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Reaffirming Human Rights: Human Rights Watch Annual Dinner 2001
New York

Please join us at a very special celebration honoring human rights monitors from around the world. The dinner will be held on Wednesday evening, November 7, 2001 at the Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine in Manhattan.

Human Rights Watch will honor four individuals who, through their personal triumphs and perseverance speaking out for justice in their home countries of Guatemala, Indonesia, Pakistan, Sudan, and Uzbekistan, have helped advance human rights and the need for international justice. Daily, they risk their safety, and often their lives, to defend their fellow citizens from tyrannical governments and abusive armed forces. Human Rights Watch works with these brave individuals on the ground as part of its defense of human rights in over 70 countries worldwide. Through sheer persistence in collecting information, strategic advocacy at local and international levels, and aggressive follow-up, Human Rights Watch has led the way in building support for human rights principles worldwide.

For more information or to purchase tickets to the Human Rights Watch Annual Dinner please call or email:
Michelle Leisure, Coordinator of Special Events, leisurm@hrw.org (212) 216-1803

Date:Wednesday, November 7, 2001
Time:Cocktail Reception 6:00-7:00pm
Program 7:00-8:00pm
Dinner 8:00-10:00pm
Place:The Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine
1047 Amsterdam Avenue (111th Street)
New York, NY 10025
Co-Chairs:Trudie Styler & Sting
Honorees: Afrasiab Khattak, Pakistan
Ismail Adylov, Uzbekistan
Dr. Haruun Ruun, Sudan
Abdul Rahman Yacob, Indonesia
Rosa Isabel Garcia, Guatemala
Ticket Prices: Underwriter $25,000 for one Table of 10
Benefactor $10,000 for one Table of 10
Patron $5,000 for one Table of 10
Individual Underwriter $2,500 for one ticket
Individual Benefactor $1,000 for one ticket
Individual Patron $500 for one ticket

Afrasiab Khattak (Pakistan)
Afrasiab Khattak heads the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), one of the country's leading non-governmental organizations. In this role, Khattak has been one of the most outspoken advocates for the protection of Afghan refugees in Pakistan, challenging government policies and practices aimed at deporting existing refugees and curbing further inflows. HRCP has also been a standard-bearer in calling for the restoration of democracy in Pakistan since the military coup in October 1999. Khattak's work as an activist extends back to previous elected and military governments. Arrested for his opposition to the martial law regime of General Zia ul-Haq, he was convicted by a military court in 1979 and sentenced to a year of labor in prison. Following his release, he spent nearly a decade in exile, returning in 1989 after Zia's death. In the current crisis in Afghanistan, Khattak has publicly articulated the need for Afghan civil society actors to play a prominent role in the country's reconstruction.

Ismail Adylov (Uzbekistan)
Ismail Adylov is a long-time human rights activist and political dissident in Uzbekistan. After he was arrested in 1994, he joined the Independent Human Rights Organization of Uzbekistan and investigated cases of illegal arrest, monitored trials, and conducted dozens of interviews with victims of torture and their families. In the spring of 1999, the Karimov government launched an aggressive campaign against Adylov and his colleagues, apparently aimed at silencing their revelations regarding religious repression and mass violations of human rights by state authorities. In July of that year, Tashkent police took Adylov into custody and raided his home. A court hearing that lasted only three hours and mimicked Soviet-era show trials declared him guilty; Adylov was sentenced in September 1999 to six years in prison. For most of the time he was in prison, Adylov was subjected to torture and denied medical treatment. After a large-scale international campaign calling for Adylov's release, President Karimov finally granted his freedom on July 3, 2001.

Dr. Haruun Ruun (Sudan)
Dr. Haruun Ruun is the head of the New Sudan Council of Churches, which comprises Catholic and Protestant churches in rebel-held areas of southern Sudan. Sudan is in the eighteenth year of a civil war that pits the Arab and Muslim-dominated central government against marginalized African peoples. He has done significant human rights-related work in connection with the People-to-People peace and reconciliation process, which aims to bring together citizens in southern Sudan to promote an end to the conflict between ethnic groups in the south. In this role, Ruun, a U.S.-educated Presbyterian minister, has helped address such problems as returning abducted women and children to their families, attempting to implement a local system of law and order, and searching for funds for the rebuilding of villages destroyed in the conflict. The New Sudan Council of Churches has taken a brave stand against oil exploration in southern Sudan, which has caused the forced displacement of countless citizens who have not been compensated at all for their land, the destruction of their homes and livelihoods, or the death or injury of their relatives.

Abdul Rahman Yacob (Indonesia)
Abdul Rahman Yacob is a lawyer in Aceh, Indonesia with a coalition of human rights organizations, known by its Indonesian name of Koalisi HAM. Aceh is in the midst of a war between Indonesian army and police on the one hand, and guerrilla forces of the Free Aceh Movement on the other. In such a situation, human rights documentation and advocacy is not only crucial, it is extremely dangerous; one Koalisi lawyer was shot to death in March 2001. Under the leadership of Rahman, Koalisi is producing some of the most thorough, timely, and accurate reporting on human rights violations in Aceh. He has taken on the defense of some of Aceh's highest-profile political prisoners. These include a student leader imprisoned for actively campaigning for a referendum on Aceh's political status and GAM officials arrested for rebellion in the midst of negotiations with the Indonesian government. Rahman is so accustomed to receiving threats that he treats them as commonplace, but in a hazardous occupation, Rahman takes on more hazards than most.

Rosa Isabel García (Guatemala)
Rosa Isabel García, a 22-year-old K'iche' woman, has been a domestic worker for seven years. García is on the executive council of CENTRACAP, an organization run by current and former domestic workers. It provides services to domestic workers and focuses on literacy, self-improvement, and vocational classes. CENTRACAP sponsors activities to improve workers' knowledge of their rights in the workforce and engages in advocacy with Congress and other state institutions to promote these rights. García represents the thousands of indigenous girls and women who migrate every year to the capital in search of employment as live-in household workers. Both indigenous and non-indigenous domestic workers encounter legal discrimination and daily exploitation. While her story is typical, García herself is exceptional. In addition to working full-time, García is studying to become a teacher so that she may return to her home province and expand the opportunities for young girls there.


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