ACLU Condemns U.S. for Failing to Uphold Civil and Political
Rights
Report Documenting Abuses Submitted to the U.N. Human Rights
Committee and Released on National Day of Action
By ACLU
06/20/06 "Information
Clearing House" --- - NEW YORK -- The American Civil Liberties Union today released
a report to the U.N. Human Rights Committee condemning the U.S.
government for failing to comply with its treaty obligations to
protect and preserve a range of human rights protections at home
and abroad. Drawing attention to some of the most vulnerable
members of society, including women, children, minorities,
immigrants and the accused, the ACLU offered detailed
recommendations to bring the U.S. in line with universally
recognized human rights standards.
"America should be a beacon of freedom throughout the world, not
a country that violates the basic human rights of its own
people," said Ann Beeson, Associate Legal Director of the ACLU.
The report, Dimming the Beacon of Freedom: U.S. Violations of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
documents the U.S. record on human rights in five areas:
national security, women's rights, racial justice, immigrants
rights and religious freedom.
The Human Rights Committee is the U.N. body of experts charged
with monitoring countries compliance with the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the primary
human rights treaty. The United States ratified the treaty in
1992. The committee will review the official submission of the
U.S. government on July 17 and 18 in Geneva. The ACLU will send
a delegation to present the report and monitor the proceedings.
Dimming the Beacon of Freedom provides a detailed description of
human rights violations in the United States. In addition to the
impact of these rights violations on other vulnerable groups in
the U.S., the report highlights how in the wake on September 11,
2001, Arabs, Muslims and South Asians, and to some extent all
immigrants, were victims of discriminatory targeting by the
government. It draws attention to the erosion of the right to
privacy, discussing expanded surveillance and the government's
growing use of the states secret privilege to avoid
accountability for abuses.
The ACLU recommendations urge the United States to:
- Ensure that federal judicial remedies are available to
all persons detained in the "war on terror," including
immigrants, minorities, women and undocumented persons;
- Thoroughly and promptly investigate all allegations of
torture and abuse in the U.S. or U.S.-controlled prisons,
jails and other detention facilities;
- Immediately end the illegal practice of rendering
individuals to secret detention facilities or to countries
known to participate in torture;
- Cease and desist domestic surveillance of Americans
without probable cause and prior judicial approval;
- Reform the nation's immigration policy and ensure its
compliance with human rights standards;
- Curtail the excessive secrecy in the administration of
justice;
- Require states to properly fund and supervise their
indigent defense systems;
- Repeal laws that convict women based on who they
associate with rather than their conduct;
- Reduce minority over-representation in juvenile
detention systems;
- Allow all citizens, regardless of their criminal
history, to vote; or, as an alternative, require all states
to restore voting rights upon completion of a criminal
sentence; and,
- Effectively plan for crises such as Hurricane Katrina,
including seeking meaningful participation from the
community at all stages.
"The government's actions in the post- 9/11 period -
ill-treatment of Muslims and immigrants, secrecy in the
administration of justice, erosion of American's right to
privacy, restrictions on rights of assembly and freedom of
expression -- as well as its indifference to the African
Americans most devastated by Hurricane Katrina, reveal its
nonchalance where human rights at home are concerned," said
Laleh Ispahani, Senior Policy Counsel at the ACLU.
Accompanying the release of the report, ACLU affiliates across
the country are recognizing that human rights begin at home with
a day of action in Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, Michigan and
Texas. The intent of the day is to educate Americans about their
human rights under the ICCPR, to demand U.S. accountability for
human rights violations, and to call for the protection and
realization of human rights on the local, state and federal
level. Representatives from these ACLU affiliates will be part
of the delegation traveling to Geneva next month.
Dimming the Beacon of Freedom: U.S. Violations of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, is
available online at
www.aclu.org/intlhumanrights/gen/25924pub20060620.html
The ACLU's new Human Rights Working Group is dedicated to
holding the U.S. government accountable to universally
recognized human rights principles. The Human Rights Working
Group is charged with incorporating international human rights
strategies into ACLU advocacy on issues relating to national
security, immigrants' rights, women's rights and racial justice.
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