A Preliminary Review of Still Flying & the Jose Molina Story that is NOT a Downer.

Quote: “Hope is the feeling you have that the feeling you have isn't permanent. " ~Jean Kerr

Song: Everytime it Rains by Charlotte Martin

State of mind: Churning like the sea.

Date: May 29th, 2010

Amazon.com delivered unto me the latest Firefly companion book, Still Flying. I’ve been witness to countless others online that had gotten advanced copies because in one way or another, they were “special.” I hated them for a while. I’m over that…. because now I’m special too, with my big glossy copy of my own!

I love the theme of the book. Still Flying. Still here after all these years. (It really would have been an even more fantastic title of a book released on a ten year anniversary of the original series.) Though the show was cancelled halfway through one season and we are never getting a sequel, fans are still active; still creating, playing, screening, talking, and shindigging. On occasion I get e-mails from one particular Browncoat friend and she signs off “Keep Flyin’” which always makes me smile. Can’t keep a good Browncoat down!

Like with the other companion books, I let myself just skim through it back and forth, only stopping when something caught my attention, like Jane Espenson’s detailing of how an episode gets written, or the travel posters (even though I have them in both full size and wave card form already), the cast photos, sketches of storyboards, photos of various props and their fate…. I skipped to the end to read about the fandom, seeing as I am a part of it. Was mostly proud and a touch aggrieved for reasons that for now will remain my own.

Eventually, like any good fan, I will sit down and pour over the book from beginning to end so I can glean every last drop of whatever I can get, probably a few times, because like any good fan, I can never get enough. Will never get enough. Might explain why I’m still here.

So far I have two complaints:

1) That Flanvention was mentioned, if only once. There it was in the pages of the prop photos. They weren’t featured in anyway, but just seeing that word sets my teeth in an uncomfortable lock jaw like grimace. Still. I realize the first was great and many people have very fond memories of it but seeing as the “fans” who ran it turned out to be in it more for what they could get from the conventions (or more precisely who they could meet) than for running a successful business, well… I’ll skip all the swearing I want to do and just say I appreciate getting my settlement check for 7 dollars and hope they had a grand time meeting other actors on my dime. I’m sure Anthony Michael Hall is fondly remembering his time with them as I type this and it was ALL WORTH IT. @!#&%!

2) That the cast pages are snippets from already done interviews, and are not new. I suppose getting original quotes from all the cast members was probably out of their reach or not something that could be scheduled in time and I like that they used the same format and similar type quotes for each page to give them a consistency and that had to mean combing hundreds of interviews, articles, and even You Tube clips of convention Q & A and probably took more time than new interviews would have so I give them kudos for that even when I’m taking them away because I’m all for recycling, but sometimes something new is just plain better. In a way using older quotes and interviews says, “The fans are still here, but the cast has moved on.” Which might be true, but I don’t really need to pay to be told that.

However, the reason I bought the book wasn’t for cast interviews or prop photos, but for the original Firefly ‘verse stories by four writers from the original 14 episodes. Although I have avoided almost all spoilers (except the few in Sci Fi Wire’s twitter feed, jerks) I was aware that there was some consternation over the story by Jose Molina. So naturally I read it first.

And worried.

I didn’t get it.

I thought maybe I missed something. So I read it again.

Damn. What a downer! Could io9 was right?

But I couldn’t stop thinking about it. The story kept rolling around in my brain, tossing and turning like a frustrated insomniac. Maybe frustrated at me for being so clueless.

Then I recalled a bit I had somehow been skipping over despite my vain attempts to understand.
Then I got it.

Mal. You stupid cranky bastard! Always looking out for your crew.

*SPOILERS*

The story is set some time after the events of the movie and it turns out that Mal has given up life as a spaceship captain and has settled on some dusty world on the rim, trying to get farther away from the Alliance and all the annoyance they bring. Zoe has the ship, Kaylee and Simon have settled down with each other and spawned little duplicates of themselves that River frequently babysits, Jayne got himself rich and dead. They don’t really say what happened to Inara, just that she didn’t give up life as a Companion. She might still be on Serenity with Zoe, or on a pretty world of her own. All we know is Mal is alone.

Yeah, I can see how that would be considered a downer.

Except as Mal reminisces, as much as a man like him can, after receiving the package from Zoe I realized that Mal has accepted his fate because his choice, his belief that it was worth dying for to get out the truth of the Reavers to the ‘verse was not only the right thing to do but it also was him once again looking out for his crew. What convinced me was the fate of Kaylee, Simon, and River. They’re free. They’re happy. They have built a family for themselves and would not have been able to do so had he not made the choice he did on Mr. Universe’s compound. And I believe the story is trying to say that he knew all along that he would probably end up where he was and despite realizing it, he made the choice he did anyhow. He takes care of his own. And he will live with whatever looking out for them costs him.

Dying, it wasn’t exactly Plan A. Living always is. Even without his ship, he is still living under his own terms. And what more can a man like him ask for?

*Done with the spoilers*

I haven’t read the other three stories yet. Maybe because I know there are only four, I’m trying to draw the experience to put off that all too familar pang of sadness when it’s all over. I’ve seen all there is to see of the ‘verse. That there will be no more...

Wonder what they’ll do for the next book?

Maybe a collection of fan stories and art? Because, really, as much as Joss, cast, and crew loved the ‘verse it is us, the fans, that are the ones still here.

Show quote of the day: “Well, my sister's a ship. We had a complicated childhood.”

Women's Action 35.1

 

 


May 2010

 

Pakistan: End exploitation and abuse of girls in domestic servitude

 
Shazia's funeral
 

On 22 January 2010, Shazia Masih, a 12-year-old Pakistani girl employed as a domestic servant, was taken to the hospital in an unconscious state where she died shortly thereafter. According to the initial medical report Shazia’s body was covered with wounds, some caused by ‘blunt means’ and some caused by ‘a sharp edged weapon.’ Her employer, a prominent lawyer and former head of the Lahore Bar Association, Advocate Naeem Chaudhry, was arrested and charged with attempted murder.

 

Various human rights organizations campaigned for justice in Shazia’s case, calling for immediate prosecution of her employer and justice for Shazia. A later medical report declared Shazia’s cause of death to be ‘septicemia due to acute or chronic inflammatory disease of lung.' Despite having kept Shazia in slave like conditions, withholding pay and not allowing her to see her parents, Advocate Chaudhry is currently out on bail. A middleman, Amanat Masih, who supplied Shazia and other impoverished girls to prosperous homes for domestic servitude, was arrested for a short period but also subsequently released on bail. Also, on 11 February 2010, Yasmin, a 15-year-old domestic servant, was allegedly burnt by her employers in Okara and died five days later in a hospital in Lahore. According to Yasmin’s father this was not the first instance of violence at the hands of her employers.

 

The cases of Shazia and Yasmin are only two examples of the abuse and exploitation suffered by girls who are trafficked into domestic servitude in Pakistan. Research shows that there are about 264,000 child domestic servants in Pakistan, most of whom are girls. According to the ILO these ‘invisible’ children, are trapped in their employers’ homes where they are given very little or no pay, are deprived of the chance to have a childhood or receive an education, and are at risk of being subjected to verbal, physical, emotional and sexual abuse. Pakistani labor laws neither outlaw domestic work as a harmful occupation for children nor regulate the domestic work sector to protect the rights of adults working in that field. Pakistan also lacks legislation addressing human trafficking within Pakistan’s borders (whether for labor or sexual servitude), and girls like Shazia continue to be trafficked into affluent homes without recourse.

 

TAKE ACTION!

 

The ILO has reported that across the globe, more girls under 16 are found in domestic servitude than any other form of work. Plan International estimates that over 100 million people globally, predominantly young women and girls, are working in this ‘least regulated and protected of sectors.’ UNICEF reports that millions of girls who work as domestic servants are especially vulnerable to exploitation, abuse and trafficking within and across borders. According to the ILO, trafficking in children both internally and cross border is prevalent in South Asia with a high incidence of domestic child trafficking.

 

Pakistan has ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW). Article 10 (3) of the ICESCR states that ‘children and young persons should be protected from economic and social exploitation’ and ‘their employment in work harmful to their morals or health or dangerous to life or likely to hamper their normal development should be punishable by law.’ It directs States Parties to set age limits below which the paid employment of child labor should be prohibited and punishable by law. Article 19 of the CRC requires States to protect children from all forms of exploitation and Article 32 states that States Parties should ‘recognize the right of the child to be protected from economic exploitation and from performing any work that is likely to be hazardous or to interfere with the child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical, mental, spiritual, moral or social development.’ It further directs States Parties to set a minimum age for admission to employment, regulation of employment hours and conditions as well as penalties to ensure enforcement. Pakistan is also a party to the ILO Convention on the Worst Forms of Child Labor (No. 182), which requires States to prohibit for children any work ‘which by its nature or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to harm the health, safety or morals of children’; and the ILO Minimum Age Convention (C138) which requires that countries set 15 years as a minimum age for admission to work and 18 years as the minimum age for hazardous work.

 

The Committee on the Rights of the Child, which monitors State compliance with CRC, in its examination of Pakistan’s report in October 2009 expressed concern at the high prevalence of child labor in Pakistan and at the ‘growing number of children trafficked internally, sometimes sold by their own parents or forced into marriage, sexual exploitation or domestic servitude.’ The Committee recommended that Pakistan ‘strengthen its efforts to eradicate child labour, particularly in its worst forms, by addressing the root causes of economic exploitation through poverty eradication and education’; ‘take all measures to ensure the protection of children from international and internal trafficking and sale’; and ‘strengthen national and regional strategies and programmes on the prevention and suppression of sale and trafficking.’

 

Domestic servitude, in which girls are often confined to their employers’ homes in slave-like conditions, work for long hours with minimal or very little pay and perform unsafe tasks, should be understood to fall under the category of hazardous work. However, Pakistan’s Employment of Children Act of 1991 which bans a number of occupations for children does not ban domestic work. Moreover, under international legal standards, most girls in domestic service would be considered victims of human trafficking, since they are clearly recruited, transported, transferred, harbored or received for the purposes of exploitation. Pakistani legislation falls short of these international standards and while the Pakistan Prevention and Control of Human Trafficking Ordinance (2002) addresses cross border trafficking, it does not apply to trafficking within Pakistan’s borders, including that of girls like Shazia who are supplied to affluent households for the purpose of exploitation.

 

Children’s rights and other human rights organizations, such as Society for the Protection of the Rights of the Child (SPARC) and Lawyers for Human Rights and Legal Aid (LHRLA) have been campaigning to ban domestic work for children; to regulate the working hours, conditions and wages in the adult domestic work sector; for provisions against domestic trafficking to be included in the Pakistani trafficking legislation; and for administrative, social and educational measures to protect the rights of children and end their exploitation. Equality Now supports the efforts of these organizations to end the exploitation and abuse of girls and women in domestic servitude.

 

Recommended Actions

 

Please write to the Prime Minister, Speaker of National Assembly, Federal Minister for Labour and Manpower, Federal Minister for Human Rights and the Minister for Law and Justice asking them to ban domestic work for children; and to regulate the working hours, work conditions and wages in the domestic work sector to prevent the abuse and exploitation of adult domestic workers. Urge them to take administrative, social and educational measures to protect the rights of children and end their exploitation. In addition please urge them to ensure that the trafficking legislation addresses domestic trafficking within Pakistan and protects children who are trafficked into domestic servitude.

 

Letters should go to:

 

HE Syed Yousaf Raza Gillani
Prime Minister of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan
The Prime Minister’s Secretariat
Islamabad, Pakistan
Fax: +92 51 922 1596
Tel: +92 51 920 6111
E-mail: secretary@cabinet.gov.pk

 

Dr. Fehmida Mirza
Speaker, National Assembly of Pakistan
Parliament House
Islamabad, Pakistan
Fax: +92 51 922 1106
Tel: +92 51 922 1082/83
Email: speaker@na.gov.pk

 

Mr. Syed Khursheed Ahmed Shah
Federal Minister for Labour and Manpower
27, Minister’s Enclave
Islamabad, Pakistan
Fax: +92 51 920 3462
Tel: +92 51 921 3686
Email: minister@molm.gov.pk

Mr. Syed Mumtaz Alam Gillani
Federal Minister for Human Rights
3rd Floor, Old USAID Building
Ataturk Avenue, G-5/1
Islamabad, Pakistan
Fax: +92 51 924 4542
Tel: +92 51 924 4526
Email: minister@mohr.gov.pk

 

Dr. Zaheeruddin Babar Awan
Minister for Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs
Ministry of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs
Islamabad, Pakistan
E-Mail: minister@molaw.gov.pk

 

Please keep Equality Now updated on your efforts and send copies of any replies you receive to:

Equality Now P.O. Box 20646, Columbus Circle Station, New York NY 10023, USA
Equality Now Africa Regional Office, P.O. Box 2018, 00202, Nairobi, KENYA
Equality Now P.O. Box 48822, London WC2N 6ZW, UNITED KINGDOM
info@equalitynow.org

Quote: “If you gaze to long into the abyss, the abyss also gazes into you.” Fredrick Nietzsche (And gets real bored, I bet.)

 

Song: “Live Out Loud” by Rob Thomas

 

State of Mind: Bored.

 

Date: 5/20/2010

 

Where the Hell have all of you been?? I’ve been looking everywhere! Well, I guess I should give that old adage of staying put and whoever you are looking for eventually come round a try.

 

So, in the words of one spaced bounty hunter Jubal Early, “Here I am.”

 

What have I been doing since I last posted… unfortunately, not much.

 

My face eventually went back to normal and I went back to work. Ho hum.

 

Also, I bought a new(ish) car that I love love love. Has a sunroof. And more power than my old car.

(Which means, finally, I can be the one to cut off other people.)

 

I chopped 90% of my hair off.

 

Took a vacation from work, but stayed home and puttered around. It was too cold to do anything and I was too broke to go anywhere.

 

My niece graduated from High School last week.

 

Both cats have remained healthy.

 

I got an infection in the cornea of my eye. Almost went blind. That was fun.

 

Watched a lot of TV.

 

Saw a few movies.

 

Read a few books. One I hated. (More on that later.)

 

Blah blah blahidty blah.

 

Seriously. I need a life.

 

Show quote of the day: “That’s a strange turn of phrase, saying, “We won” when you weren’t even playing. When watching Star Wars we don’t say, “We defeated the Empire!”

sad day

Saddest Day of the Year

Quote of the day: “Time cools, time clarifies; no mood can be maintained quite unaltered through the course of hours. ~Mark Twain

 

Song of the day: Invincible by Crossfade

State of mind: disagreeable and a tad whiny

Date: Jan 18th, 2010

Yesterday was the official day to give up on any New Years resolutions you made. Nice. Are we such a nation of quitters we actually recognize a specific date on which we should just give up, stay fat, stay disorganized, and a hundred other things we resolve to do while on a champagne high at the beginning of the month?

Maybe the realization that we will never be any better than we are at this moment and we should give up trying on the 17th is why the 18th is the saddest day of the year. Reality sets in; makes us all moody.

Or it’s the holiday spending spree credit card bills and Valentine’s Day displays already up everywhere.

Whatever.

My day sucks because I couldn’t get to sleep last night due to my brain churning all night long. Then when I finally did get to sleep, it didn’t last and I woke up three hours earlier than usual. I fall back asleep just in time to wake up late and miss the garbage truck. One cat was sick in my dinning room and the other peed in the kitchen. I ended up being late to work and when I got there they were plowing so I had to park on the other side of the building and walk all the way around in the slush that hadn’t been removed yet. For some reason, despite it only being 33 degrees outside, the air conditioning is on and it’s blowing right on me. My back aches, my joints hurt, my slacks don’t fit and so far I’ve had three stupid and avoidable paperwork mistakes to correct and it’s not even noon yet.

Also, I forgot my lunch.

*sigh*

But at least my house didn’t crumble around me days ago and I’m still stuck underneath it because everyone’s house fell on them and my government doesn’t have the tools or manpower capable to get me out, and even if I was one of the lucky ones that didn’t have a building fall on me I could be wandering the death filled streets with no water or food and wondering where all my loved ones are.

http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/

http://www.redcross.org/

http://www.mercycorps.org/

 

Show quote of the day:  I'm polymerized tree sap and you're an inorganic adhesive, so whatever verbal projectile you launch in my direction is reflected off of me, returns to its original trajectory and adheres to you.

Urgent Alert: Call on Senate to pass International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act of 2009

From: "Equality Now" <info@equalitynow.org>
Date: November 23, 2009 1:43:15 PM EST
To: HGPrime@hotmail.com
Subject: Urgent Alert: Call on Senate to pass International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act of 2009
Reply-To: Equality Now <info@equalitynow.org>

EQUALITY NOW
URGENT ALERT: UNITED STATES
23 November 2009

EQUALITY NOW CALLS ON THE UNITED STATES SENATE TO PASS THE INTERNATIONAL PROTECTING GIRLS BY PREVENTING CHILD MARRIAGE ACT OF 2009

In November 2009, Equality Now issued Women’s Action 34.1 highlighting the case of Fawziya Abdullah Youssef who was married by her father to a 25-year-old man at age 11 and died in childbirth a year later after 3 days of painful labor and a stillbirth.  The Action calls on the Government of Yemen to enforce the minimum age of marriage of 18 years in Yemen.

Also, in June 2009, Equality Now issued a News Alert calling on the Government of Saudi Arabia to annul the marriage of 10-year-old Amneh Mohamed Sharahili to a 25-year-old man and urging the Saudi King to issue an edict banning all child marriages.

The severe negative physical, emotional, psychological, educational and sexual implications of child marriage on girls are well-documented.  Such marriages violate the human rights of girls by excluding them from decisions regarding the timing of marriage and choice of spouse.  The health-related impact of early marriage and pregnancy, according to the United Nations, includes increased risks of HIV infection, death in labor, septic abortion, stillbirths, pregnancy-induced hypertension, puerperal sepsis and obstetric fistula.  Early marriage also jeopardizes girls’ right to formal education, which ends upon marriage.  International research has shown that married girls have few social connections, restricted mobility, limited control over resources and little or no power in their new households, and that domestic violence is common in child marriages.  Equality Now continues to call on its network to urge the Yemeni and Saudi governments, respectively, to ban child marriage.

In June 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the State Department Reauthorization Bill which included major provisions of the International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act of 2009 (H.R. 2103) (the “Act”).  This landmark legislation recognizes that child marriage is an obstacle to United States’ development efforts, and investments in improving women’s and girls’ education, health, economic and legal status are needed to prevent this harmful practice.  It authorizes U.S. foreign assistance programs to prevent child marriage and provide educational and economic opportunities for girls around the world for fiscal years 2010 through 2014.  The U.S. Senate must also include similar provisions from the Act (S. 987) into its version of the State Department Reauthorization Bill, which the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will introduce as early as this week.

As a part of efforts to curb child marriage in Yemen, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere, Equality Now urges its Women’s Action Network members in the United States to call upon their U.S. Senators to cosponsor the Act (S. 987) and urge members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to ensure that provisions from the Act are included in the Senate version of the State Department Reauthorization Bill. Click here to find your Senators’ contact information. Click here to see a list of Senate Foreign Relations Committee members.

Please keep Equality Now updated on your work and send copies of any replies you receive to: info@equalitynow.org

Sample letter
[add address of Senator]

Dear

I am writing to express my deep concern about the prevalence of child marriage in a number of countries around the world and the severe negative physical, emotional, psychological, educational and sexual implications of such marriage on girls.  Child marriages violate the human rights of girls by excluding them from decisions regarding the timing of marriage and choice of spouse.  Health-related impacts of early marriage and pregnancy according to the United Nations include higher risks of HIV infection, death in labor, septic abortion, still births, pregnancy-induced hypertension, puerperal sepsis and obstetric fistula.  Early marriage also jeopardizes girls’ right to formal education, which ends upon marriage.  Moreover, international research has shown that married girls have few social connections, restricted mobility, limited control over resources and little or no power in their new households, and that domestic violence is common in child marriages.

I am aware that provisions from the International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act of 2009 (H.R. 2103 and S. 987) (the “Act”), which authorizes U.S. foreign assistance programs to prevent child marriage and provides educational and economic opportunities for girls around the world, were passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on 10 June 2009 as part of the State Department Reauthorization Bill. As a Senator, I urge you to cosponsor the Act (S. 987) and ensure that provisions from the Act are included in the Senate version of the State Department Reauthorization Bill. Please take action on this issue so that efforts to eradicate child marriages, which undermine our government’s efforts to empower women around the world, can be expanded and girls around the world are given a better chance to realize their potential.

I thank you for your attention.

Yours sincerely

Feed the puppies!

X

 
 

Hi, all you animal lovers! 
This is pretty  simple... Please 
ask ten friends to each ask a further ten today! 
The Animal Rescue Site is having trouble getting  enough people to click on it daily so they can meet their quota of  getting 
FREE FOOD donated every day to abused and neglected animals.  It takes less than a minute (about 15 seconds) to go to their site  and click on the purple box 'fund food for animals for free'. This  doesn't cost you a thing. 
Their corporate  sponsors/advertisers use the number of daily visits to donate food  to abandoned/neglected animals in exchange for advertising. 
Here's the web site! Please pass it along to people you know. 

http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/ 

  
AGAIN, PLEASE TELL 10  FRIENDS!

Take Action to End Early Marriage in Yemen

Take Action to End Early Marriage in Yemen

Equality Now has just issued Women’s Action 34.1 -- Yemen: End early marriages through enactment of a law enforcing a minimum age of marriage.  Research shows that up to 50% of girls in Yemen are married before they are 18.   Despite the negative physical, emotional, psychological, intellectual and sexual implications of child marriage on girls, the Yemeni government has failed to take effective steps to prevent such marriages.  The campaign calls upon the Yemeni government to end early marriages by enacting and effectively enforcing a law establishing 18 years as the minimum age of marriage.

For Women’s Action 34.1 please click on the following link:

http://www.equalitynow.org/english/actions/action_3401_en.html

We hope that you will support this and our other Women's Action campaigns.

 

If you would like to make a contribution to Equality Now, please click here:

https://www.equalitynow.org/english/support/support_join_en.html

Urgent: Call on Saudi government to reunite forcibly divorced couple


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Equality Now" <info@equalitynow.org>
Date: July 27, 2009 3:40:33 PM EDT
To: NYPinTA@hotmail.com
Subject: Urgent: Call on Saudi government to reunite forcibly divorced couple
Reply-To: Equality Now <lanant@equalitynow.org>

  

EQUALITY NOW
NEWS ALERT: SAUDI ARABIA
27 JULY 2009

Equality Now issues urgent call for the immediate reunification of the family of Fatima Bent Suleiman Al Azzaz and Mansour Ben Attieh El Timani as the family’s health deteriorates

Equality Now recently called on the Saudi government to take urgent action to reunite Fatima Bent Suleiman Al Azzaz and Mansour Ben Attieh El Timani, a happily married couple who were forced to divorce against their will and have been living apart under duress for over three years.  For more background on the case, please see: http://www.equalitynow.org/english/actions/action_3101_en.html

Equality Now has just learned with deep concern that Nuha, their 5-year-old daughter is showing signs of acute trauma.  Nuha is severely distressed at not being able to see her mother and will not let her father out of her sight knowing he is under constant threat of imprisonment.  She fears all strangers.  Nuha is barred from going to school because her father cannot get her birth certificate or any other documents for her that are required for school admittance.  Nuha’s younger brother, Suleiman, lives in an orphanage with his mother under extremely difficult circumstances.  These are the cruel repercussions of the forcible divorce of a happily married couple, condoned and enforced by the Saudi authorities.

Fatima is also suffering persecution in an attempt to wear her down and remove any support she may have in facing her ordeal.  Officials at the orphanage have tried to take Fatima’s laptop computer and cell phone but she has so far been able to resist these attempts.  She has also been put under surveillance by two female guards, who monitor her every move. 

Please write to the Saudi Ambassador in your country, urging the immediate reunification of Fatima, Mansour and their children so that they can attempt to rebuild their lives in peace and security without fear of persecution or abuse.  Ask that the government put a stop to all forced divorces, so that couples who wish can reunite.

Contact information for Saudi embassies around the world can be found on the following websites:

http://www.the-saudi.net/saudi-arabia-directory/Saudi_Embassies/
http://www.saudinf.com/main/p1.htm

Please send copies of your letters to:
Dr. Bandar bin Abdullah El Aiban
President
The Human Rights Commission
P.O. Box 58889 Riyadh 11515
King Fahed Street
Building 373, Riyadh
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Fax: +966 14 612 061
Email: hrc@haq-ksa.org

 

SAMPLE LETTER

Dear Ambassador:

            It is with deep concern that I have learned of the severe trauma of 5-year-old Nuha, daughter of Fatima Bent Suleiman Al Azzaz and Mansour Ben Attieh El Timani, who were divorced by the Saudi authorities against their will and in breach of Saudi Arabia’s obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.  The forced separation of Nuha and her younger brother Suleiman’s parents and their intolerable treatment by the Saudi authorities is not, by the government’s own admission, legally prescribed.  I ask you to do all that you can to end this family’s suffering.  Please ask the King to grant the immediate reunification of Fatima, Mansour and their children and allow them to rebuild their shattered lives without fear of persecution or abuse.  I ask that you do the same for all other couples forcibly divorced in Saudi Arabia who wish to be reunited.

            Sincerely yours,
 

 

 


 

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URGENT: Call on the Iranian government to release human rights activist Shadi Sadr‏

I got this in my email yesterday from Equality Now:

EQUALITY NOW CONDEMNS THE ABDUCTION AND ILLEGAL ARREST OF IRANIAN HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVIST & LAWYER SHADI SADR

Equality Now is deeply concerned for the welfare of human rights activist and lawyer Shadi Sadr who was allegedly beaten, manhandled and arrested without warrant in Tehran on 17 July on her way to Friday prayers. Her friends who were accompanying her have reported that she was dragged into a car by plain-clothes officials. Shadi struggled out of the car and managed to escape with her friends’ help, but was pursued by other officials who beat her violently with a baton and then drove her away.

Please write to the Iranian Embassy in your country calling for the immediate and unconditional release of Shadi Sadr who was arrested without justification. Express your extreme concern about her assault at the hands of plain-clothes security officials. Ask for the release of all those currently detained for the peaceful expression of their beliefs.

Contact information for Iranian embassies around the world can be found on the following websites:

http://www.offshorewave.com/embassies_show.php?country_id=98
http://www.embassiesabroad.com/embassies-of/Iran

Please keep Equality Now updated on your work and send copies of any replies you receive to: info@equalitynow.org

SAMPLE LETTER

Dear Ambassador:

It is with great dismay that I have just learned of the beating and abduction of Iranian lawyer and human rights activist, Shadi Sadr, as she was on her way with friends to Friday prayers. Ms. Sadr was allegedly beaten, manhandled and arrested without warrant in Tehran on 17 July 2009 by plain-clothes officials. Ms. Shadr at first managed to escape with her friends’ help, but I understand she was pursued and captured by other plain-clothes officials who beat her violently with a baton and then drove her away.

I am deeply concerned for the welfare of Ms. Shadi Sadr and urge the Iranian government to release her immediately and unconditionally. Ms. Sadr was arrested without justification. This and her alleged brutal assault at the hands of plain-clothes security officials are unacceptable. I also ask the Iranian government immediately to release all those currently detained for the peaceful expression of their beliefs.

Sincerely yours,