Donna Darko

Entries categorized as ‘human rights’

Listen to the Silence 2008

January 23, 2008 · No Comments

Via WOC PhD:

Listen to the Silence 2008
12th Annual Asian American Issues Conference

Saturday Jan 26, 2008 9:30 am - 5:30 pm
Stanford University
Events, meals and housing are free

Mission Statement 

Justice - Today in the 21st century, social justice continues to elude Asian American populations. As globalization enriches some, low-income Asian American immigrant workers in garment factories, hotels, and restaurants continue to suffer from economic exploitation in America. As medical technology advances, socioeconomic and cultural barriers continue to threaten health care access for Asian American populations. Lack of representation in the media and the government continue to render Asian Americans invisible to greater American society.

Unity - In the face of injustice, unity is a powerful weapon. To achieve justice, Asian American communities must collectively recognize a broken system, and combine their different experiences and voices to create one powerful, resounding voice that cannot be silenced. United, our community can achieve educational equity, a living wage and benefits for workers, and rights for immigrants.

Action - For students, education can provide the initial impetus to pursue social change. But, unless we take visible action and create audible outcry, no change can be implemented or sustained. Our conference workshops highlight the work of those who are taking action in the Asian American community, and who are empowering others in their respective journeys.

The schedule is interesting. Check it out.

Categories: Capitalism · Environment · Music · Race · class · education · homophobia · human rights · online activism · poverty · racism

Most slaves are Asian women

September 12, 2007 · 11 Comments

The Guardian:

According to the UN, up to 27 million people are now held in slavery, far more than at the peak of the African slave trade. The majority of the victims this time are Asian women.

The report says: ‘Violence against women by men continues to cause more casualties than wars do today.’ One in five women around the world will be a victim of rape or attempted rape in her lifetime. The situation is so bad schools should teach girls martial arts for self-defence, it says.

‘We have departments of defence around the world protecting people. What’s the department of defence for women?’ Mr Glenn asked.”

I looked up slave on dictionary.com because it didn’t sound right but it’s the right word. Modern slavery is the trafficking of persons who are exploited for their labor including sex work. And despite what Elaine Vigneault says about puppy mills, animals can’t be slaves:

slave (n.)
1. a person who is the property of and wholly subject to another; a bond servant.
2. a person entirely under the domination of some influence or person: a slave to a drug.

Categories: Misogyny · gender · human rights · sexism · violence against women

How Vanita Gupta successfully took on Bush administration

September 3, 2007 · 4 Comments

My girl, Vanita, is back in the news again and this time she beat the federal government. This time I also really cried. The T. Don Hutto Detention Center in Taylor, Texas is essentially a prison for immigrants. On August 27, the ACLU won a landmark settlement with Michael Chertoff, secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security, and six officials of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. As lead ACLU staff attorney on the case, she improved conditions for children and their families at the Center and 26 children were released. Hear Vanita state her case at the bottom right corner of this page.

“How Vanita Gupta successfully took on Bush administration”

“Vanita Gupta, the civil rights activist attorney is back in the news again. This time she took on the Bush administration and won in terms of affecting a landmark settlement in a federal lawsuit challenging conditions at an immigrant detention center in Texas.

Gupta, who less than four years ago won freedom and compensation for more than 40 African Americans wrongly incarcerated in a drug sting in Tulia, Texas, this time as a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union led the team that settled with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which resulted in a marked improvement in the conditions for illegal immigrant children and their families inside the 512-bed T Don Hutto Detention Center in Taylor, Texas.

Dozens of children were released from the facility as a result of the litigation and as a result of the deal, a trial that was set to open in the US District Court was averted with ICE beginning to alleviate the conditions of those detained in terms of education, medical care, recreation and privacy standards in its first large holding facility for illegal immigrant families that had opened in May 2006.

Gupta, who in 2004, was presented with the first India Abroad Publisher’s Special Award for Outstanding Achievement, said, “This is a huge victory not only for the children and families that have been released from Hutto, but for every detainee held at the facility, now or in the future.”

“Though we continue to believe that Hutto is an inappropriate place to house children, conditions have drastically improved in areas like education, recreation, medical care and privacy,” she said.

The settlement is the result of extensive litigation and mediation in consolidated lawsuits filed earlier this year against Michael Chertoff, secretary of the US Department of Homeland Security, and six officials from ICE on behalf of 26 immigrant children. The children are between the ages of one and 17 years and were detained with their parents, who, in almost all cases, were awaiting determinations on their asylum claims.

Soon after the litigation commenced, ICE instituted a policy of detaining at Hutto only families placed in expedited removal proceedings and began to issue bonds for asylum seekers who passed their credible fear interviews.

ICE said in a statement that it “continues to improve Hutto,” and that the facility “is a safe and healthy environment for children and adults.”

The agency pledged that it will continue to enforce the immigration laws “in a humane and responsible manner,” and under the terms of the agreement will place families who have a legal claim to contest deportation in the Hutto center only if no other space is available.

Gupta, who joined ACLU’s Racial Justice Program last year, told rediff.com, “I am really thrilled by this victory. This was a precedent-setting case in the area of immigration detention, which is on a fast rise in this country.”

While acknowledging that “there were South Asian families detained at Hutto,” Gupta and her team who took on the US Department of Justice lawyers who were defending ICE, argued that “it is un-American to detain innocent children, immigrant or not, in poor conditions. We sued to enforce existing standards that are designed to protect immigrant children.”

She said that “until we filed the litigation, the US government had been in blatant violation of the law by making children wear prison scrubs, get one hour of education a day, eat food of poor quality and nutritious value, restricting recreation outdoors to barely an hour, often less.”

Gupta said it was “our litigation and the ensuing settlement that forced the government to make sweeping conditions reforms at the detention center, and on top of these reforms, the government has agreed not to place asylum seekers who have established a credible fear of persecution at the facility, except in the most exigent of circumstances requiring justification.”

She said that after her Tulia experience, she had “reconnected with Texas all over again thanks to this case,” but joked about how “I have been getting teased by friends and family about the fact that my big cases always take place in Texas.”

However, she noted that “this was a lawsuit against the federal government,” unlike Tulia which “involved state officials,” but acknowledged with a laugh, “there’s clearly something about the state that keeps bringing me back.”

Categories: Race · human rights · racism

Jose Padilla convicted of supporting terrorism

August 16, 2007 · 4 Comments

When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.

–Pastor Niemöller

Categories: human rights · politics

Vanita Gupta

July 28, 2007 · 4 Comments

My girl, Vanita Gupta, will be played by Halle Berry in Tulia directed by John Singleton. Vanita is an ACLU lawyer and has been called the Erin Brockovich for people of color. She was 26 and fresh out of NYU law when she saw a documentary by human rights lawyer William Kunstler about a serious travesty of justice in Tulia, Texas. Immediately after 9-11, she went to Texas to investigate even though an Asian Indian woman could be profiled in the South. The racist asshole who imprisoned 43 mostly African American men for a total of 750 years with no corroborating evidence will probably be played by Billy Bob Thornton. There will be no sex in this movie.

I heard Halle will play a composite of Vanita and some white male pro-bono lawyer. She sent a memo to the biggest pro-bono law firms in DC saying the prison system was the forefront of the modern civil rights movement and that Tulia, Texas was the forefront of that fight. She knew she needed the media’s help and enlisted NYT’s Bob Herbert to write ten articles in a year. By 2003, she overturned all the convictions by proving the arrests were based on racial profiling. Texas governor Rick Perry pardoned all 43 former prisoners who received six million dollars. She won a George Soros Justice Fellowship to reform race-biased drug sentencing laws affecting non-violent offenders who are people of color, the prestigious Reebok Human Rights Award and several Indian service awards.

We took intro women’s studies together and heard she was kicking ass by her senior year. I googled her a couple years ago and almost started crying when I found out what she did. I emailed her and she definitely remembered me and asked me what I’d done. We were a couple of shit starters.

She felt oppressed growing up in Surrey, England because people called her and her family names in public. When our women’s studies professor asked if we thought women were not oppressed, oppressed or very oppressed, we were the only two Asian Americans who thought women were very oppressed. I remember looking at the not oppressed group thinking, “Suckers! Wait ’til you hit that glass ceiling!” I haven’t changed much, have I? Vanita is nice, normal, cool, cute and fun.

I once said, “I expect life to be like a movie,” and she said, “I know what you mean.”

Well, Vanita, your life’s really a movie now.

Categories: Race · human rights · racism · white supremacy