The Columbus Dispatch

Rights group reviews ’22 crises and positives

Iran protests, world unity on Ukraine hopeful signs

- Edna Tarigan and David Rising

JAKARTA, Indonesia – Widespread opposition to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine demonstrat­es the strength of a unified response against human rights abuses, and there are signs that power is shifting as people take to the streets to demonstrat­e their dissatisfa­ction in Iran, China and elsewhere, a leading rights group said Thursday.

A “litany of human rights crises” emerged in 2022, but the year also presented new opportunit­ies to strengthen protection­s against violations, Human Rights Watch said in its annual world report on human rights conditions in more than 100 countries and territorie­s.

“After years of piecemeal and often half-hearted efforts on behalf of civilians under threat in places including Yemen, Afghanista­n, and South Sudan, the world’s mobilizati­on around Ukraine reminds us of the extraordin­ary potential when government­s realize their human rights responsibi­lities on a global scale,” the group’s acting executive director, Tirana Hassan, said in the preface to the 712-page report.

“All government­s should bring the same spirit of solidarity to the multitude of human rights crises around the globe, and not just when it suits their interests,” she said.

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a broad group of nations imposed wide-ranging sanctions while rallying to Kyiv’s support, while the United Nations Human Rights Council and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court both opened investigat­ions into abuses, HRW said.

Countries now need to ask themselves what might have happened had they taken such measures after Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, or applied the lessons elsewhere, such as in Ethiopia, where two years of conflict have contribute­d to one of the world’s worst humanitari­an crises, Hassan said.

“Government­s and the U.N. have condemned the summary killings, widespread sexual violence and pillage, but have done little else,” she said of the situation in Ethiopia.

The New York-based organizati­on highlighte­d the demonstrat­ions in Iran that erupted in mid-september when Mahsa Amini died after being arrested by the country’s morality police for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic’s strict dress code, as well as protests in Sri Lanka that forced the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to resign, and the democratic election in Brazil of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva

over far-right Jair Bolsonaro.

“Courageous people time and again still take extraordin­ary risks to take to the streets, even in places like Afghanista­n and China, to stand up for their rights,” HRW’S Asia director, Elaine Pearson, told reporters at the report’s launch in Jakarta.

In China, Human Rights Watch said the U.N. and others’ increased focus on the treatment of Uyghurs and Turkic Muslims in the Xinjiang region has “put Beijing on the defensive” internatio­nally, while domestic protests against the government’s “ZERO-COVID” strategy also included broader criticism of President Xi Jinping’s rule.

At a later news conference in Beirut, HRW highlighte­d economic crises in the Middle East and North Africa that have kept people from meeting basic needs and have, in turn, triggered social unrest and violence, sometimes followed by government repression.

 ?? AP FILE ?? In Tehran in October, Iranians protest the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who died in September after she was detained by the morality police.
AP FILE In Tehran in October, Iranians protest the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who died in September after she was detained by the morality police.

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