Regarding the Pain of Others: Human Rights in Mexico

Similar documents
Zapatista Women. And the mobilization of women s guerrilla forces in Latin America during the 20 th century

Observations on the State of Indigenous Human Rights in Mexico

Honduras. Police Abuse and Corruption JANUARY 2016

Impact & Political Outcomes in Mexico

Strategic Pacification in Chiapas

POLICY BRIEF NJ! 1. Chiapas and the Crisis of Mexican Agriculture. by Roger Burbach and Peter Rosset

CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLES 16 AND 17 OF THE COVENANT

MEXICO. Military Abuses and Impunity JANUARY 2013

Sudan - Researched and compiled by the Refugee Documentation Centre of Ireland on 13 July 2011

Review of Mexico s Compliance with the ICESCR

INDIA. Accountability, impunity and obstacles to access to justice

Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies Contract Instructor Opportunities Fall/Winter

Advisory Panel on the Question of the Caribbean The Question of Haiti

Professor Robert F. Alegre, Ph.D. Department of History University of New England

CHAPTER 28 Section 4. The Equal Rights Struggle Expands. The Civil Rights Era 895 Dolores Huerta during a grape pickers strike in 1968.

List of issues in relation to the initial report of Sierra Leone (CCPR/C/SLE/1)*

Bolivia. Accountability for Past Abuses JANUARY 2014

In devising a strategy to address instability in the region, the United States has repeatedly referred to its past success in combating

Submitted to the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Ecuador to the United Nations Office and other international organizations in Geneva

Concluding observations on the combined initial and second periodic reports of Thailand*

THE 2010 RAFTO PRIZE TO JOSÉ RAÚL VERA LÓPEZ FEARLESS DEFENDER OF MEXICO S MOST VULNERABLE

For the last 50 years Colombia has been in the midst of civil armed conflict. The civil

Ijaarsa Dubartoota Oromo Addunyaa/International Oromo Women s Organization

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

Characteristics of the Ethnographic Sample of First- and Second-Generation Latin American Immigrants in the New York to Philadelphia Urban Corridor

Featured Project for June 2016 CATW-LAC. Access to Justice and Due Diligence for Sex Trafficking Victims Red Alert System

War, Education and Peace By Fernando Reimers

Economic and Social Council

Reading Questions (Vocabulary terms should be highlighted throughout answer)

Ramona: Rebel Dreamweaver. by Juan Machin

Suggested questions for the Human Rights Committee s List of Issues to be taken up during the 5 th periodic examination of Mexico

If anyone cares to remember what attitudes toward women were like

AP COMPARATIVE GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS 2011 SCORING GUIDELINES

Transitional Justice and the Truth Commission in Nepal

Map of Mexico. Civil Society in a Globalizing World: The Case of Mexico. Regime Stability. No Meaningful Opposition.

amnesty international

Together We Can Close The Gender Wage Gap! The Canadian Federation of Business and Professional Women Ottawa

Panel Statement for held on 7 and 8 December, 2011 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia

United Nations Human Rights Website - Treaty Bodies Database - Document - Concludin...

Key Concept 6.2: Examples: Examples:

OUTLAWED AND ABUSED CRIMINALIZING SEX WORK IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Rudolf Steiner on What We Do Now with T. H. Meyer - August 31 st. From The Site

A Briefing on the Situation of Women in Cambodia May 2005

VERACRUZ, MEXICO: SECURITY ASSESSMENT

Human trafficking, exploitation, and displacement in Syria

Losing Ground: Human Rights Advocates Under Attack in Colombia

A Reply to Andersen. José Antonio Lucero University of Washington

Economic and Social Council

Opening speech to the First EI World Women s Conference

NGO STATEMENT TO NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS for the PROMOTION AND PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS

A view from the Americas

agree that the treaty was beneficial and it made a significance in the economic relations between

UPR Info s Database. UPR Info s database of UPR Recommendations and voluntary pledges is a very unique tool developed by UPR Info.

Analysing the Conflict Resolution: The Example of Zapatista Movement

Honduras. Police Abuses and Corruption JANUARY 2015

Dear Delegates, It is a pleasure to welcome you to the 2016 Montessori Model United Nations Conference.

Chile. not enter into force because the executive branch did not have legal authority to issue it.

FP048: Low Emissions and Climate Resilient Agriculture Risk Sharing Facility. Guatemala, Mexico IDB B.18/04

New Minority Movements. The American Indian Movement and The Chicano Movement

Kenya. Conduct of Security Forces JANUARY 2017

Sixth Declaration of the Selva Lacandona

INTRODUCTION TO POLITICS Spring Semester 2013

1. Issue of concern: Impunity

International Economics & Cultural Affairs - Valparaiso University

Myanmar. Burmese government and many of the 135 ethnic groups in Myanmar such as the Kachin, Shan,

LATINOS IN AMERICA: A Demographic Profile

Mexico s Independence Mexico declared its independence from Spain on September 16, 1810 The Mexican war for independence then lasted from

The Origins and Future of the Environmental Justice Movement: A Conversation With Laura Pulido

WOMEN MIGRANT WORKERS HUMAN RIGHTS

SPECIAL ISSUE: The International Violence Against Women Act

SUDAN MIDTERM REPORT IMPLEMENTATION OF UPR RECOMMENDATIONS

TERMS OF REFERENCE NATIONAL CONSULTANT ILO/UNHCR JOINT PROJECT

University of Wollongong. Research Online

Human Rights and Social Justice

List of issues in relation to the initial report of Belize*

Oman. Authorities often have relied on provisions in the 2002 Telecommunications Act and 2011 Cybercrime Law to restrict freedom of expression online.

TERMS OF REFERENCE NATIONAL CONSULTANT ILO/UNHCR JOINT PROJECT

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

UGANDA. Freedom of Assembly and Expression JANUARY 2013

United Nations Human Rights Website - Treaty Bodies Database - Document - Concludin...

Concluding comments of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women: Trinidad and Tobago

Subject: HUMAN RIGHTS AND DUTIES Code No. 92

International covenant on civil and political rights CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 40 OF THE COVENANT

San Diego s South Bay: Imperial Beach

Topic Abstract: Fidel Castro s Revolutionary Guard, 1956

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

CENTRE FOR STUDIES CRITICAL INTERDISCIPLINARY

EN 32IC/15/19.3 Original: English

Origins of American Government

Information for the UPR

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE 2014 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE OFFICE OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR FOR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION OF THE IACHR

Uncovering Truth: Promoting Human Rights in Brazil

UN Security Council, Report of the Secretary-General on the Activities of the United Nations Office for West Africa, 26 June

Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and

Level 1. Manifest Destiny and the Addition of Land

Freedom of Expression on the Agenda in Mexico. By Mariclaire Acosta, Mexico project director and Viviana Giacaman, director of Latin America programs.

"Zapatistas Are Different"

6/8/2015. Webinar Guidelines. Partners and Sponsors

Papua New Guinea. Women s and Girls Rights JANUARY 2017

Transcription:

Página 1 de 5 Share Report Abuse Next Blog» Create Blog Sign In Regarding the Pain of Others: Human Rights in Mexico Virgin de Guadalupe About Us Regarding the Pain of Others: Human Rights Mexico The following entries are renderings, thought experiments, and short stories we want to share about our human rights experiences in View my complete profile Elizabeth Elizabeth is a student at the University of Washington. Sergio Sergio grew up in Jessica Adler Jessica Adler is a graduating senior at the University of Washington. She is currently enrolled in the course Human Rights in Latin America as instructed by Alejandro Cerone. It is in this class where she was Thursday, July 8, 2010 Mexico: Indigenous Human Rights Abuses we want to create a democratic space. We don t see armed struggle in the classic sense of previous guerrilla wars, that is as the only way and the only all-powerful truth around which everything is organized. In a war, the decisive thing is not the military confrontation but the politics at stake in the confrontation. We didn t go to war to kill or be killed. We went to war in order to be heard. (Subcomandante Marcos) Subcomandante Marcos is considered one of the most prominent leaders of the indigenous Zapatista Liberation Army (EZLN) located in the southern state of Chiapas, Evidently this group of indigenous revolutionaries have been fighting as strong advocates for the improvement of human rights for not only the indigenous people of Chiapas but to all indigenous tribes of The situation of the indigenous people of Mexico, is one which has called international attention due to the wide range of human rights violations directed toward the indigenous people of Mexico and its community leaders. (Mexico is home to one of the largest and most diverse indigenous populations in Latin America and yet its indigenous people continue to be victims of injustice and discrimination). Thus, EZLN has served as a voice since 1944, declaring war against the Mexican state for the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement which oppresses the working class and most importantly, for denying autonomy to the indigenous peoples of Mexico in the state of Chiapas (UNHCR). Currently many of the indigenous human rights violations include the marginalization of economic, social and cultural rights, which involve extreme cases of poverty in the indigenous population, lack of access to education, health services, potable water and fair wages. As of 2008, Mexico s indigenous population is approximately 13 million people, which accounts for 13 percent of the total population, with a variety of 62 different languages spoken (UNHCR). Thus, documents from the National Commission Blog Archive 2010 (2) July (2) Mexico: Indigenous Human Rights Abuses To Right a Wrong: Abortion, Rape and the Female C...

Página 2 de 5 provided with the oppertunity to create a blog about the human rights conditions in She choose to study Mexico because of the experiences she had while traveling around North, Central and South America. Jessica lived in Oaxaca, Puerto Escondido and Chiapas for over 4 months. During that time she had the opportunity to observe the human rights conditions closely of many families in the south of for the Development of Indigenous Peoples indicate that 25 out of every 100 indigenous people receive no pay for their work and 56 earn 256 dollars or less a month (Cevallos). In addition, about one-third of people who speak an indigenous language are illiterate, which is three times the national average (UNHCR). Due to the impoverished conditions faced in their own rural lands, thousands of indigenous people of Mexico including 300,000 indigenous minors, abandon their homes or indigenous communities to work in agricultural fields or in other Mexican cities selling trinkets, working as domestics and participating in the sex trade every year. Thus, the lack of food forces 36% of indigenous minors between ages six and fourteen to work in the labor force to sustain their families (UNICEF). The violation of civil and political rights is also another issue for the indigenous peoples of Mexico who seek political representation and official recognition of their languages as they partner with local non-governmental organization (NGOs) to fight the lack of rights and inequalities and poverty. Most of these activists for indigenous human rights face death threats, intimidation, torture and murder by the very own Mexican military and police force, which have been accused of the deaths and abductions of various indigenous human rights leaders. Some of the recent abductions include Manuel Ponce Rosas and Raúl Lucas Lucía, two indigenous human rights activists and president and secretary of Organization for the Future of Mixteco People (OFPM). Rosas and Lucía were abducted on February 13, 2009 by three men claiming to be agents of the Ministerial Investigative Police (PIM) and were later found dead and their cases remain unresolved (Ahni). Hence, many in the Mexican police force and the army military authority continue to kill with impunity due to the failure of the justice system to control and bring these killers to justice for these severe humans right abuses. Reports released by America s Watch in 1992 up until 2006 reveal strong government interference with core political rights including indigenous rights activists, which can explain for the use of intimidation and threats and the corruption, which continues to pervade the Mexican criminal justice system (World Report 2006). As a result, the Mexican indigenous peoples calls for justice continue to be ignored by many Mexican government officials and hope moves forward to international media and the United Nations to hold the Mexican government accountable for the economic, social and cultural rights of the indigenous peoples of Sources: Ahni. "Mexico: Indigenous Rights Leaders Found Dead : Intercontinental Cry." Intercontinental Cry : For the People, the Land and the Truth. 24 Feb. 2009. Web. 06 July 2010.. Cevallos, Diego. "MEXICO: Indigenous People "As Poor as Ever" - IPS Ipsnews.net." IPS Inter Press Service. 4 Jan. 2006. Web. 06 July 2010.. Human Rights Watch. "Essential Background: Overview of Human Rights Issues in Mexico (Human Rights Watch, 31-12-2005)." Home Human Rights Watch. 2006. Web. 06 July 2010.. Minority Rights Group International. "World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Mexico : Indigenous Peoples." UNHCR Welcome. 2008. Web. 06 July 2010.. UNICEF. "At a Glance: " UNICEF. 8 Sept. 2004. Web. 6 July 2010.. POSTED BY: ELIZABETH P. PÉREZ Posted by Regarding the Pain of Others: Human Rights Mexico at 4:45 AM 0 comments Wednesday, July 7, 2010 To Right a Wrong: Abortion, Rape and the Female Condition in Mexico Other suggested readings: Human Rights Watch, Mexico: Supreme Court Protects Rape Victims, 27 May 2010, available at: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/4c04c1851a.html [accessed 4 July

Página 3 de 5 2010] Human Rights Watch, Rape Victims Denied Legal Abortion, 6 March 2010, Available at: http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2006/03/06/mexico-rape-victims-denied-legalabortion Human Rights Watch, Mexico: Hold Military Accountable on Rights Abuses, 29 April 2009. Williams, Joyce and Holmes, Karen. The Second Assault: Rape and Public Attitudes, Greenwood Press. December 1981 <!--[endif]--> <!--[if!supportfootnotes]-->[1]<!--[endif]--> Mexico has signed (and ratified almost) every human rights related treaty except the UN Covenant on Economic, Social and cultural rights. It is therefore obligated to enforce and protect rights granted in those treaties. <!--[if!supportfootnotes]-->[2] Rudolf, Beate and Eriksson, Andrea, Women's Rights Under International Human Rights Treaties: Issues of Rape, Domestic Slavery, Abortion, and Domestic Violence (July 2007). International Journal of Constitutional Law, Vol. 5, Issue 3, pp. 507-525, 2007. Posted by Regarding the Pain of Others: Human Rights Mexico at 4:47 PM 0 comments Labels: Abortion, cultural relativism, government officials, human rights, rape Home Subscribe to: Posts (Atom) Google Wired News - YouTube's 'Leanback' Wants To Friend Your Remote powered by This blog was created + edited by UW students Jessica, Elizabeth and Sergio. DO NOT COPY OUR IDEAS. Travel template by Sookhee Lee. Powered by Blogger.

Página 4 de 5

Página 5 de 5