Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Death Penalty Demo in Zürich


On 13th October – in glorious sunshine in the Hirschenplatz – we held our demonstration against the Death Penalty, in the course of which we collected signatures for the abolition of the Death penalty in Japan, and also in support of the forthcoming UN resolution on Burma.

The action was a great success, and we were able to send off 210 and 170 signatures respectively.

Passers-by were also very intrigued by our Info-Game, in which we told people about various cases of individuals on Death Row as well as some who had already been executed. People were then invited to decide which countries these had happened in. Many were surprised at just how many countries still retained
the Death Penalty, and for which crimes.

The Cup-Cakes we handed out were delicious and also very successful (Grateful thanks to Melanie and Rebecca!). We hope to be able to hold a similar demonstration next year. Many thanks to all who supported us and took part on the day.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Event: the future of human rights in Egypt


The event will be in German, that's why this post is in German as well :-)


Die Zukunft der Menschenrechte in Aegypten

Die englischsprachige Gruppe von Amnesty International Zürich plant eine Veranstaltung zu der Zukunft der Menschenrechte im Arabischen Raum am Beispiel von Aegypten.
Dazu haben wir die Amnesty Expertin für Aegypten eingeladen, die über die aktuelle Situation der Menschrechte in Aegypten berichten wird. Ausserdem wird sie auch auf das grosse Problem der sexuellen Belästigung eingehen.


Bitte anmelden bei: Chrispieh(at)msn.com

Sprache: Deutsch

Wann: 19.11.2012, 19:00

Wo: Volkhaus, Zimmer 23
Stauffacherstrasse 60
8004 Zürich

Falls mehr Personen erscheinen als geplant, findet die Veranstaltung im Volkshaus statt, darüber wird rechtzeitig informiert werden.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Action to world day against death penalty

When: Saturday October 13th
Where: Hirschenplatz, Zürich
What time: 10:00 until 17:00


Together with the China group, we are organizing an action against death penalty.
Visit our booth at Hirschenplatz to sign a petition against death penalty, to eat a yellow cupcake, to be informed on death penalty, to play our anti-death-penalty game, to pick up a yellow Amnesty balloon or just to say hello :-)


Saturday, April 28, 2012


The Death Penalty in the USA

Amnesty campaigns tirelessly for the abolition of the Death Penalty, which denies those most basic of Human Rights : the right to life, and not to be tortured or suffer degrading treatment. But in the US, alone among the democratic countries of the free West, several states continue to apply the Death Penalty, and it is increasingly apparent that an unacceptable degree of racial discrimination is at work here.

This issue hit the international headlines in September 2011, when Death Row veteran Troy Davis, who had for over twenty years protested his innocence, was executed by lethal injection, despite a million petitioners world-wide urging clemency from the Georgia authorities.

Many studies have shown that the US Death Penalty discriminates against black people. Black defendants are less likely to be well represented by competent lawyers, evidence is sometimes mislaid, and so on. While blacks and whites are murdered in roughly equal numbers, the killers of white people are six times more likely to be executed, with 77% being put to death for killing a white, but only 15% for killing blacks (http://www.amnestyusa.org/our-work/issues/death-penalty/us-death-penalty-facts/death-penalty-and-race).

The most recent case Amnesty has campaigned for was that of Linda Carty, a UK citizen by virtue of her birth in St Kitts. She was accused of murder in Texas – and defended by a lawyer who had already seen twenty of his clients doomed to Death Row. Her trial was seriously flawed, and she still faces execution despite this inadequate legal representation. There are now many campaigns for her reprieve, led strongly by Amnesty International.

This is just one case among many that AI urges you to support. Later this year the Zurich Amnesty group hopes to stage an anti-Death Penalty Action.We’ll let you know. Meanwhile there are petitions on the Amnesty website that would welcome your response (http://takeaction.amnestyusa.org/siteapps/advocacy/ActionItem.aspx?c=6oJCLQPAJiJUG&b=6645049&aid=14230)

The Death Penalty has no place in any civilised society. The contribution of your signature will make a real difference.

Janice Davis, Vilters.

Monday, December 26, 2011

A Very Special Christmas Present

by Janice Davis

I volunteered to be the one responsible in our Zürich English-speaking group of Amnesty International for the case of Chen Zhen Ping. This is a Chinese lady who is a supporter of the Falun Gong spiritual movement, and as a result of which finds herself imprisoned and subjected to torture and degrading treatment.
She has been sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment for “using a heretical organisation to subvert the law”. Amnesty understands that she has been forcibly injected with drugs and subjected to regular beatings.
Falun Gong is a belief system that has been banned by the Chinese authorities, and its members face regular intimidation and persecution for their beliefs. Chen Zhen Ping is currently being held at Women’s No. 5 Prison, Henan Province, where an estimated 200 Falun Gong practitioners are held. Other prisoners have confirmed that the Falun Gong prisoners are daily subjected to broadcasts denouncing their beliefs and to high-pitched music unless they renounce their beliefs.
Amnesty is concerned that Chen Zhen Ping is still being subjected to torture and that her health is at serious risk.
We sent several letters, to the prison where she is held, and to various government officials, urging hat Chen Zhen Ping be released immediately and unconditionally; and that she should have access to legal representation; and should not be subjected to any mis-treatment.
And we also sent a card to her daughter, who now lives in Finland and is active in support of her mother. We sent our good wishes for her Mother and also all the family.
So it was a very special surprise to receive a parcel from Finland on Christmas Eve. It was addressed to Amnesty International Switzerland, and somehow my local Post Office thought it should be delivered to me. I was bemused : who could be writing to me from Finland ?
It was a box of chocolates from the daughter of Chen Zhen Ping, together with a card saying : To Switzerland Amnesty. Merry Christmas. Happy New Year. Thank you – help me and my Mom Chen Zhen Ping. Thank you very much !!!
So lovely. I will take the choccies to our next meeting in Zürich. And we will all enjoy.
Meanwhile – please all be aware that however little we think we are doing – just sending a letter, a card – it all makes a difference. I just did some school talks at the Kantonalschule in Sargans, and we ended up sending off eighty letters on behalf of Jabbar Sevelan in Azerbaijan. Bring it on !

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Aleksei Sokolov Released!

Good News Story

A court in Krasnoyarsk decided to release Aleksei Sokolov on parole on 27 July 2011. He was arrested in May 2009 and sentenced for theft and robbery a year later, on charges that many believed to have been fabricated in response to his human rights work in defence of prisoners' rights. He was allowed to leave the prison colony shortly after the July court hearing and is now back home with his family in Yekaterinburg. Alexei Sokolov had two previous parole applications turned down on the flimsiest of pretexts earlier this year.

When Amnesty International spoke to Aleksei Sokolov he said he was relieved to be able to go back to his wife and children. He thanked Amnesty International and its members as well as the many other human rights organizations that have supported him over the last two years.

Background: Human rights defender Aleksei Sokolov, head and founder of the organization Pravovaia Osnova in Ekarerinburg, was detained on 13 May 2009 and later charged with theft. He was briefly released on 31 July 2009 but detained the same day and charged with robbery in connection with a different incident. He has been kept in detention ever since, including at times without a judicial decision legalizing his prolonged pre-trial detention. On 14 May 2010 he was found guilty of theft and robbery and sentenced to five years imprisonment. Upon appeal his sentence was reduced to three years.

Amnesty International campaigned for his release, considering him a prisoner of conscience detained solely for the peaceful exercise of his right to freedom of expression in the course of his lawful human rights activities in Russia. The Amnesty International Zurich English Group has been working on his case since 2010.

Thank you to everyone who was involved!

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Amnesty’s 50th Anniversary

May 2011, supporters of Amnesty International throughout the world will be celebrating 50 years of Human Rights Action, on behalf of those who suffer injustice and abuse. Many official events are planned nationally and locally, and Amnesty has launched a series of historic posters for display, including designs by Picasso and Miro.

AI Schweiz will be no exception, and a special event is planned for Saturday 14th May in the Paradeplatz Zurich.

The Zurich AI groups want to stage a really joyful action to celebrate all the work that ordinary Amnesty members have been doing since 1961. They are inviting everyone to join them for the day in the Paradeplatz, which they intend to rename – especially for the occasion – “Human Rights Square” !
To celebrate AI Schweiz as we all know it, there will be something for everybody. Placards will tell you details of the 30 Articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. You can find out about work on urgent actions and individual cases. Visitors can write a card, supporting our anniversary message, and learn about how Amnesty really does get results. Students from Zurich’s Art College are creating an installation depicting the reality of Human Rights, in a novel and entertaining way. And there will be plenty for the children to do. They can take part in a huge memory game about Human Rights – and get an AI balloon to play with.
This is an unmissable opportunity for all of Zurich to:
• Celebrate 50 years of Amnesty
• Learn more about what Amnesty does
• Find out about Amnesty’s success stories
• And have a lot of fun !

Sometimes it feels difficult to be light-hearted about Amnesty’s work. The reality is often depressing, shameful, frustrating. But Amnesty campaigns do work ! Prisoners are released and reunited with their families ; death sentences are repealed ; the “disappeared” are found again. There is a lot to celebrate and tell the world about. So come and join in the celebration on 14th May!