health are indispensable to sustainable development. Ministers and senior officials from 47 countries adopted a comprehensive Asian and Pacific Ministerial Declaration on Population and Development [PDF], which affirms and endorses policies of non-discrimination, of ending violence against women and of universal sexual and reproductive rights. The declaration will also serve as the region’s input for review by the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) [official website], which will be conducted by the UN General Assembly [official website] in 2014.

    The UN and others have been working around the world to promote gender equality and reproductive health [JURIST backgrounder]. The UN has been particularly concerned with violence against women, and in March more than 130 UN member states agreed to adopt new measures [JURIST report] to prevent and eliminate violence against women and girls. Gender inequality has also manifested in countries’ criminal justice systems, and in 2011 the UN Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers [official website] Gabriela Knaul [official profile] urged countries to integrate gender perspectives into judicial procedures to allow women’s perspectives to challenge the “traditional notions of judging and judicial authority.”

  • JURIST - Paper Chase: UK marines charged with 2011 Afghanistan murder
    http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/10/uk-marines-charged-with-2011-afghanistan-murder.php

    UK marines charged with 2011 Afghanistan murder
    Matthew Pomy at 12:18 PM ET

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    [JURIST] Five UK Royal Marines were charged with murder on Sunday in connection with an incident in 2011 in Afghanistan. The charge allegedly arises out of a video [Telegraph report] that showed marines in an incriminating situation with a wounded member of the Taliban. An independent agency that supervises military prosecutions, the Service Prosecuting Authority [official website], decided to bring the murder charge against five of the nine marines arrested in relation to the incident. The other four were released. The five charged will remain in custody [BBC report] until appearing before a court martial.

    There have been several incidents arising out of the Afghan and Iraqi conflicts. In February the US Army dropped all charges [JURIST report] against Army Specialist Michael Wagnon, originally charged with killing Afghan civilians. In January US Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich pleaded guilty [JURIST report] to the charge of negligent dereliction of duty. Sgt. Calvin Gibbs was convicted of three counts [JURIST report] of premeditated murder last November and was sentenced to life in prison. In December 2010 Staff Sergeant Robert Stevens pleaded guilty [JURIST report] to shooting two unarmed Afghan farmers. Charges against Lt. Colonel Jeffrey Chessani were dropped [JURIST report] in June 2008.

  • JURIST - Paper Chase: Syria military using banned cluster bombs: HRW
    http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/10/syria-military-using-banned-cluster-bombs-hrw.php

    Syria military using banned cluster bombs: HRW
    Matthew Pomy at 3:00 PM ET

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    [JURIST] The Syrian military is using cluster munitions [HRW backgrounder] against opposition forces, Human Rights Watch (HRW) [advocacy website] reported [text] on Sunday. A Youtube video [video], posted by Syrian opposition forces, showed remnants of cluster munitions allegedly near several towns. Markings on the remnants suggest they were dropped from aircraft. The report details several instances of cluster munitions being used and being reported by civilians. HRW has called for Syria to stop using these munitions and for local media to detail the dangers of them more extensively.The use of these munitions are prohibited according to the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM) [text, PDF], which Syria has neither signed nor ratified, because of the potential harm they pose to civilians. The CCM bans the use, stockpiling, production and transfer of cluster bombs, weapons that break apart, releasing large numbers of smaller, self-contained explosives which spread out before detonating on impact.

    This is not the first HRW report calling attention to Syria using cluster munitions. In July HRW reported evidence of Soviet-made cluster munitions being used [JURIST report] in Syria. The Convention was initially agreed upon [JURIST report] by nations in May 2008 following 10 days of negotiations at the Dublin Diplomatic Conference on Cluster Munitions [official website] while the US, Russia and China each declined to sign it. In November 2010 the former UN Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro [UN profile] had urged more states to join the CCM at the First Meeting of States Parties [official website]. The CCM officially went into effect in August 2010, six month after the UN’s announcement [JURIST reports], as binding international law with 107 countries having signed the treaty and 37 countries having ratified it.