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Your Letters Helped Free a Political Prisoner: Reverend Bienvenido Samba is Free!

Amnesty International welcomed the release of 14 prisoners of conscience in Equatorial Guinea. Reverend Bienvenido Samba from Equitorial Guinea, a pastor who was an outspoken critic of government treatment of minorities, was released.

Since 2002, Amnesty members have worked steadily on his behalf, publicizing his plight and sending thousands of letters calling for Reverend Samba’s release. Reverend Samba was the subject of ongoing campaigning by the local group in Allentown, PA and in December 2007, individuals sent messages of encouragement and support to Reverend Samba through AIUSA’s Holiday Card Action.

Reverend Samba’s case is a clear illustration of the power your letters and actions hold – the affects are far reaching and can change the lives of people in faraway corners of the world like Equatorial Guinea.

Read the full press release
Participate in our summer postcard action to show your solidarity with other individuals at risk

TAKE ACTION

Stop Executions of Children in Iran

84 known juvenile offenders currently await execution in Iran. The total number could be much higher. Iran is one of the only countries left in the world today that still executes children and child offenders in violation of its commitments to international treaties banning the practice.

Teenager Mohammad Hassanzadeh was hanged on Tuesday. However, Mohammad Feda’i whose execution was postponed, will live for another month. Feda’i has been on Iran’s death row since the age of 17 and after an unfair trial, with inadequate representation and allegations of a tortured confession, Feda’i's life will continue to hang in the balance.

Take action for Feda’i and other juvenile offenders

CAMPAIGN UPDATES

Supreme Court Supports Habeas Corpus for Gitmo Detainees

In a crushing blow to the Bush Administration, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled this week that Guantánamo detainees have a right to challenge their detention before a legitimate court. The court’s decision is a stark indictment of wrongdoing at Guantánamo.

Still, the decision will not close Guantánamo. It will not keep the administration from transferring detainees to countries known for torture. And it will not stop the Bush administration from finding ways to circumvent the law.

Ask Congress to uphold the Supreme Court’s decision

Expert Organizing Tip - Make the most of the summer heat by asking your local ice-cream shop to donate a percentage of their profits to your group on a day when the temperature tops 100 degrees. Then, to show your appreciation and cool off, go to the shop and buy yourself two scoops to celebrate.

OPPORTUNITIES

Guantanamo Cell on MySpace

The Guantanamo Cell replica that is touring the country now has its own page on MySpace! Become its friend and keep updated with its travels!

Summer Postcard Action: Write Prisoners of Conscience Letters of Support

For many people, summer is a time for vacations, picnics and recreation. But for prisoners of conscience or those who defend human rights in many countries, summer brings no relief from the potential danger and sense of isolation they may face. By simply sending a postcard, however, you can help support these women and men. On Amnesty’s website, there is information about some of these prisoners.

Help Shut Down Guantanamo Bay

We need your help to put the pressure on Washington to close the Guantánamo Bay Detention Facility and to bring individuals responsible for crimes to account and ensure that they are given a fair trial and punished accordingly.

By meeting with U.S. Representatives and Senators who are both very supportive of closing Guantánamo, and those who might have different views, we will raise the chorus of individuals working for closure of the facility, and we will ensure that the facility is closed in the proper manner and we will also quell those voices who would have the human rights abuses persist.

Participating in a Delegation visit will take a time commitment of only about 3 hours, and entails reading background materials, participating in both a practice meeting and the actual meeting with your elected official. Please note that the official meeting with your elected official’s office is likely to be held during normal business hours during the week of June 30 – July 3, 2008.

Join a delegation

See What the RPG is Up To: Read the Regional Planning Group’s Call Notes

The Mid-Atlantic Regional Planning Group (RPG) is a volunteer body which acts as a voice for the membership (local and student group and action team members, network members, volunteer leaders, and individual members) and as an advisory board to the Regional Office. Each month the Mid-Atlantic Regional Planning Group (RPG) has a call to discuss important issues facing the region.

Read the minutes from the RPG’s June call
Contact the RPG about issues for next month’s call

Pretty Bird Woman House Supply Drive

Help get necessary supplies to victims of domestic violence and sexual assault
Amnesty International’s Midwest Regional Office is organizing a supply drive for Pretty Bird Woman House (PBWH) through the end of June in recognition of Sexual Assault Awareness Month and Women’s Health Month. PBWH is an emergency shelter that provides temporary housing, advocacy support, and educational programs for women on the Standing Rock reservation who have been victims of domestic violence or sexual assault.

PBWH was highlighted by AIUSA’s Maze of Injustice report last year. Native American and Alaska Native women are more than 2.5 times more likely to be raped or sexually assaulted than other women in the United States in general. They face considerable barriers to accessing justice A complex maze of tribal, state and federal jurisdictions allows perpetrators to rape with impunity and in some cases even encourages assaults. This is why these women are a top priority of Amnesty International’s Maze of Injustice campaign, and PBWH is a pillar to the program as one of the few facilities set up to help Native American.

AIUSA groups and members are being asked to hold supply drives for the items needed. Get more information about how to host a supply drive and what supplies are needed.

Items should be mailed DIRECTLY to PBWH by the end of June along with a card so PBWH will know who is sending them the much needed supplies.

Address:
Pretty Bird Woman House
211 First Ave W
McLaughlin, SD 57642

All donations are tax deductible.

LOCAL EVENTS

Love Lessons from Abu Ghraib

The improbably bravery and beauty of victims of torture in Abu Ghraib prison is told through the eyes of Jennifer Schelter, founder of Yoga Shelter. Inspired by interviews of Iraqi prisoners of war, these tales uncover the best of friendship, justice and art.

When: Saturday, June 21st at 7pm
Where: Virginia Evans Theater at the Please Touch Museum, located at 210 N 21st St. Philadelphia, PA.
For more info visit: www.yogaschelter.com or www.phillyfunguide.com.

Local Group 531 Bi-Monthly Meeting

Join the Allentown, PA group for their meeting on Tues, June 24th from 7-9pm. It is located at: St. Timothy Evangelical Lutheran Church, 140 S. Ott St. Allentown, PA 18104. For more info contact: dlaxarai@excite.com

VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES

Fall Internships With Amnesty International

Attention all those interested in a fall internship!
Did you know that the Amnesty International office in Washington, DC offers internships for summer, fall, and spring? Now is the time to start thinking about applying for the internship. The deadline to apply for the fall term is June 30th, 2008.

This is a highly competitive internship program, so we recommend you start preparing early.

More information about the requirements for the DC internship program, and other programs in the DC office offering internships

For more resources and information for the Mid-Atlantic Region visit: www.amnestyusa.org/MARO
For questions or comments please contact us at aiusama@aiusa.org

Philly Cell Tour A Success

Here’s a note from the Mid-Atlantic staff. Thanks to everyone who gave their time and energy to help make the Cell Tour Philadelphia stop a success!

The Philadelphia stop on the national Guantanamo cell tour was a huge success. Despite a run-in with bad weather, over 700 people visited the cell during its stay in the city of brotherly love. Over forty local activists volunteered their time over the course of the event including a core group of five volunteer leaders who served on a volunteer planning committee for the event – Eric Merlino, April Zappaterrini, Emily Helms, Aditi Dubey, and Jenn Price.

Other highlights included a special event featuring Larry Cox, AIUSA’s Executive Director, and local musicians, The Late Night Drifters.

Check out photos and blog entries from the cell tour at celltour.amnesty.org and www.amnestyusa.org/celltour

Guantanamo Bay Cell Tour – Save the Date!

Volunteer to help with the Philadelphia Cell Tour Event

The lack of human rights and the assaults on human dignity present in Guantanamo Bay must end. This year Amnesty International’s Denounce Torture Campaign will be traveling the United States with a life size replica of a Guantanamo Bay prison cell to raise awareness about the torture and abuse that takes place and to demand an end to Guantanamo Bay. The event will give participants the opportunity to enter the cells experience the conditions of isolation and then comment on your experience.

The Philadelphia stop will be between May 27- June 2. Volunteers are needed to help plan smaller events leading up to the cell tour stop in Philadelphia to help educate the community about this issue and to help with the actual cell tour stop in Philadelphia (final location details coming soon).

If you’re interested in volunteering either to help plan a pre-tour event or during the cell tour stop, please e-mail Jen Horwitz at jhorwitz@aiusa.org

Global Day for Darfur DC Wrapup

Here is a report about last weekend’s Global Day for Darfur from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Office staff.

Global Day for Darfur – This April marks 5 years of crisis in Darfur. Children have grown up knowing violence, displacement, and unrest as a normal way of life. On Sunday, April 13th, Amnesty International USA joined in a global day of action for Darfur.

Here are a few highlights from the day:

  • More than 1,000 people walked through Displaced, Amnesty International’s human rights exhibition.
  • Darfuris and activists came from all over the east coast to participate in the day of action.
  • Approximately 500 people stopped what they were doing to hear the inspiring words of Larry Cox, Mohamed Yahya, and others Darfuris and activists.
  • Over a thousand petition signatures were collected and hundreds of students and young people used their hand prints to call on the Bush Administration to use their authority to end the violence in Darfur.
  • MARO Director, Folabi Olagbaju, got an op-ed printed in the Richmond Times.

Take action for Darfur in your community
See pictures from the day on Flickr

The power of the flower

Turn flowers into power for Native American and Alaska Native women. Tell the incoming Indian Health Service (IHS) Director that we need to ensure that survivors of rape and sexual assault receive the proper healthcare they deserve.

Take Action!

  1. Organic Bouquet
    For every ten emails sent, Amnesty International USA will send a flower to Robert G. McSwain, who any day now will step into the official role of IHS Director. Our goal is to fill the IHS office with so many flowers that IHS officials recognize that their actions (and lack thereof) to protect Native American women are being observed by hundreds of dedicated advocates around the country. Take meaningful action and ensure proper healthcare for Native American and Alaska Native women.
  2. Get Crafty!
    A fun way to send a message for women’s human rights is to make paper and origami flowers! Get your friends together and get creative. Learn how to make flower-themed crafts and help women’s rights bloom.

Volunteers Needed: Regional Conference

If you are attending the regional conference and would like to volunteer your time to help keep things running smoothly, let us know! We need volunteers to:

  • help with set up and pack up
  • work the registration and information table
  • usher attendees between sessions
  • coordinate workshop evaluations
  • help out with special programming logistics
  • staff the Amnesty International Shop
  • assist with the resolutions process

If any of these roles sound good or you’d like to hear more, let us know by Monday, November 5 by emailing cwilliams@aiusa.org or calling 202.544.0200 ext. 301.

We are having a rally at this year’s regional conference to repeal the death penalty. If your group plans on attending, we would really appreciate sign/poster making. Try to aim for 20! To make it easy, below is a list of slogans for your signs:

$$Capital Punishment is EXPENSIVE$$

Repeal the Death Penalty NOW!

Dear Governor O’Malley, Thank you for leading the way to repeal the death penalty

Innocence exists on death row!

People of faith oppose the death penalty.

Life Without Parole Works Better Than Death!

Human Rights Violation in Congo

Coquette Nsinga, a student and supporter of the Movement for the Liberation of the Congo, the main opposition party of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), was arrested along with her mother and two other women on one year ago today, October 30, 2006. She was held for several weeks with out charge or trial and didn’t receive any medical treatment following her torture and rape, which exposed her to the risk of contracting sexually transmitted infections. Coquette is in need of urgent medical care as she suffers from the physical and psychological effects of the physical and sexual attack.

What Can You Do?

Please write a polite letter to Mr. Georges Minsay Booka, the DRC Minster of Justice on behalf of Coquette Nsinga and her mother with a copy to the DRC Ambassador in Washington. Please stress the following points in your letters:

  • Express concern over Coquette’s health following her ill-treatment and rape in detention.
  • Ask for Coquette to be given immediate medical care.
  • Request for an independent investigation into the rape allegations and for those responsible to be brought to justice.
  • Emphasize that Coquette and her mother must not be tried before a military tribunal.
  • Ask that Coquette and her mother must be charged with a recognizable offense without further undue delay and tried before an appropriate civilian court or be immediately freed.

Address Letters to:
Minister of Justice
Mr. Georges Minsay Booka
Ministre de la Justice et Garde des Sceaux
Ministere de la Justice
228 Avenue de Lemera
BP137
Kinshasa Gombe
Republique Democratique du Congo
Email: minsaybooka@yahoo.fr
Salutation: Dear Minister

Get more background information about this ongoing issue in Congo.

UPDATE: Karen from the Bethlehem group drafted this sample letter (Word format) which you can modify, print and mail. Postage is 90 cents to Congo, or 41 cents to the DRC Embassy (for the CC).

Senate Bill 751, legislation that will ensure that persons with mental retardation will not be executed in Pennsylvania, passed the state Senate yesterday by a landslide vote of 45-3. We are hopeful that this decisive vote will give us momentum in the House. The Mid-Atlantic Regional Office is member of Pennsylvania’s for Alternatives to the Death Penalty, a group that has been working on this issue. PADP is also a partner with Amnesty in our work towards a death penalty moratorium in PA.

An engaging photo exhibit has been created to promote the passage of the Child Soldiers Prevention Act. We encourage you to think of creative ways to utilize this photo exhibit. Please let us know how you use the exhibit and remember to use the petition (PDF) with the slideshow as well.

Click here to download the photo exhibit (PowerPoint)

Below are some suggestions on how to use the exhibit.

  • Give a short class presentation – Ask professors to take 10 minutes of class time to give a presentation using the slideshow and have the petition available
  • Tabling in High Traffic Areas – Have the presentation showing on a laptop, with the petition and the Q&A info sheet available
  • Panel Discussion event – Hold a discussion with experts in the field, utilizing professors if possible; use slideshow as background on the issue and the Act
  • Physical photo display with selected photos – Display on bulletin boards or somewhere visible with petition available; create an outdoor/indoor display with photos on easels