Monday, November 30, 2009

The Positive Ladies Soccer Club

Médecins Sans Frontières presents a documentary about an HIV positive ladies soccer team in Zimbabwe. Directed by Joanna Stavropoulou. 



A group of HIV ladies in one of the poorest township’s of Zimbabwe, Epworth, decide to form a football team. Women in Zimbabwe don’t usually play football and HIV positive women are stigmatized so much that they are afraid to disclose their status even to close family members. This group of women has to overcome all this and find strength within themselves against great odds.
The film is about their football team, the ARV Swallows and focuses on the lives of four players. We hear their stories; follow them in their daily lives, in their visits to the clinic, to church, to practice and to the football games.
The idea of an all-female team is laughed at by the local population. Men especially are very scornful at the idea of women playing football. And the first training sessions seem to prove that the men are right – the Swallows are hopeless and the coach walks off the training grounds in despair.
Team captain, Annafields is determined that ARV Swallows will be a success. She gives the team a pep talk which motivates the ladies and they start to training intensely even at their homes by themselves, with other team mates or even with their children. We follow their training regime and how they fit exercise and practice around all their other daily responsibilities.
But attending regular football practice is not easy for Meria. Her HIV positive husband is suffering from tuberculosis and needs daily injections over a period of two months at the local clinic. The only way for him to get to the clinic is for Meria to push him there in a wheelbarrow. Then she has to wheel him back from the clinic, find enough firewood so she can cook a meal for her family and take care of the children. After that, finding the energy to go to soccer practice is a real struggle, but her teammates won’t let her give up and, through their help, finds the strength to continue.
Defender Nyarai describes her HIV diagnosis as the saddest time in her life. Her neighbors advised her that it would be better if she took poison and killed herself. Being part of the team has provided her with support and given her a place to talk about her problems and seek comfort and advice.

"Even though we have the HIV virus, we are not AIDS victims 
 Annafields Phiri, team captain "

The women confront their situation with tenacity, determination and above all, joy. Despite their difficulties they sing, dance and cheer.
All the Swallows have overcome difficulties in their lives and a lack of football skills is just one of them. China became so ill that she had a near death experience. She was revived by her son and sought treatment after being tested positive for HIV. She now makes a living selling firewood she collects with her son. On days when there is not enough money for food, they light a fire so that the neighbors think they are cooking, yet they go to bed on empty stomachs. China has a strong character and upon discovering her husband is promiscuous she chases him away. Her position as the team striker has given her a sense of pride.
HIV positive women are so stigmatized in Zimbabwe that many are afraid to tell close family members about their status. Many HIV patients suffer from depression and discrimination. When Annafields discovered that she had HIV her landlady laughed at her, yelling at her “Annafields, come see others like you, they are dying.” Ironically, the landlady herself becomes HIV infected and Annafields helps her to see that this disease does not have to be a death sentence.
"I have to score a goal, I have to score a goal,thinks Annafields during the final as the game hangs in the balance 1-1. Our team has to win. We will show the whole world. They will never look down on us again!"
For Annafields winning the tournament will prove this to the whole world.

check out the Club's website


Saturday, November 28, 2009

Human Rights Council adopts resolution on migration and children


1 October 2009
 
In a resolution on Human rights of migrants: migration and the human rights of the child (A/HRC/12/L.16), adopted without a vote as orally revised, the Council calls upon States to promote and protect effectively the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all migrants, especially those of children, regardless of their status, in conformity with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the international instruments to which they are party, and therefore: calls upon States to establish or strengthen policies and programmes aimed at addressing the situation of children in the context of migration that have a human rights-based approach and are based on general principles, such as the best interests of the child, non-discrimination, participation and survival and development; also calls upon States of origin to take appropriate measures to promote and protect effectively the rights of children who are left behind in their country of origin by migrating family members; further calls upon States to protect the human rights of children in the context of migration, and therefore: calls upon States parties to the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and the supplementing protocols thereto, namely, the Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Sea and Air and the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, to implement them fully, and calls upon States that have not yet ratified or acceded to them to consider doing so as a matter of priority; requests all States to take concrete measures to prevent the violation of the human rights of migrant children while in transit, and to train public officials to detect and treat them respectfully, in a sensitive and age-appropriate manner and in accordance with their international obligations; calls upon States to ensure that migrant children, especially those who are unaccompanied and those who are victims of violence, exploitation, persecution and conflict, receive special protection and assistance, in accordance with their international obligations; calls upon States of destination to protect effectively the human rights of children in the context of migration, without discrimination of any kind; and also requests the Office of the High Commissioner to prepare a study on challenges and best practices in the implementation of the international framework for the protection of the rights of the child in the context of migration, in consultation with relevant stakeholders, including States, regional organizations, civil society organizations and national human rights institutions, and requests that the study be available on the website of the Office prior to the fifteenth session of the Council, and to disseminate it to all relevant international forums.

Friday, November 27, 2009

European Court of Human Rights

                                        Chamber judgment concerning Greece                26.11.2009

Tabesh v. Greece (no. 8256/07)*
The applicant, Rafk Tabesh, is an Afghan national who was born in 1986. His current place of abode is unknown. Relying on Article 3 (prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment), he complained about the conditions of his detention pending deportation. Relying in particular on Article 5 (right to liberty and security), he further complained that his placement in detention had been unlawful, the reasoning of the administrative and judicial decisions having been insufficient in this connection, and that when he had been arrested he had been informed of the reasons for his arrest in a language that he had not understood.
Violation of Article 3 (treatment)
Violation of Article 5 §§ 1 and 4
Just satisfaction: EUR 8,000 (non-pecuniary damage) and EUR 3,500 (costs and expenses)

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Candlelight vigil to remember Ian Tomlinson


Royal Exchange by Threadneedle Street, London, EC3V 3LL
Tuesday 1st December
6pm - 7.15pm

The United Campaign against Police Violence would like to encourage all our supporters to come along to this vigil for Ian Tomlinson on Tuesday. It has been called by the Ian Tomlinson Family Campaign.

It is important that we keep Ian’s memory alive and continue the fight for justice, I hope as many people can come as possible.

Speakers include:
Ian’s family
Samantha Rigg David - Sean Rigg Justice & Change Campaign
Deborah Coles - INQUEST
John McDonnell MP

The Ian Tomlinson Family Campaign said:

"Ian died in tragic circumstances, an 'innocent passerby' trying to get home, after a police assault at the G20 protests on April 1st 2009.Eight months on, our family are preparing for our first Christmas without him and still waiting for justice.

"We have been grateful for public support this year and would like an opportunity to hold this public memorial gathering to remember Ian, with our friends and supporters around us.We ask that those who attend please wear black as a mark of respect and remember that this is peaceful event.

"PLEASE LET US KNOW IF YOU ARE COMING so we can estimate numbers and please send messages of support - a number of these will be read out at the vigil.

"RSVP to iantomlinsonfamilycampaign@gmail.com"

Radical antifascist was shot in Russia - The wheel of violence goes round and round

UNITED E-NEWS 24/11/2009



 

On the 17th of November 2009 Ivan Khutorskoy, aka Vanya-Kostolom, a 26-year-old radical antifascist, was shot at the threshold of his flat in Moscow. Ivan's contacts and home address had many times been posted on right-wing extremists web-sites and he had also been attacked by the Neo-Nazis four times prior the murder. Ivan was actively involved in organizing security of antifascist music concerts.

The next day dozens of antifascists with fire sticks and empty bottles counterattacked the office of pro-Kremlin organization 'Young Russia', the leader of which - the member of State Duma Maxim Mishchenko - openly collaborates with the right-wing extremist group 'Russian image' ('Russkiy Obraz'). This action was also devoted to the murder of S. Markelov and A. Baburova who had been shot dead in January 2009. One of the suspects, who is now being detained, happens to be the former 'Russian Image' activist.

The attackers are still to be identified. On the one hand, experts from analytical center SOVA state that Ivan Khutorskoy's murder is highly likely to be political, whereas the left-wing activists, anarchists and radical antifascists bluntly call Neo-nazis to be the perpetrators. On the other hand, leaders of ultra nationalistic groups like the Slavic Union ('Slavyanskiy Soyuz') or Movement against Illegal Migration ('Dvizhenie protiv Nelegal'noy Migrazii') claim to have not been involved in the murder, but shift responsibility to the special services, that allegedly instigate a war between antifascists and right-wing radicals.

Nevertheless, this is already widely-spread in the media that this is the 7th murder of antifascists in Moscow. The other victims of Neo-Nazis were: A. Ryukhin (musician), S. Markelov (lawyer), A. Baburova (journalist), A. Krylov (antifascist), F. Filatov (antifascist skinhead), I. Dzhaparidze (antifascist football supporter).

The general context depicts that the absence of systematic actions against xenophobia in Russia, leads to mistrust to the state on behalf of the youth, who step into violent actions against Neo-Nazis. If previously these were fights, now these are gun killings. At the moment both radical movements - antifascists and right-wing extremists are marginalized due to the high rate of violence involved, that cannot by accepted by the majority of the population. And without clear antifascist stance of other sectors of society (authorities first of all, but also academicians, artists, musicians, etc), this wheel goes round and round.

For more info please contact: Youth Human Rights Movement
ynri@yhrm.org
 
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European network against nationalism, racism, fascism
and in support of migrants and refugees
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