Refugee Action’s Big Night in!

Saturday, May 2nd, 5.00pm, Fawcett JCR, Newnham College

We decided to spice things up a bit at our first CUAI meeting of term, and swapped the usual tea and biscuits for a variety of dishes from around the globe in aid of Refugee Action. All of the dishes were based on recipes written and developed by refugee chefs, ranging from a Sri Lankan Wattakka curry to an Ndolé dip from Cameroon. We also sent off dozens of letters on recent urgent actions, including the unjust imprisonment of Burmese human rights activist Thein Aung Myint. The event was a huge success, and many thanks to everyone who came along!

See Facebook Event

Information on Refugee Action

Our buffet to raise money for Refugee Action

 

Ice&Fire Asylum Monologues 01/12/14

Ice and Fire, Amnesty UK Cambridge, CGHR and Cambridge STAR present: The Asylum Monologues.

Asylum Monologues is a first-hand account of the UK’s asylum system in the words of people who have experienced it. Launched at Amnesty International in June 2006, it has been touring the UK ever since. The script is regularly updated with new testimonies.**No part of these testimonies has been fictionalised.**

Quote from the play:
‘This waiting for the Home Office to decide, I always say that it is a diplomatic form of torture. They are not raping us, they are not burning us with cigarettes, but they are torturing us mentally, and that’s the worst.’

This event is a collaboration with:
*Amnesty UK Cambridge*
https://www.facebook.com/amnestycambridgeuk?ref=ts&fref=ts
*Cambridge STAR (Student Action for Refugees)*
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Cambridge-STAR/280021975356136?fref=ts

More about Ice and Fire: http://iceandfire.co.uk/

Sign up to the CGHR mailing list:
http://cam.us8.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=83ed5e73a7cc4b7cae83192ad&id=1b0135a96c
For more CGHR events visit:
http://talks.cam.ac.uk/show/index/21892

Write for Rights 30/11/14

Come along to Cambridge Amnesty’s Christmas Event – Write for Rights – this Sunday (30th November) 4-6pm in Downing Bar.

Each year, Amnesty runs a campaign around Christmas time, in which we write letters of support – and Christmas cards – to prisoners of conscience around the world, who are being held against their human rights.

Come along to write a letter or two, meet the CUAI committee and find out more about Amnesty’s work.

The event is open to *everyone* – feel free to pop in for 10 minutes, or to stay for the whole two hours.

* there will be Christmas decorations, food and cheer! *

Need more convincing? Check out this inspiring video on why you should take part in this campaign: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3s2mgXCeozk#t=47

FInd out more about write for rights here:
http://www.amnesty.org.uk/issues/Write-for-Rights-2014

Meet this year’s cases: http://write.amnestyusa.org/cases/

Any questions please contact our secretary Ellen Chapman, ec500@cam.ac.uk

SEEDS OF HOPE: Film Screening + Live stream with the UN in New York 20/11/14

Cambridge University Amnesty International CUAI is thrilled to bring you an absolutely unique event with the collaboration of CCARHT (Cambridge Centre for Applied Research in Human Trafficking). We will be participating in the special screening of the film ‘Seeds of Hope’ at the United Nations, hosted by the UN Representative office for Prevention of Sexual Violence.

The film will be screened first and then a Q&A will follow with the director of the film Fiona Lloyd-Davies and some specially invited people attending the UN in New York (including Suzanna Sirkin from Physicians for Human Rights). The UN have facilities to live stream the event so the student audience in Cambridge will be able to ask questions directly to the panel of guests in New York via webcam. We really hope you can join us for this exceptional opportunity!

SEEDS OF HOPE- a 72 minute documentary by Fiona Lloyd-Davies. Seeds of Hope follows the story of Masika Katsuva, a Congolese woman who sacrifices her safety everyday to help others deal with the unimaginable horrors they have experienced in their lives. Since the outbreak of the civil war, which has torn the Congo apart, rape has become commonplace and is used as a weapon of war. At Masika’s centre, a community of rape victims try to rebuild their lives and console each other.

Film trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NKYclYglmPg

For more information on the film:
http://www.seedsofhopefilm.co.uk/
https://www.facebook.com/seedsofhopestudio9films
http://masikarebeca.wordpress.com/

Cambridge University Amnesty International, find us on:
Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/pages/Cambridge-University-Amnesty-International-CUAI/382604515143494
Twitter- https://twitter.com/CambridgeUniAI
Wordpress- https://cambridgeuniamnestyinternational.wordpress.com/

Cambridge Centre for Applied Research in Human Trafficking:

CCARHT is a virtual network of academics, social entrepreneurs, enforcement personnel, Not for Profit organisations and political lobbyists gathered from across Europe, the Americas, Oceania, Asia, and Africa, networked out of our Cambridge Offices, who are concerned to see applied research brought to bear on the complex challenges of Human Trafficking as it emerges as one of the great human rights violations and accelerator of criminal wealth creation to be addressed in the twenty first century.

www.ccarht.org

Human rights and the protection of taxpayers’ rights in theory and in practice: a talk by Professor Philip Baker QC 13/11/14

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Cambridge University Amnesty International CUAI is delighted to invite Professor Philip Baker QC of the Field Court Tax Chambers in Grays Inn to come and speak on the topic of Human Rights and the protection of taxpayers’ rights.

The current situation of taxpayers is not very optimistic; we live in a century where tax revenues and press attack not only illegal tax evasion but also legitimate and justified tax planning. One decision of a bored revenue officer or an article of ambitious journalist can change someone’s life and destroy a good name. Some sociologists call taxation a new terror of a State.

One would expect that taxpayers would be protected by human rights. However, it is not always the case.

Given the significant impact taxation has on our lives and the extent to which the state will go to enforce its rights, the courts should give greater weight to the powers enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights (‘the Convention’) in applying tax laws. However, to date, courts have been reticent to purposefully applying the Convention.

Professor Baker will be discussing the following:

– Taxation as the modern terror of the State
– The significance of taxpayers’ rights
– Taxation and the European Convention on Human Rights as seen through the case law of the European Court of Human Rights
– From theory to practice: the practical protection of taxpayers’ rights in Europe

The talk will be followed by a short Q&A session.

Professor Philip Baker QC studied law at Emmanuel College Cambridge, then Oxford and London. He taught law at London University’s School of Oriental and African Studies for seven years before moving into practice. He is now a QC practising from Field Court Tax Chambers in Grays Inn. He has had an involvement with human rights work for many years, and in 1997 was awarded an OBE for services to Chinese political refugees in the UK. In recent years he has become increasingly involved with issues concerning taxpayers’ rights and their practical protection.

Hope to see many of you there!

Modern Day Slavery? Forced labour in the UK: a panel discussion 29/10/14

Cambridge University Amnesty International CUAI is collaborating with Cambridge Centre of Applied Research in Human Trafficking (CCARHT) to bring you an evening exploring Forced labour through film and conversation with panellists from Law, social advocacy programmes and law enforcement.

The evening will start with the screening of a short series of films on Forced Labour in the UK from the Unchosen Film Festival http://www.unchosen.org.uk/.

A chaired panel of experts will then follow. The panel will consist of:

Dr Carrie Pemberton Ford (Chair)
Director of Cambridge Centre of Applied Research in Human Trafficking
Associate Research Member of Centre for African Studies University of Cambridge
Visiting Research Fellow Orange Free State University RSA
Former Chair of Research, Education and Training in Human Trafficking UK Human Trafficking Centre UK

Dr Sarah Steele
Former Fellow, Lecturer, and Director of Studies in Law
Christ’s College, University of Cambridge
Specialist in Legal challenges and Public Health impacts of Human Trafficking

Charlotte Wilson
Head of Licensing
Gangmasters Licensing Authority

A Member of Cambridgeshire Constabulary’s Local Policing team

DIRECTIONS: Cross over Magdalene Bridge and turn right onto Chesterton Lane. Continue along that road past Clare Colony and Cripps Court will be on your left.

Hope to see many of you there!

If you have any questions please feel free to contact us at ch609@cam.ac.uk

The Cambridge Centre for Applied Research in Human Trafficking (CCARHT) website: www.ccarht.org

The CCARHT facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Cambridge-Centre-for-Applied-Research-in-Human-Trafficking/326355221679?ref=hl

Fresher’s Squash 12/10/14

Come along to Cambridge University Amnesty International’s Fresher’s Squash

THIS SUNDAY (12/10/14) 5pm @ Clare College Gatehouse Memorial Court

Opposite the UL – ask at the Clare porters (or call 07856424331 if you get lost)

Come along to:

– hear about what we do (both in Cambridge and Amnesty more generally)
– how to get involved
– our plans for this term
– do some letter writing
– eat some biscuits & drink some tea
– meet the committee
– let us know what you’d like to see amnesty doing this year.

*EVERYONE WELCOME*

Any questions please email ellen at ec500@cam.ac.uk

Coerced Labour: The Exploitation of Homelessness

When considering modern day slavery, we are most likely to cite victims of sex trafficking, domestic servitude and forced labour: those who, under false pretences of job opportunities or threats of violence, are imported from their country of origin and made to work for their employers for no wage, often living in appalling conditions and experiencing abuse, malnourishment, working for over 12 hours a day. However, what is not often considered is the existence of coerced, exploitative labour within this country of vulnerable citizens, both immigrants and nationals.

The most recent recession led to a huge increase in cases of homelessness, a stretching of soup kitchen and safe house resources, many of those sleeping rough suffering from alcohol and drug addictions. The abundance of vulnerable individuals marginalised from society provides easy pickings for those seeking to exploit. Gangs approach the most desperate with a lure of employment, yet after accepting the offer, workers are coerced into 5am to 11pm shifts for as little as £2-£3 per day. Rather than a gateway out of poverty, such exploitation feeds a vicious cycle: they are homeless because they are exploited, and exploited because they are homeless.

These gangs reportedly target open soup kitchens as well as penetrating indoor food banks, pretending to be homeless in order to gain access to potential victims. Whilst these gangs often work independently for their own ends, many make up ‘recruitmen
t agencies’, supplying workers to larger construction corporations, big businesses thereby complicit in the extortion.

Last year 511 were exploited in this way, however this is a gross underestimate. The new draft of the Slavery Bill aims to reduce evidential burdens with clauses on human trafficking for exploitation as well as slavery, servitude and forced labour. Whilst this may help those victims of forced labour, it will mean nothing for those coerced by the gangs into cheap labour. As it is legally perceived as consensual employment, such extortion will remain particularly hard to prosecute; those destitute are perceived to have ‘chosen’ to be exploited. The gangs and ‘recruitment agencies’ thereby rely on such legal impunity.

Exploitative labour is not just as a problem for the road workers of Jharkhand, the migrant construction workers in Saudi Arabia or the sweatshop workers of China, but as a global problem for the developed and developing world. And for the solution to an international problem, we need an international reaction.

Bronte Philips

International Women: A ‘Pandemic’ of Abuse

Throughout time, across continents and cultures, there has been no crime more greatly persecuted than the offense of being born female. In the name of honour, family, and religion, their most basic rights are habitually abused, the women themselves a matter of property. International women’s day this Saturday provides a chance to shout for those who have no voice.

Nothing on a national level compares to the global scale of violence against women, which the organisation UN women calls “pandemic”. In many countries, women are routinely denied not only the right to education and healthcare, but the right to feel safe, valued and unique, recent studies revealing that 54% of children are not in school – and over 64 million are child brides, more than the total UK population. Female genital mutilation affects 140 million, a figure thought to explain why pregnancy complications are the main causes of death amongst 15-19 year olds.

This year, International Women’s Week calls for change in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where UN forces have failed in protecting women from rape as a weapon of war even within refugee camps. They demand support for women in Egypt who have seen a rise in gender-targeted assault, including highly invasive “virginity tests”. They call for women’s rights in Afghanistan, where honour-killing and self-immolation of girls as young as 14 are frequent consequences of child marriage, the withdrawal of UN troops threatening to worsen the situation.

Yet there are many issues which will not be drawn attention to: women are the greatest casualties of poverty, with 10% of Nepalese (many in their 20s) suffering from uterine prolepsis caused by early child birth and carrying heavy loads. India’s degrading attitudes towards women boosts a thriving sex industry, with 20,000 sex workers working in Kamathipura, many trafficked children – after all, girls under 16 charge four times the price. One woman is raped in India every seven seconds – and these are the statistics we know about.

Those who speak out for women’s rights face even greater risks of persecution. This does not just include the Malalas, the politicians, the journalists, but those who deal with women daily as part of their career – teachers, health and security workers. In Amnesty’s report on Afghan women, a gynaecologist told of how her son had been shot because his mother helped rape victims. Yet even in the most dangerous environments, women’s rights groups provide support and hope for a better future. Despite assassinations of group members, ‘Women for Afghan Women’ has helped more than 8,000 women since 2007. Such movements are lighting candles for women of other communities, creating their own counter-epidemics. The resistance is contagious.

As an international community, we cannot continue to support an environment where women’s issues can remain silent. There is a difference between what is culturally relative and what constitutes the systematic abuse of human rights. Without imposing any ‘western’ priority, we must support the women looking to change their society – from the inside out. They need our voice, your voice.

Bronte Philips