12/11/2009

Victor Gollanzc Human Rights prize awarded to CIMI

The General Secretary of CIMI, José Eden Pereira Magalhães, and the Chairperson of the Russian human rights organisation MEMORIAL, Oleg Orlov, will accept the Victor Gollancz Prize of the Society for Threatened Peoples, in Göttingen, Saturday 14th of November 2009.


Equal partners
“CIMI has recognized in exemplary fashion the native peoples as equal partners and defends their interests against state authorities, large land-owners and companies,” states the laudation of the German Human rights organisation Gesellschaft für bedrohte Völker (GfbV).


CIMI was launched in 1972, supported by liberation theologians and linked to the Brazilian Bishops’ Conference. Today more than 300 lay people, members of various orders and priests work for CIMI. They picture the problems of the indigenous communities all over Brasil, including deep in the most inaccessible parts of the Amazonas. They make note of the complaints and charges of the Indians against intruders, document violations of land rights, work out with the people concerned strategies of resistance, appear before officials or in political meetings as their spokespeople and keep an eye open throughout the world for allies of the indigenous people.


Death threats
MEMORIAL receives the honour for “the exemplary courage of its staff in day by day risking their lives in a hostile environment”. The Russian human rights organisation was founded during the Perestroika of 1988 and consists today of 80 independent organisations above all in the states of the Russian Federation. MEMORIAL ( dt. Memorial) works both on the clearing up of the Stalinist past and on the research, documentation and publication of present-day human rights violations u.a. in Chechnya and Ingushetia. Members of staff are for this reason constantly being threatened with death. The two women murdered, Anna Politkovskaya and Natalya Estemirova both worked for MEMORIAL.


Victor Gollancz


The STP has been presenting the Victor Gollancz Prize since the year 2000, which now has a symbolic value of 2.500 euros. Among the previous prize-winners have been the “Mothers of Srebrenica” (Bosnia), the former Russian human rights commissar Sergei Kovalyov and Dr. Halima Bashir (Darfur/Western Sudan).


The prize is named after the British Jewish humanist, publisher and writer Victor Gollancz (1893 – 1967), who throughout his life spoke out against crimes against humanity and mobilised help for the survivors of human rigths violations, like the victim´s of Hitler´s nazi-regime.

The Prize will be given this year at the Annual General Meeting of the STP, at which some 150 delegates are expected in Göttingen on 14th and 15th November. Working parties will be discussing the strategies of future STP human rights campaigns.

Fonte: Gesellschaft für bedrohte Völker
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