PRESS STATEMENT
26 May 2006
Issued by
Annalisa Enrile, National Chairperson
GABRIELA Network USA
chair@gabnet.org, (212) 592-3507
We are pleased to announce the departure
of an all-women
human rights legal team from the United States to the Philippines.
Team members are as follows:
-
Jill Soffiyah Elijah, Deputy
Director, Criminal Justice Institute, Harvard Law School. BA,
Cornell University; Juris Doctorate, Wayne State University
Law School. Ms. Elijah was in private practice for several years
before joining Harvard. She specialized in criminal defense
and family law. She has authored several articles and publications
and has represented numerous political prisoners and social
activists over the past 22 years.
-
Rachel Lederman, National Lawyers
Guild. Ms. Lederman is one of the authors of the NLGs
Know Your Rights pamphlet. She won a million-dollar law suit
against the city of San Francisco for unlawfully rounding up
demonstrators protesting the Rodney King verdict in Los Angeles.
-
Vanessa Lucas, National Lawyers
Guild. Juris Doctorate and MA in International Business Administration,
University of San Diego, CA. Ms. Lucas is in private practice,
representing clients in cases that include employment, labor
law and civil rights. Her interests include using international
law in domestic practice and immigrant rights.
-
Merrilyn Onisko, National Lawyers
Guild, currently serves as co-chair of the NLGs Middle
East Subcommittee; also on the NLGs Steering Committee
of the International Committee and the United Nations Subcommittee.
She is an alternate representative to the United Nations for
the International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL).
She recently returned from Bulgaria and Cuba where she presented
reports on UN activities to the IADL Bureau. She speaks French,
Spanish, Russian and conversational Mandarin.
-
Tina Monshipour Foster, Esq,
Center for Constitutional Rights. Juris Doctorate from the Cornell
Law School where she was editor of the Cornell International
Law Journal and President of the Cornell Law Students Association.
Ms. Foster has been deeply engaged in the pursuit of the protection
and observance of civil rights for detainees held in US detention
facilities all over the world. Before joining CCR, Ms. Foster
practiced law in New York, specializing in criminal defense
and class action litigation.
This all-women human rights legal
team is a joint project of GABRIELA Network and the Vanguard Foundation,
in cooperation with the National Lawyers Guild and the Center for
Constitutional Rights.
While in the Philippines, the team
will be co-hosted by the GABRIELA National Alliance of Women and
by the Gabriela Womens Party.
The team will meet with the Batasan 6 and their legal defense team;
listen to accounts and testimonies regarding the assassination of
some 585 activists, organizers, unionists, communist and church
leaders, but most of all, to accounts of the assassination of some
70 politically active women.
GABRIELA Network initiated this project
in the spirit of internationalism and global sisterhood. Alarmed
by the continuing murder of both men and women actively engaged
in the practice and pursuit of democratic rights, GABNet is seeking
ways and means by which the human, civil and political rights of
the people, as well as womens rights, be respected in the
archipelago, in the face of governmental indifference to the Filipino
peoples right to be safe and secure in their homeland.
As a womens organization, the
persecution and murder of women activists, organizers and leaders,
as well as of womens organizations, cut us to the bone. Our
members who are of Philippine ancestry know full well the role that
organizing for ones collective interests plays in the pursuit
of the optimal in working and living conditions.
The Filipino workers of the plantations
of Hawaii and California, of the canneries of Alaska, broke out
of their serf-like conditions in the 1930s only by organizing themselves
and joining their brother workers in unions. Filipina nurses throughout
the U.S. freed themselves from temporary worker visas in the 1980s
by organizing for their right to permanent residency. GABNet began
the agitation against the traffic of women and the mail-order bride
system in the 1990s, work which bore fruit only in the last five
years.
In the face of repression, exploitation
and injustice, history shows us that the only way to freedom is
through sustained activism and perseverance in the defense and advancement
of the peoples democratic and human rights. But how can we
expect the 700,000 women exported from the Philippines in 2005,
as well as all migrant Filipinas who now comprise over 65% of overseas
Filipinos, to seek just working and living conditions, to struggle
against abuse and exploitation, to oppose traffickers, to fight
against racial and gender discrimination, if their own sisters in
the archipelago are being killed for doing exactly the same thing?
###
May
26 press release
May
26 press statement
Letter
to US Ambassador to the Philippines
Letter
to Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo
Statement
of All-Women HR Team. 31 May 2006
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