Souhayr Belhassen dedicates the 90th anniversary of FIDH to its 26 emprisoned activists
It was 90 years ago, yes, ninety years ago, that a group of activists
from human rights organisations in France, Germany, Belgium, Hungary,
Egypt and ten other countries met, to build an international human
rights movement on the vestiges of the First World War: they created the
F(..)I(..)D(..)H(..).
These precursors were seeking to build a society that went beyond
national borders by placing human rights at the heart of societies,
above partisan, economic or national interests.
In 1927 they called for the adoption of a worldwide declaration on
human rights and the creation of a permanent international criminal
court. Decades later, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was
adopted and the International Criminal Court was born. A legal framework
was created for human rights, rights for each and every individual to
claim.
Our fight has weathered the years, against the rise of anti-semitism
and nationalism, imperiling the lives of our predecessors. Victor
Basch, an FIDH founding member and president was assassinated by the
French militia in Lyon in 1944.
Our predecessors fought colonisation and all forms of arbitrary
judgement during the Cold War and strove for a more just and equitable
world. They have inspired human rights activists the world over.
Now, as before, they are in the front line, striving day in day out
for the universality of human rights, for the effective, tangible
application of women’s rights, the right to justice, freedom of speech
and freedom of belief and the right to dignity.
They pay a high price. As we celebrate our 90th anniversary this
evening, my thoughts go to the 26 FIDH activists who are in prison,
right now.
I think of Ales Bialiatski, an FIDH Vice President and President of
Viasna, in Belarus, who has been sentenced to four years in prison and
hard labour.
I think of Nabeel Rajab, an FIDH Secretary General and President of
the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights who has been sentenced to three
years in prison without parole.
I think of Nasrin Sotoudeh, in Iran, who will be awarded the
Sakharov Prize next week. We hope that this prize will contribute to
ending Nasrin’s isolation after she was sentenced to 11 years in prison
and barred from practicing law for 20 years. I am thinking about her
three colleagues from the Iranian Defenders of Human Rights Centre who
are in the same situation.
I think of Muharrem Erbey, in Turkey, Vice President of the Turkish
Human Rights Association and 13 of his colleagues who are also behind
bars.
I think of the five members of the Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan who are in prison, they too.
These human rights activists are fighting for their freedom and their rights; they are fighting for our freedom and our rights.
It is to them that I dedicate this gala evening.
Your presence here this evening is a sign of your support for our fight. In their name, and in the name of FIDH, I thank you.