<![CDATA[Jezebel: human rights watch]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/jezebel.com.png <![CDATA[Jezebel: human rights watch]]> http://jezebel.com/tag/humanrightswatch http://jezebel.com/tag/humanrightswatch <![CDATA[Ambassador To Address House On Violence Against Women — But Will She Have Answers?]]> Human Rights Watch says ambassador-at-large Melanne Verveer wasn't specific enough in her advice to the Senate on how to stop violence against women in Sudan. The group will be listening as she addresses a House panel on today. [UPI.com]

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<![CDATA[Maid In Lebanon]]> According to a Human Rights Watch report released yesterday, foreign maids in Lebanon have been dying at a rate of more than one a week. Since January 2007, at least 95 foreign maids have died from either suicide, falling from high buildings while trying to escape their employers, or health issues (we're guessing that they don't have healthcare). Interviews with the embassies and friends of those who committed suicide reveal that they were unhappy due to forced confinement and excessive work demands; according to another report, nearly 1/3 of foreign maids in the country are not allowed to leave the homes in which they work. [HRW via NYT]

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<![CDATA[Meet Sarah Tofte: Death Penalty Researcher Turned Rape Kit Activist]]> Sarah Tofte is a researcher with Human Rights Watch, and organization more known for its international policy and anti-death penalty work than its work on women's issues — in fact, its website on women's issues in the U.S. is sparse to be sure. But when we saw Tofte's byline on an Op Ed in the L.A. Times last month about the problem with backlogged rape kits in L.A., we were too busy paying attention to what she'd written to think too much about that.

However, her name rang a bell when another story on backlogged rape kits appeared in the Washington Post today, so we were inspired to do a little more research into her and came up with something that surprised us. Tofte doesn't have a ton of background in victims' rights advocacy or research. She does, however, have a great deal of background in offenders' rights work.

Last year, after receiving a "Distinguished Alumni Award" from her alma mater, she gave a lecture on death penalty abolition to the students — fair enough, as most of her research to that point seemingly focused on the need to abolish the death penalty. After that, her scholarship and public statements shifted toward sex offenses, and she's written in opposition to sex offender registry laws and spoken about what she sees as the difference between perception and reality when it comes to sex offender recidivism (the oft-cited reason for sex offender registry laws).

This is a number that always strikes me, that I think people don't pick up on as much, but to me I find this the most striking number. Is that every year, of all new sex crimes, eighty-seven percent of new sex crimes are committed by someone who has no previous sex crimes convictions.

In both her pieces in the LA Times and the Washington Post, Tofte argues forcefully for more money and resources to go to the examination of rape kits — there's a tremendous backlog in the processing of such kits, which can be (and are often supposed to be) checked against a database of known offenders — offenders that she's suggested have a reasonably low recidivism rate that doesn't justify registration. On the other hand, many groups that work on offender issues have correctly noted the use of DNA testing in clearing defendants and those convicted of certain crimes like rape. So, I guess I'm a little suspicious now what Tofte's purpose is in changing suddenly from offender-advocacy to victim-advocacy, let alone advocating and researching issues in which HRW has historically never taken much of a stand or an interest.

Lost Promise For Rape Victims [L.A. Times]
A Test of Justice for Rape Victims [Washington Post]
Sarah Tofte [Luther College]
The Wrong Sex Offender Laws [LA Times]
Sarah Tofte finds it striking... [Aztram]

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<![CDATA[ Human Rights Watch has declared Saudi Arabia's...]]> Human Rights Watch has declared Saudi Arabia's treatment of women to be a "denial of fundamental rights." Saudi women (in case you haven't heard) are legally obligated to have a male guardian to make decisions for them, travel with them, and are banned from driving, giving them about as much personal freedom as a 9-year-old. The Saudi government, HRW says, resists reforms in order to maintain male control over women and sacrifices basic human rights in the process. While there have been some reforms put into place with King Abdullah (women over 45 are allowed to travel alone) most of them are ignored when put into practice. [Guardian]

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