World Sitting on 'Powder Keg' of Social Unrest: Amnesty
LONDON - The world is sitting on a "powder keg" of social unrest, which risks exploding as human rights are eroded by the global economic slowdown, Amnesty International warned.
But its annual report -- detailing abuses from China to Guantanamo Bay and from Sri Lanka to the ex-Soviet Union -- said the global meltdown also offers a chance to rebuild an economic framework putting human rights at its heart.
"There are growing signs of political unrest and violence, adding to the global insecurity that already exists because of deadly conflicts which the international community seems unable or unwilling to resolve.
"In other words: we are sitting on a powder keg of inequality, injustice and insecurity, and it is about to explode," said Amnesty chief Irene Khan.
The 400-page Amnesty Report gives an overview of abuse around the world, including well-publicised human rights hotspots such as Myanmar, Sudan's Darfur or the Palestinian territories.
In Asia , Amnesty noted the "magnificence" of the Beijing Olympic Games, but lamented that the run-up to them was "marred by increased repression throughout the country as authorities tightened control over human rights defenders, religious practitioners, ethnic minorities, lawyers and journalists."
In Africa there was "state-sponsored political violence" in Zimbabwe, while war-torn areas of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) saw "numerous human rights abuses... committed by all the parties to the conflict."
The election of US President Barack Obama raised hopes for progress on closing down the Guantanamo Bay prison camp, but even after only a few months "the record of the new administration has been mixed," Amnesty said.
"Early promise and initial important steps to redress violations have been followed by limited action towards ensuring detentions are brought into line with the USA's international obligations, and a lack of accountability and remedy for past human rights violations remains entrenched," it added.
In Europe, Amnesty highlighted problems ranging from the use of cluster munitions during the brief Georgia-Russia war, to widespread discrimination against ethnic minorities.
"Migrants, Roma, Jews and Muslims were among those subjected to hate crimes by individuals or extremist groups," it said.
The Israel-Palestinian conflict stayed at the heart of Middle East tensions, where the Gaza conflict in January showed "the failure of military forces... to abide by the basic requirements of... international humanitarian law."
As well as national and regional problems, Amnesty also highlighted wider global problems, including food shortages which leave one billion people hungry or malnourished.
Growing unemployment, as the global economic suddenly contracts after a prolonged boom in many of the richest countries in the world, only adds to the crisis.
"While it is too early to predict the full impact on human rights of the profligacy of recent years, it is clear that the human rights costs and consequences of the economic crisis will cast long shadows," said Khan.
"Billions of people are suffering from insecurity, injustice and indignity. This is a human rights crisis," she said.
In an interview with AFP, Khan called on the Group of 20 (G20) countries to remember that human rights must go hand-in-hand with stimulating economic growth.
"Our message to them is: you can't fix the economic problem without fixing the human rights problems that go along with it," she said.
But the Amnesty report's conclusions are not all gloomy: from the wreckage of the global economy, it may be possible to rebuild something better, its authors suggest.
"For the past two decades, the state has been retreating or reneging on its human rights obligations in favour of the market in the belief that economic growth would lift all boats," said the Amnesty chief.
"With the tide receding and boats springing leaks, governments are radically changing their positions and talking about a new global financial architecture and international governance system in which the state plays a stronger role."
That, it said, could ultimately be good news.
"That opens up an opportunity to also halt the retreat of the state from the social sphere and re-design a more human rights-friendly model... than the one that has characterized international policy-making for the past 20 years."
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12 Comments so far
Show AllHey!
It's my favorate form of torture: WORLD DOMIINATION: NWO: ONE WORLD GOVERNMENT.
The ultimate form of Monopoly. So even if you hate living in the United Police States of America, pretty soon, you won't even be able to leave! Because the damn Octopus will be everywhere.
FIGHT GOVERNMENT GLOBALIZATION!
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
If there is to be unrest, let it begin. It can only be a good thing.
Direct Action get the goods as the wobs say...
How romantic. Just hope it is not YOUR throat that gets cut.
So the choice is: The poor stay quiet and starve gracefully OR they become cutthroats? I believe there are other paths toward economic justice, actions in which both the starving and the well-fed can collaborate.
Joe
so, let's see:
the priorities, according to this article, are to improve global human rights conditions via global economic growth?
no mention of the ecologic impact of economic thinking?
the problem we are facing isn't a dying economy, it's a dying planet due to our economy...
there is no economy, no human, and no human right, without the living planet, and economic growth destroys the planet, recklessly using the earth and all other species of plant and animal as the raw source material, processing it toxically, and returning it damaged...
Sometimes I wonder if we would be better off had McCain stolen the election. Now that this mess of a country has a pretty face (Obama's) on it and a master manipulator at the helm, people are back in slumber mode, while corporations redouble their efforts to control whatever is left of this world's resources, and the wealthy continue to suck us dry.
Had McCain been given the presidency, Americans would not have bought those bailouts for the rich. Many of us would've thrown a few bricks by now, and the inevitable political upheaval that will eventually give birth to a revolution would've started already...we'd be closer to the light at the end of the tunnel.
Obama is the appeaser-in-chief. His job is to maintain the status quo while keeping the great unwashed in their place, away from those who conrol this country and this world.
Exactly what I've been thinking.
There never was a "global economy" just as there is no "global government"
So there will be no "global" solution to this, each country will have to dael with their own problems.
Time to recognize the importance of survival since "rights" are fairly useless without it.
Mr. More,
You don't know much about much, don't you. Ever heard of the WTO, NAFTA, GATT, FTAA, WB, IMF, and other alphabet soup instutions dedicated to global dominance by multinational corporations?
Ever heard of the World Economic forum, and the World Social forum organised as a counterweight against it?
Tell the millions of Indians, Africans, West Indians, and Latin Americans who have lost their livlioods and now live in deep poverty due to the big agricultural multinational firms and the "structural adjustment" forced privatization and union busting by the global banks.
Did they mention the illegal wars and occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan?
This is depressing that Obama the hope of the progressives turned out to be such a puppet. The world has been on social unrest powder keg for some time now. The fuse has been lit now its time to await what ever is coming.