Showing posts with label Katie Bacharach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katie Bacharach. Show all posts
By Katie Bacharach

A new briefing by Sedex Global and Verite has found that it is possible to remove modern-day slavery from global supply chains, but only if global companies contribute to greater transparency and collaboration, according to the IPS News Agency

The briefing outlines modern-day slavery statistics and highlights issues such as “broker-induced hiring traps” that had not been addressed sufficiently before. The briefing also emphasizes the risks businesses face with regard to modern-day slavery and provides recommendations for brands and suppliers to engage in ethical practices in supply chains.
By Katie Bacharach

BITs, perhaps the most common economic treaties in modern times, have only recently begun to encompass protections for stakeholders, and there has been some controversy as to whether the protections that have been included are effective. On April 9, the Georgetown Global Law Scholars and Lawyers for Corporate Accountability will be hosting a conference where a panel of speakers will present their thoughts on the challenge of protecting labor and environmental rights through the BIT mechanism and discuss what form of protection offers the best chance of being realistically effective.

The speakers will include: Ben Beach, Research Director, Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch; Lee M. Caplan, Partner, International Arbitration and Dispute Resolution, Arent Fox; Gary Horlick, International Trade Lawyer and Adjunct Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center; Karin Kizer, Attorney Adviser, Office of the Legal Adviser’s Office of Economics and Business, U.S. Department of State.

The conference will be held at Georgetown University Law Center on Wednesday, April 9, 2014 from 2:30-4:30 p.m. in McDonough Hall 205. Drinks and hors d’oeuvres will be served at a post-conference reception from 4:30-5:30 p.m.


For more information, please contact Adina Appelbaum at appelbaum.adina@gmail.com.

By Katie Bacharach

Papua New Guinea’s Supreme Court has begun a human rights inquiry into Australia’s immigration detention center on Manus Island, according the BBC. The probe will assess whether the conditions there meet human rights requirements under PNG’s constitution.

Australia sends asylum seekers arriving by boat for detention and processing in offshore camps in Papua New Guinea and the Pacific territory of Nauru. The conditions of these camps have been strongly criticized by U.N. agencies and rights groups. The investigation will examine what human rights these asylum seekers have, whether they are being granted those rights, and if not, how their rights can be protected.
By Katie Bacharach

Marc Weller, Professor of International Law at the University of Cambridge, has written an analysis of the legal issues raised by Russia’s intervention in Crimea for BBC. The analysis works through several possible legal arguments and concludes that the event violates international law under each of them. It is definitely a piece worth checking out.
By Katie Bacharach

The UN News Centre reported on the second official visit to the Central African Republic (CAR) made by the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Zainab Hawa Bangura, on March 17 to 19. She met with State officials, civil society representatives, and humanitarian workers to discuss practical arrangements for the prevention of and response to conflict-related sexual violence. 

Displaced persons in CAR face a constant threat of atrocities committed by perpetrators of inter-communal and inter-religious violence, including rape and gang rape, forced marriage, sexual mutilation, abduction, and sexual slavery. Ms. Bangura agreed to the U.N.-backed deployment of a rapid response unit of the national gendarmerie to respond to incidents of sexual violence in conflict in an effort to combat the climate of impunity.
By Katie Bacharach

The Libyan Cabinet has issued a decree that would put women raped during Libya’s 2011 uprising on the same level as wounded veterans by recognizing them as war victims.  

Pro-Gaddafi forces are alleged to have used rape of women as a weapon against rebel forces during the uprising. The decree, which still would need congressional approval to go into effect, contains 12 measures, including financial assistance and physical and psychological health care. Recognizing rape victims is unprecedented in the conservative North African country, and the hope is that this will help with reconciliation efforts.

See the BBC for more details.
By Katie Bacharach

Onesphore Rwabukombe, a former Rwandan mayor, was sentenced to 14 years in prison for his role in the Rwandan genocide, according to the BBC

He was found guilty of ordering the killing of between 400 and 1,200 people who had taken refuge at a church in Kiziguro, where Rwabukombe was the mayor at the time. He had been living as a political refugee in Germany since 2002. This was the first trial to take place in Germany in connection with the Rwandan genocide.
By Katie Bacharach

The European Union has agreed to impose sanctions on Ukrainian officials “responsible for violence and excessive force” after the bloodiest day of clashes in Kiev, according to the BBC

Seventy-five people have been killed since Tuesday, with some anti-government protesters reportedly being killed by snipers. 

E.U. foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said that the “prime responsibility” to get talks started  between the two sides lay with President Viktor Yanukovych and that implementation of the measures “will be taken forward in light of developments in Ukraine.”
By Katie Bacharach

Edgar Tamayo, a Mexican citizen, has been executed in Texas despite a recent statement by Mexico’s foreign ministry that going ahead with the execution would be a "clear violation" of the United States’ international obligations, according to the LA Times and Reuters

Tamayo was convicted of fatally shooting a Houston police officer in 1994. However, Tamayo was never informed of his right to diplomatic assistance, enshrined in the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. In 2004, the International Court of Justice ruled that the United States had violated the Vienna Convention for the case of 51 Mexicans, including Tamayo, who had been sentenced to the death penalty without being informed of their rights to consular assistance. The court ordered the United States to reconsider the convictions. 

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry had also urged Texas to reconsider the execution because it could impact the way American citizens are treated abroad.
By Katie Bacharach

Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and South Africa’s first black president, has died, according to BBC NewsReuters, and Washington Post.

Mr. Mandela led South Africa’s transition from apartheid after spending 27 years in prison for his political activities. He had been receiving intensive medical care at home for a lung infection after being hospitalized for three months. Mr. Mandela was 95.
By Katie Bacharach

A Thomson Reuters Foundation poll found that Egypt is the worst Arab state for women. Egypt’s place at the bottom of the ranking is attributed to discriminatory laws, a spike in trafficking, sexual harassment, high rates of female genital cutting, and a surge in violence and Islamist feeling after the Arab Spring uprisings. The poll surveyed 336 gender experts in August and September in 21 Arab League states and Syria. Questions were based on provisions of the U.N. Convention to Eliminate All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), which 19 Arab states have signed.

Complete poll results can be found here.
Factory | By Peter Grifin
By Katie Bacharach

A Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) is a treaty between two states that ensures that investors of one state receive certain agreed upon standards of treatment when investing in the other state. The primary purpose is to encourage foreign direct investment (FDI) between the two states, which in turn should lead to economic growth for both states.

The emphasis on protecting the investor has had two important implications for BITs. First, broader public policy concerns have not traditionally made their way into these agreements. Second, the agreements have typically been characterized by an asymmetry of power, where foreign investors are accorded a number of substantive rights under the agreement without being subject to any specific obligations. For those concerned with labor rights and corporate social responsibility, this can be a dangerous combination that can lead to a “race to the bottom,” where countries continue to relax labor standards in order to attract investors.

One potential way to get around this race to the bottom and to impose labor rights obligations on multinational and transnational corporations is to insert labor commitments directly into BITs. In recent years there has been a push for governments to do a better job of incorporating broader public policy concerns, including labor rights, into their BITs. Consequently, a number of countries have inserted labor safeguards into the language of their model BITs (which are essentially templates that countries formulate as their treaty ideal and then use as a starting point for negotiating actual agreements).
By Katie Bacharach

Two former leaders of Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge regime denied responsibility for war crimes on the last day of their trial before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), according to the UN News Centre.

The ECCC was established in 2006 to try those most responsible for the crimes committed during the Khmer Rouge regime. Mr. Nuon Chea and Mr. Khieu Samphan are on trial for war crimes and both men denied responsibility and expressed remorse for those who suffered under the regime. The prosecution called for a life sentence, arguing that the two men were the masterminds of criminal policies that forced millions of people to march thousands of kilometers to unknown places in inhumane conditions and killed hundreds of former Lon Nol officials and soldiers.
By Katie Bacharach

Last week Madagascar voters went to the polls in the first presidential election since the coup in 2009. The country was plunged into turmoil after Mr. Rajoelina ousted former President Ravalomanana. Since then, foreign aid has largely been cut and poverty has worsened.

BBC and Reuters have the details on how the election has gone. There were 33 presidential candidates in the election, which has been postponed three times this year. Mr. Rajoelina, former Presidents Ravalomanana and Ratsiraka, and Ravalomanana’s wife were all barred from running for president. Voting was largely peaceful, although a number of polling stations outside of the capital were attacked.

According to BBC, European and African observers announced that the election was “free, transparent and credible”. Preliminary results show that Richard Jean-Louis Robinson has about 30 percent of the votes and his main rival Hery Martial Rakotoarimanana Rajaonarimampianina has just over 15 percent.
EGYPT PROTEST/ by oxfamnovib, on Flickr
By Katie Bacharach

The Washington Post has reported that the military-appointed interim government in Egypt has drafted legislation that would strictly regulate street protests. The law would grant authorities the power to cancel demonstrations or quickly escalate the use of lethal force for vague reasons, such as threats to public order. 

The proposed law has made pro-democracy activists and intellectuals wary of the intentions of the interim government. They are concerned that this is a sign the government is attempting to put an authoritarian regime in place similar to that of former President Hosni Mubarak, who used a sweeping emergency law and security apparatus to thwart demonstrations and dissidents.
By Katie Bacharach

The BBC reported that Ivory Coast ministers decided to file a motion to dismiss the ICC’s arrest warrant for Simone Gbagbo, the former first lady. Mrs. Gbagbo is being prosecuted for crimes against humanity, including murder, rape, and torture allegedly committed following the disputed presidential election in the Ivory Coast in 2010. The cabinet instead plans to bring Mrs. Gbagbo to trial by Ivorian courts. Her husband, former President Laurent Gbagbo, is already in The Hague awaiting trial at the ICC for charges of crimes against humanity. This announcement came shortly after the African Union announced it will hold a summit next month to discuss a mass withdrawal from the ICC in protest to the trial of Kenya’s Deputy President William Ruto.
By Katie Bacharach

As the 68th UN General Assembly convened on Tuesday, the UN News Centre reported that the body's new president, John W. Ashe, announced that he would ask delegations to focus on setting the stage for the post-2015 development agenda. Mr. Ashe said he would convene three high-level events, focused on women, youth, and civil society; human rights as rule of law; and South-South cooperation, triangular cooperation, and information communication technology for development. 

Reuters has an interesting article explaining why women's empowerment should remain a priority in the post-2015 development agenda. Because women account for about 70 percent of the world's extremely poor, targeting them could have the greatest impact on reducing global poverty. In addition, empowering women has broad ripple effects on general development progress, including improving family health, increasing the likelihood of child immunization, and reducing maternal mortality. 
By Katie Bacharach

Saudi Arabia’s Cabinet passed groundbreaking legislation recognizing domestic violence as a criminal offense punishable by law. Reuters reports that the new law covers all forms of abuse, including physical, psychological, and sexual, as well as the threat of abuse. Previously, domestic abuse against women was regarded as a private matter in Saudi Arabia and it is still a relatively new concept for public discussion in the kingdom. There is some concern, though, that the new law is flawed because women remain subject to male guardians who must bring them to file abuse complaints, even though these guardians could be the abusers.

Read more at Reuters.