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Indigenous & Latina Women & Children's Human
Rights News from the Americas |
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UNICEF Regional Office for Latin America & the Caribbean |
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On International Women's Day - 1999 |
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"Stop the Violence Against Women and Girls!" |
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© 1999 - UNICEF |
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| From:
http://www.unicef.org/lac/ingles/urgente/deten.htm
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- More than 185 million children and
adolescents live in Latin America and the Caribbean.
- It is believed that the great
majority of these may be exposed to the perils of violence of
which sexual harassment, maltreatment and rape are the most
common forms.
- Recent studies indicate that no
less than six million children and adolescents are subjected to
severe aggression and that 80,000 of them die each year as a
result of violence unleashed in their own homes.
- 28% of adolescents between the age
of 15 and 19 are not in school, and 12% are confined to domestic
chores.
- According to estimates, seven
young people between the age of 15 and 24 are infected with the
deadly virus HIV every hour
Santafé de Bogotá, March 8, 1999
On International Women’s Day,
designated by the United Nations as UN Day for Women’s Rights and
International Peace, UNICEF, in support of the United Nations’
campaign for the eradication of violence against women, calls on
society in Latin American and Caribbean to eradicate violence
against women and children. Violence is a problem that still remains
largely hidden from the public eye; and most countries in the region
have only scarce systematic information on the scope of it.
Society’s silence is the main
accomplice in allowing widespread impunity. Latin America and the
Caribbean face enormous challenges in the prelude to the
twenty-first century. The region will have to bring out into the
open this increasingly disturbing reality; and it will have to
struggle against the high degree to which society tolerates or
practices inconceivable forms of aggression against the most
vulnerable individuals in society. In commemorating International
Women’s Day, Executive Director of UNICEF Carol Bellamy said that
"it is everywhere, among rich and poor -- at home, in school, in the
workplace and in the community. Yet on the eve of the 21st century,
the vast scale of this outrage is still not widely acknowledged, nor
even truly understood".
Recent studies indicate that no less
than six million children and adolescents in Latin America and the
Caribbean are subjected to severe aggression, and that 80,000 of
these die each year as a result of violence unleashed in their own
families. Sexual harassment, maltreatment, child labour, violence in
the home and sexual exploitation occur with such frequency that they
can be considered a daily phenomenon. All violence leaves physical
and psychological scars on their victims which are to a great extent
irreversible. A real change in the conditions of girls and women
would imply the acknowledgement that in every situation of
maltreatment or violence, there is always an aggressor, an exploiter
or an abuser.
There are more than 185 million
children and adolescents under the age of 18 in Latin America and
the Caribbean. It is estimated that thousands of them are exposed to
diverse forms of violence, ranging from juvenile delinquency, war
and armed conflict, slave trade, sex trade, international drug
trafficking, and sexual abuse and exploitation, to name but a few.
In addition, one could cite the difficulty in gaining access to
quality education, as well as the discrimination children suffer on
account of sex, religion, ethnicity, culture or socio-economic
status.
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Added Aug. 5, 2008
Mexico
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Vandalized office at CIMAC
Alfredo Domínguez
La Jornada
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LibertadLatina
Our new
special section on the ransacking of the
offices of the CIMAC women's news association in
Mexico City
The Mexico City offices of the women's news agency
CIMAC (Women's Communication and Information) were ransacked on July 28, 2008.
The level of vandalism and theft of document archives leads activists to
believe that this was an act of intimidation and retaliation against CIMAC for
its effective work in defense of women's rights.
We at
Libertad
Latina
stand 100% in solidarity
with CIMAC.
We encourage
everyone to express their support for CIMAC.
Please contact:
Lucía Lagunes Huerta,
General Director, CIMAC
Let's express our
solidarity with the journalists of CIMAC!
Silence is also violence!
End impunity now!
- Chuck Goolsby
Libertad Latina
August 5 , 2008
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Read our new section
on Tapachula
Mexico
The city of
Tapachula, near Mexico's border with Guatemala,
is one of the largest and most lawless child sex trafficking markets in all of Latin America.
Our new news section tracks events related to
this hell-on-earth, where over half of the estimated 21,000 sex slaves and other
sex workers are underage, and where especially migrant women
and
girls
from
Central and South America, who seek to migrate to the United States, have their
freedom taken from them, to become a money-making commodity for gangs of
violent criminals.
A 2007 study by the international organization
ECPAT
[End Child Prostitution and Trafficking]...
revealed that over 21,000
Central Americans, mostly children, are prostituted
in 1,552 bars and brothels in Tapachula.
- Chuck Goolsby
Libertad Latina
August
9, 2008
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Noticias de
Agosto, 2008
Aug.
2008 News
(News Added During Aug., 2008)
The Americas
Incredible injustice for
indigenous women
Editor's note: The
following was named Best Editorial of 2007 by the
Native American Journalists Association at its
annual awards banquet July 26.
It was originally published
in Volume 26, Issue 47. Indian Country Today
presents it again in appreciation and acknowledgment
of those who work tirelessly toward justice for
Indian girls and women.
''From the oldest to the
youngest, Native women are disrespected and treated
in the most humiliating fashion, living and dying
without justice or the knowledge that their
granddaughters will live free of the violence they
experienced.'' This passage, taken from
testimony by Sacred Circle on the Violence Against
Women Act, helps breathe life into the devastating
statistics at the center of a groundbreaking report
on violence against indigenous women.
Amnesty International's 113-page report, ''Maze of
Injustice -
The Failure to Protect
Indigenous Women from Sexual Violence in the USA,''
released April 24, [2007], asserts that the U.S.
government has ''created a complex maze of tribal,
state and federal jurisdictions that often allows
perpetrators to rape with impunity,'' and that these
crimes are ''compounded by failures at every level
of the justice system.''
American Indian and Alaska Native women are nearly
three times more likely to be raped or sexually
assaulted in their lifetimes. According to the
Department of Justice, nearly 90 percent of the
reported cases of rapes and sexual assault of Native
women are committed by non-Native men. It is a
staggering legacy for women to ''fully expect to be
raped,'' as one elder stated in the report, because
they are Indian.
The report contains interviews with courageous
survivors and advocates, including stories of abuse
and injustice so vivid, the mind does not want to
believe they are true. Each story illustrates why so
many survivors describe their experiences seeking
justice as being raped ''all over again.''
Incompetent medical personnel, non-responsive or
slow-moving law enforcement, conflicting
jurisdictions and underlying racism that affects
court proceedings are common obstacles...
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- Indian Country Today
August 01, 2008
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The Americas
Día Internacional de los
Pueblos Indígenas 2008 (9 de agosto)
OPS: Podemos evitar otro
patrimonio en extinción
International Day of
Indigenous Peoples 2008
PAHO: We can avoid the
extinction of another endangered heritage
Washington, DC - ...On the occasion of International
Day of Indigenous Peoples 2008, the Pan American
Health Organization (PAHO) stated that "recent and
historical processes in the [Latin American] region
have identified different cultures where coexist a
range of relationships that, with regards to the
indigenous in most societies, are asymmetric,
subordinated and conflicted."
Studies and reports prepared by the hemispheric
organization reiterate that most of the 45 million
indigenous people living in the Americas today are
confronted by a growing inequity in health and
access to basic sanitation. Dr. Jose Luis Di Fabio,
Area Manager of Technology and Health Services
Delivery within PAHO, said that illiteracy,
unemployment, lack of land and territory, high rates
of morbidity and mortality from preventable causes,
and limitations on access and utilization of basic
health services, education, housing and others, "are
problems that still affect the majority of
indigenous communities and affect their quality of
life and their health."
"Minimum results"
The International Decade of the World's Indigenous
People (1995-2004) was proclaimed by the UN General
Assembly in 1993 with the purpose and commitment to
strengthen international cooperation to help solve
the problems affecting indigenous peoples in areas
such as human rights, environment, development,
education and health...
In its assessment of the progress in health of
indigenous populations since 1995, PAHO concluded
that the results were "minimal" and that the most
serious problems remained "still unresolved..."
- Pan American Health Organization
August 7, 2008
Guatemala
Celebran Día Nacional e
Internacional de los Pueblos Indígenas
In Celebration of
Indigenous People's Day
The city of Santa Cruz del Quiche - Organizations of
the Quiche Mayan ethnic community have organized a
wide range of activities to celebrate Indigenous
People's Day on August 9, 2008.
Among the organizations that are presenting the
events are the Academy of Mayan Languages of
Guatemala (ALMG), the association Ajb'atz Quiché
network, Defensoría K'iche [Quiche Defense] and the
municipality of the city of Santa Cruz del Quiche.
Quiche liaison Tomas Matias Gutierrez told Cerigua
that there is progress in recognizing the rights of
indigenous peoples in the world. The Indigenous were
previously thought to be an obstacle to development.
The United Nations must recognize the existence and
importance of native peoples because, despite the
exclusion, marginalization and ethnocide to which we
have been subjected, we are contributing to the
welfare of the world.
The celebration allows sharing capabilities of
science and technology with Maya people throughout
society, since there are now more likely to open
opportunities for participation of different
sectors, changes occur in the educational system
with the introduction of various Mayan elements the
school curriculum.
For true harmony to exist within Guatemalan society
we should strengthen the principles that to
understand and accept other cultures is the only way
to eliminate these prejudices, that only exist to
hurt people.
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- Héctor Tecúm
Cerigua
Guatemalan Human Rights News
August 7, 2008
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The World
U.N. celebrates International
Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples
August 9th is the 14th International Day of the
World's Indigenous Peoples, and we hope you will
join us in celebrating a particularly momentous year
in indigenous rights. Among the milestones this
year, the UN General Assembly adopted the
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in a
near-unanimous vote, and the governments of
Australia and Canada formally apologized for their
egregious forced-assimilation policies. The event is
being celebrated at the United Nations today with
presentations by a range of UN dignitaries from
UNESCO and the UN Development Program, as well as
chair the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
(and Cultural Survival board member) Victoria
Tauli-Corpuz, and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
Ban's statement, released before the event,
acknowledges indigenous peoples' "marginalization,
their extreme poverty, the expropriation of their
traditional lands and other grave human rights
abuses" and also makes special mention of the
disappearance of indigenous languages.
- Ellen L. Lutz Executive Director
Cultural Survival
August 8, 2008
See also:
Mexico, Latin America
Mujeres En La Conferencia
Internacional Sobre Sida
Women's Participation at the 2008 AIDS Conference in
Mexico City
About 33 million people are living with HIV
globally. Some 1.6 million of these people live in
Latin America. In its latest report, announced for
the first time a decline in the spread of the
epidemic, but it also warned of its feminization.
Sixty percent of the young people between 15 and
20-years-old who are living with HIV / AIDS are
women.
In Mexico, official data estimates that 115,651
cases exist. Their statistics show an accelerating
increase in the rate of feminization. Over the past
two decades the gender ratio of victims has risen
from 23 men to three men for every female affected.
Faced with this reality, public policies, care,
prevention efforts and the budgeting for them, have
been limited.
Violence against women is both a cause and
consequence of HIV, and one of the main factors
associated with the accelerated process of
feminization of the pandemic.
For thousands of women, the threat of violence
prevents access to information, access to HIV
testing, disclosure of their HIV status, access to
services to prevent HIV transmission to infants, and
the receipt of treatment and counseling, even when
they know they are infected.
Mexico is the first country in Latin Americas to
host the global AIDS conference, which gathers
health professionals, scientists, donors,
personalities and decision makers, as well as
non-governmental organizations and people living
with HIV.
That is why CIMAC has opened this space to make
visible to women living with HIV with the creation
of print and radio news stories, statistics and
links to other organizations dealing with the issue.
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- CIMAC Noticias
Women's Rights News
Mexico City
August 8, 2008
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Mexico, the U.S.
!!CAMINO A CASA!! A program to
support integrity and rights of immigrant kids
Something unusual is happening at the U.S.-Mexico
border. Every day thousands of innocent hearts
embark on a trip (for many of them without return).
Their goal is to reunite with their loved ones, who
left before in search of a better future. The
numbers reported are alarming. The list of deported
children who are repatriated from the United States
has forced the border-state government of Sonora to
carry out urgent measures to help these minors, one
of which is the program “On the Road Home.”
The objective of the program is to provide
protection and attention to kids who arrive
completely alone at border ports of Sonora, Mexico.
Their stay in these areas makes them vulnerable to
the violation of their human rights. They are
exposed to physical abuse from authorities, guides
and thieves. They can become victims of negligence
and kidnapping, sexual abuse, accidents or sickness
(such as dehydration, diarrhea, bronchitis, etc.),
organ trafficking, stinging or biting by poisonous
animals, hunger and thirst. The list of risks and
abuses can be endless, which, despite their young
age, they suffer only because they took the chance
of risking everything with one goal in mind: to
reunite with their loved ones.
Due to this alarming situation, Ms. Lourdes Laborin
de Bours, President of the Sonora DIF, made a call
for the solidarity of all the states that drive out
immigrants. The response from the state of Hidalgo
was immediate. In a formal meeting, B.A. Michael
Angelo Osorio Chong, representing the state, signed
a collective agreement with the Sonora Governor
Eduardo Bours Castelo.
At this meeting, Osorio Chong said, “We have to move
on from speeches to actions”… A good example of this
immediate action was the signing of the collective
agreement to create a trust that institutionalizes
support for attention to these immigrant kids...
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