Human Rights Watch chief to step down after three decades

Human Rights Watch chief to step down after three decades

Human Rights Watch chief to step down after three decades

Human Rights Watch chief to step down after three decades

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Human Rights Watch govt director Kenneth Roth said Tuesday he was stepping down after three a long time wherein the New York-based NGO has become a thorn inside the aspect of authoritarian regimes and rights abuses globally.

Roth, who has led the organization considering the fact that 1993, will depart at the end of August, HRW said in an assertion.

“Nothing can last forever,” he said in a video message. “It is time to pass the baton.”

He expressed “great confidence” that his colleagues would continue to effectively defend human rights.

“While I am leaving Human Rights Watch, I am not leaving our cause,” he said.

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Under his leadership, HRW has grown from a small-scale campaign group into a global rights organization that now employs over 500 staff across the globe.

In 1997, it shared a Nobel Peace Prize for its efforts to ban antipersonnel landmines and played a critical role in establishing the International Criminal Court.

Evidence gathered by its staff during conflicts around the world helped ensure the convictions at international tribunals of figures including former Liberian leader Charles Taylor over the war in Sierra Leone and wartime Bosnian Serb leaders Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic.

“Today, amid the horrific abuse taking place in Ukraine, an infrastructure is in place to hold perpetrators accountable,” the group said in a statement.

In comments to AFP, Roth said that while Russia’s invasion of its neighbor was devastating, “my biggest fear by far is China.”

“China is economically powerful and is determined to undermine the global human rights system. For Xi Jinping, the only way to hang on to power is to be profoundly repressive and to actively weaken the international human rights system,” he said.

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His stances occasionally drew controversy, and HRW acknowledged in its statement that “Roth inevitably earned many enemies.”

In April 2021, HRW became the first major international rights group to accuse Israel of using policies of apartheid — the segregation of black people and whites in white-ruled South Africa — against Palestinians.

Israel vehemently denied the allegation and denounced HRW’s report. But in February this year a similar allegation was made by HRW’s London-based counterparts at Amnesty International.

“Despite being Jewish — and having a father who fled Nazi Germany as a 12-year-old boy — he has been attacked for the organization’s criticism of Israeli government abuses,” HRW said.

In recent years, Roth had also become a bitter enemy of the Chinese authorities after repeatedly singling out Beijing over its rights violations.

China imposed sanctions in opposition to Roth individually and expelled him from Hong Kong whilst he traveled there to release HRW’s annual World Report in January 2020, “which spotlighted Beijing’s risk to the global human rights machine”, the company stated.

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A look for a successor is now underway, it added.

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