New UN Human Rights Chief Subjected to Torture

Human rights has been the subject for me today.  I see it violated in a range of ways – homelessness, refugees, occupation of countries, denial of rights, refusal to resolve conflict and the flagrant use of power to silence dissent.  I know this subject well and it has been the inspiration for my speaking up in my life and deciding to live democracy as my right regardless of what other’s think.

All human rights is is respect for all people.  To me it appears so easy to apply human rights in my life but I am not in the shoes of those who believe differently.  What I do know is that when you respect people violence de-escalates, when you are indifferent to their suffering violence exacerbates.  Any form of abuse is a mental dysfunction, I say this with love and respect.  I know it through experience as I’ve felt torture from a psychological perspective.

In reality violating others only brings back on the other what they do.  It may take time but always what is put out comes back.  It is a universal law.  We are all here to learn who we are.

It is only through direct experience that you can know the value of human rights.  The new UN Human Rights Chief is a Chillean woman.  I was pleased to learn this.  I’ve been to Santiago, Chile and visited the torture places. I have visited torture places, the worst for me was in Cambodia – Killing Fields and Tsol Sleng prison (former school).  I felt the heaviness in the air, I had to have a shower as I could feel the pain in the walls.  The energy hangs around as people are terrorised. This is the real terrorism.  I don’t care who does it, causing terror is terrorism.  It happens as the one doing it cannot feel for the other, they are objectivised as if not human, as is popularly stated ‘no right to exist’.  I have felt that in my life.  I have experienced complete disinterest in suffering to the point of wanting to finish. It is the disconnection I paid close attention to as it was a driver of abuse.

Human rights only exists in a world that is primitive, that is unconscious, emotionally disconnected and has no respect for the sanctity of human life.  Unfortunately those of us who envisage peace have to still communicate why it is important.  It should most definitely be linked to trade not decoupled as Clinton said many years ago.  It is essential that the world get’s behind the rule of law as the situation around the world is out of hand. Too many governments compromise due to economic interests who have no ethics as it is about winning and money.

In the future we will look back and shake out heads.

A key quote:

Hatred and inequality are on the rise,” he said. “Respect for international humanitarian and human rights law is on the decline. Space for civil society is shrinking. Press freedoms are under pressure.”

The military/industrial complex or the business of war is a central problem as there are forces who have a vested interest in its growth like a market rather than the de-escalation of violence to ensure civilian safety and spaces for resolution.

In the article there is contemplation on how to get dictators, autocrats, tyrants and demagogues to respect human rights..  My answer to this is you can’t.  They will never change unless they have a significant life experience.  It is better to work on the children, to develop emotional intelligence and conflict resolution.  That is where tranformation rests.  I have known abuses and they didn’t change not one inch.  However, laws can dissuade, public opinion can restrict excesses but on the whole you have to feel empathy to really get the horror of human rights abuses.

I send love and peace to this brave woman.  Let’s hope she is a light in this darkness, I send the intention she can achieve human rights as a universal notion that the people of the world embrace as their own liberties dwindle.  She speaks of consistency, this is important in the face of a changing world picture where many men wheel and deals human life as if commodities.

I send love, peace and protection to all those defending the most vulnerable people in the world. To me they are the real heroes on this planet.  They stand beside those targetted and are unarmed.  No greater courage than that.

I love you all and bow at your feet.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/world/the_americas/new-un-human-rights-chief-is-torture-survivor-herself/2018/09/04/c5ce69e8-aff7-11e8-8b53-50116768e499_story.html?noredirect=on

New UN human rights chief has survived torture herself

September 4, 2018 at 12:39 AM

FILE – In this July 20, 2017, file photo, Chile’s then President Michelle Bachelet looks on during a visit to Memory Park which honors the victims of the country’s dictatorship, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Bachelet was 23 years old when she was tortured and fled her country’s dictatorship into exile. Now in 2018, more than four decades later, she will have to face her painful past as the new U.N. human rights chief fighting such abuses worldwide. (Natacha Pisarenko, File/Associated Press)

SANTIAGO, Chile — Former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet was 23 years old when she was tortured and fled her country’s dictatorship into exile. Now, more than four decades later, she will face her past fighting such abuses worldwide as the new U.N. human rights chief.

Bachelet, 66, is often seen smiling, chatting easily or tossing unplanned comments or jokes into her speeches. But behind her good humor lie haunting memories of the brutal dictatorship that tore her family apart.

Her father, air force Gen. Alberto Bachelet, died in 1974 following months of torture in prison. Gen. Augusto Pinochet’s military had convicted him of being a traitor for opposing the 1973 military coup that ousted President Salvador Allende.

Bachelet herself was arrested along with her mother in 1975. She was a young member of the Socialist Party, and her time in a secret prison was an ordeal that she prefers not to talk about, saying only in her autobiography that she suffered “physical hardships.”

Using the family’s political connections, she went into exile in Australia and the former East Germany. There she reunited with her then-partner, Jaime Lopez.

At age 25, Lopez became one of the leaders of the Socialist Party that had seen many of its members tortured, killed or forcibly disappeared by Chile’s military dictatorship. He returned to Chile, but only briefly because he feared he would be captured by Pinochet’s agents.

Back in Europe, Bachelet reminded him of the importance of committing to the cause and her father’s sacrifice, according to “Bachelet. The Unofficial Story,” by Javier Ortega and Andrea Insunza.

“My dad died because he was consistent. I expect nothing less from you,” the book says Bachelet told her then-boyfriend.

When he followed her advice, Lopez was captured in Chile. Under torture, he gave Pinochet’s secret police information on other members of the Socialist Party, before he became one of the about 1,000 people who were forcibly disappeared during the dictatorship.

Her father’s death and her boyfriend’s disappearance marked Bachelet’s character. Despite this, she never held grudges – not even against the Chilean military, said Giorgio Agostini, a sociologist who has long-known Bachelet and has written about her life.

Bachelet returned to Chile in 1979 when she felt she could do so safely. She studied medicine, specializing in pediatrics, and began working at an organization that helped children with mental health problems whose parents had been victims of the 1973-90 dictatorship.

Bachelet rose through the ranks of the Socialist Party and became a key player in the center-left coalition that dominated Chile’s government for almost 20 years after Pinochet lost power.

Putting her traumatic past behind, she helped the discredited military regain its status in the wake of Pinochet’s dictatorship.

One of her emblematic moments came when she was named Latin America’s first woman defense minister during the government of President Ricardo Lagos. She continued to break boundaries when she became Chile’s first women president in 2006.

After her term, she was named the first head of U.N. Women, the world body’s new women’s agency. She left the post to return to Chile and won the presidency again, serving from 2014-18.

Bachelet is known as a caring single mother, a hard worker and an astute negotiator.

In her new post as the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, she replaces Zeid Ra’ad Al-Hussein, a diplomat and member of Jordan’s royal family.

Diplomats from the U.N.’s 193-member states burst into applause in July when the General Assembly president gave official approval to Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ selection of Bachelet.

But in Chile, some human rights groups criticize her record, saying that as president she failed to close a special prison for dictatorship-era criminals that provided them with comforts they wouldn’t enjoy in regular confinement.

Guterres has said that Bachelet is taking office “at a time of grave consequence for human rights.”

Hatred and inequality are on the rise,” he said. “Respect for international humanitarian and human rights law is on the decline. Space for civil society is shrinking. Press freedoms are under pressure.”

On Monday, Bachelet’s third day in her new job, a Myanmar court sentenced two journalists from Reuters news agency to seven years in prison on charges of illegal possession of official documents.

The ruling was met with international condemnation that will add to outrage over the military’s human rights abuses against Rohingya Muslims.

“On several issues related to different parts of the world,” Bachelet told reporters in Geneva on Monday, “I need to gather more information and make a deep analysis. But I have to mention how shocked I am after finding out about their seven-year prison sentences.”

She called on the Myanmar government to release the journalists and said that their trial breached international standards.

Bachelet will face many other challenges, chief among them, how to get dictators, autocrats, tyrants and demagogues to respect human rights.

She also comes to the job soon after President Donald Trump’s national security adviser told the Associated Press that the United States will cut funding for the U.N. human rights chief’s office.

Bachelet also faces a decision on how outspoken she will be on what she sees as human rights violations. Zeid told U.N. reporters last month that “silence does not earn you any respect — none.”

Zeid said he will give his successor the same advice his predecessor, Navi Pillay, gave him — “be fair and don’t discriminate against any country” and “just come out swinging.”

Globally, Bachelet will also have to tackle the persecution of religious minorities and homosexuals in Africa and the Middle East, and the use of banned weapons on civilian populations.

In Latin America, she will face an economic and governance crisis that has forced more than two million Venezuelans to flee their country, as we well as violence under an official crackdown in Nicaragua.

“Those who defend human rights and the victims look up to the High Commissioner and hope that we are there to defend and support them,” Bachelet said Monday. “And I’ll do everything on my side to make sure that we do so.”

Her deep resume will work in her favor, said Heraldo Munoz, who served as her foreign minister.

“She knows presidents and prime ministers who will pick up the phone (when she calls them),” Munoz said. “That can be a very important mechanism to try to resolve human rights problems through dialogue.”

___

Associated Press writers Edith Lederer in the United Nations, and Jamey Keaten in Geneva contributed to this report.

Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Mohandas Gandhi

“An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind.”

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