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Human Rights Watch
Together, we can make a difference

Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the
human rights of people around the world. e stand with victims and activists to
prevent discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect people from
inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders to justice.
We investigate and expose human rights violations and hold abusers accountable.
We challenge governments and those who hold power to end abusive practices and
respect international human rights law. We enlist the public and the
international community to support the cause of human rights for all.
Human Rights Watch is an independent, nongovernmental organization, supported by
contributions from private individuals and foundations worldwide. It accepts no
government funds, directly or indirectly.
WHO - More than 150 dedicated professionals
work for Human Rights Watch around the world. We are lawyers, journalists,
academics, and country experts of many nationalities and diverse backgrounds. We
often join forces with human rights groups from other countries to further our
common goals. A growing cadre of volunteers supports us.
WHAT - Human Rights Watch is the largest
human rights organization based in the United States. Human Rights Watch
researchers conduct fact-finding investigations into human rights abuses in all
regions of the world. Human Rights Watch then publishes those findings in dozens
of books and reports every year, generating extensive coverage in local and
international media. This publicity helps to embarrass abusive governments in
the eyes of their citizens and the world. Human Rights Watch then meets with
government officials to urge changes in policy and practice -- at the United
Nations, the European Union, in Washington and in capitals around the world. In
extreme circumstances, Human Rights Watch presses for the withdrawal of military
and economic support from governments that egregiously violate the rights of
their people. In moments of crisis, Human Rights Watch provides up-to-the-minute
information about conflicts while they are underway. Refugee accounts, which
were collected, synthesized and cross-corroborated by our researchers, helped
shape the response of the international community to recent wars in Kosovo and
Chechnya.
WHEN - Human Rights Watch started in 1978 as
Helsinki Watch, to monitor the compliance of Soviet bloc countries with the
human rights provisions of the landmark Helsinki Accords. In the 1980's,
Americas Watch was set up to counter the notion that human rights abuses by one
side in the war in Central America were somehow more tolerable than abuses by
the other side. The organization grew to cover other regions of the world, until
all the "Watch" committees were united in 1988 to form Human Rights Watch.
WHERE - Human Rights Watch is based in New
York, with offices in Brussels, London, Moscow, Hong Kong, Los Angeles, San
Francisco, Tashkent, Toronto, and Washington. We often set up temporary offices
in regions where we're conducting intensive investigations, and our researchers
regularly travel to the countries they cover, unless security concerns prevent
it. In cyberspace, Human Rights Watch is located at www.hrw.org. Human Rights
Watch tracks developments in more than 70 countries around the world. We also
follow issues in women's rights, children's rights, and the flow of arms to
abusive forces. Other special projects include academic freedom, the human
rights responsibilities of corporations, international justice, prisons, drugs,
and refugees. Any and all parties to conflict may find themselves the target of
Human Rights Watch. We have exposed abuses by governments and rebels; by Hutu
and Tutsi; by Serb, Croat, Bosniak Muslim, and Kosovar Albanian; by Israelis and
Palestinians; by Christians and Muslims in the islands of Indonesia and the
sands of the Sudan. We frequently call on the United States to support human
rights in its foreign policy -- but we also report on human rights abuse inside
the United States, such as prison conditions, police abuse, the detention of
immigrants, and the death penalty.
WHY - Human Rights Watch believes that
international standards of human rights apply to all people equally, and that
sharp vigilance and timely protest can prevent the tragedies of the twentieth
century from recurring. At Human Rights Watch, we remain convinced that progress
can be made when people of good will organize themselves to make it happen.
HOW - The hallmark and pride of Human Rights
Watch is the even-handedness and accuracy of our reporting. To maintain our
independence, we do not accept financial support from any government or
government-funded agency. We depend entirely on contributions from private
foundations and from individuals like you. Please join thousands of other
concerned global citizens in supporting the work of Human Rights Watch. |