A Tale of Two Human Rights Awardees
A Tale of Two Human Rights Awardees
Editor: John Feffer, Foreign Policy In Focus
The annual Robert F. Kennedy Award ceremony took place at the White House this year for the first time in its 28-year history. Also for the first time, the president of the United States was there to honor the awardees.
This year's winner was the group Women of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA), represented by Magodona Mahlangu and Jenni Williams.Since its founding six years ago, WOZA has campaigned against domestic violence and rape, for rebuilding their country's crumbling health and education systems, and for ending government repression. Despite their commitment to nonviolence, WOZA activists have been routinely threatened, abducted, and beaten, and over 3,000 of its members have been detained or imprisoned. This show of support from President Obama is particularly important in light of the trial of the two WOZA activists, scheduled to begin next week, for "conduct likely to cause a breach of [the] peace," which could result in a five-year prison sentence if convicted.
Such public support from the White House is in stark contrast with its silence on the fate of last year's winner, Aminatou Haidar, who is widely known as the Saharan Gandhi. Earlier in November, when she was returning from the United States after receiving the Civil Courage Award from the Train Foundation, Moroccan occupation authorities arrested and expelled Haidar from her homeland of Western Sahara.
Belated Response
Haidar is Western
Sahara's leading human rights campaigner. She has led
For nearly two
weeks, the State Department was silent on Haidar's fate. It
spoke out only this past Thursday, as Haidar's physical
well-being came into question when she entered the eighth
day of a hunger strike. Spokesman Ian Kelly expressed U.S.
concerns about her health situation, but simply called for
"a speedy determination of her legal status." Rather than
calling on Moroccan authorities to live up to their
international legal obligations, Kelly instead appeared let
the Moroccans determin her status. The Moroccans
"determined" that she is persona non grata, and has no right
to return. The RFK Center for Justice and Human Rights
It
was Leahy who, standing in for his ailing colleague Edward
Kennedy at last year's ceremony, praised Haidar's struggle
for human rights against Moroccan repression and promised
that, with the incoming Obama administration, "help was on
the way." Unfortunately, bama ended up appointing Hillary
Clinton, a longtime supporter of the Moroccan occupation, to
oversee his foreign policy. Currying Favor with
Morocco Indeed, Secretary of State Clinton may bear
partial responsibility for Haidar's situation. The
activist's arrest and expulsion is part of a broader
Moroccan crackdown that appears to have received Clinton's
endorsement during a visit to Morocco early last month.
Rather than joining Amnesty International and other human
rights groups in condemning the increase in the
already-severe repression in the occupied Western Sahara,
Clinton instead chose to offer unconditional praise for the
Moroccan government's human rights record. Just days before
her arrival, Moroccan authorities arrested seven other
nonviolent activists from Western Sahara — Ahmed Alansari,
Brahim Dahane, Yahdih Ettarouzi, Saleh Labihi, Dakja
Lashgar, Rachid Sghir, and Ali Salem Tamek — on trumped-up
charges of high treason. Amnesty International has declared
the seven activists (who are currently awaiting trial)
prisoners of conscience, and called for their unconditional
release. But Clinton decided to ignore the plight of these
and other political prisoners held in Moroccan jails.
Under such circumstances, it appears that the Moroccan
authorities decided they need not fear a negative reaction
from Washington for engaging in further repression,
especially since the United States has given the country
billions of dollars in military assistance since its
conquest of Western Sahara in 1975. International law
requires that the people of non-self-governing territories
such as Western Sahara deserve the right of
self-determination, confirmed in the case of Western Sahara
by a landmark opinion of the International Court of Justice.
However, Clinton — in an interview during her recent visit
— appears to have endorsed Morocco's plans for annexing
the territory under a dubious "autonomy" plan
I have worked with both Jenni
Williams and Aminatou Haidar. They are both deserving of the
RFK Prize, and they both deserve the support of the U.S.
government as well. A test of a government's sense of
justice is whether it sees human rights as a universal
principle or simply as a political tool to advance its
foreign policy agenda. The Obama administration appears to
have opted for the latter. It is easy to support human
rights activists like the women of WOZA, since they are
battling against a regime opposed by the United States. When
it comes to human rights activists who challenge a U.S.
ally, however, the Obama administration appears no different
than previous administrations in tolerating their
oppression. Stephen Zunes is a Foreign Policy in Focus
ENDS