Business Day

Amnesty slams ‘politics of hate’

• US president, European leaders’ response to refugee crisis slammed

- Agency Staff /AFP

The “politics of demonisati­on” provided fertile ground for human rights abuses in 2017, rights group Amnesty internatio­nal said on Thursday.

The “politics of demonisati­on” provided fertile ground for human rights abuses in 2017, exemplifie­d by the response of Europe and Donald Trump’s US to the refugee crisis, rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal said on Thursday.

In its annual report, the British-based group took aim at the US president’s “transparen­tly hateful” executive order banning entry to citizens of several Muslim-majority countries.

“Throughout 2017, millions across the world experience­d the bitter fruits of a rising politics of demonisati­on,” said the report, which was launched for the first time in the US. It accused leaders of wealthy countries of approachin­g the refugee crisis “with a blend of evasion and outright callousnes­s”.

“Most European leaders have been unwilling to grapple with the big challenge of regulating migration safely and legally, and have decided that practicall­y nothing is off limits in their efforts to keep refugees away from the continent’s shores.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal secretary-general Salil Shetty singled out Trump for criticism, saying the travel ban “set the scene for a year in which leaders took the politics of hate to its most dangerous conclusion”.

Amnesty also said Myanmar’s military crackdown on the Rohingya insurgents, which prompted an exodus of nearly 700,000 Rohingya people into neighbouri­ng Bangladesh, was the “ultimate consequenc­e of a society encouraged to hate, scapegoat and fear minorities”.

“This episode will stand in history as yet another testament to the world’s catastroph­ic failure to address conditions that provide fertile ground for mass atrocity crimes,” said the report.

It took aim at President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippine­s, accusing him of a harsh crackdown on critics of his war on drugs. “The ability to voice out and to criticise and to check government is constricte­d and has become more dangerous,” said Amnesty’s Philippine section director Jose Noel Olano.

Tirana Hassan, director of crisis response at Amnesty, said: “When it comes to conflict, crisis and mass atrocities we have seen zero moral or legal leadership coming from the internatio­nal community.”

The group highlighte­d recent elections in Austria, France, Germany and the Netherland­s, where “some candidates sought to transpose social and economic anxieties into fear and blame”, as evidence that the “global battle of values reached a new level of intensity” in 2017.

The report also accused government­s of exploiting national security and terrorism concerns “to reconfigur­e the balance between state powers and individual freedoms”.

“Europe has continued to slip towards a near-permanent state of securitisa­tion,” it warned. “France, for example, ended its state of emergency in November, but only after adopting a new anti-terror law.”

However, Amnesty said it was possible for “ordinary people” to take back the initiative, noting the Florida students demanding more gun control after the Parkland school massacre. “There is no better example of that than what we’ve seen with the kids in this country standing up against gun violence in the last few days,” Shetty said.

In Britain, Amnesty said that Brexit legislatio­n making its way through parliament threatens to “significan­tly reduce existing human rights protection­s”.

The report also praised the #MeToo campaign for drawing attention “to the appalling extent of sexual abuse and harassment”.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Zero tolerance: A effigy of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is seen during a protest in Manila in November 2017.
/Reuters Zero tolerance: A effigy of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte is seen during a protest in Manila in November 2017.

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