This Article is From Sep 02, 2015

US Calls for Freedom for 20 Women Political Prisoners

US Calls for Freedom for 20 Women Political Prisoners

Representational Image.

Washington: The United States launched a drive on Tuesday to highlight the plight of 20 women around the world it says have been unfairly imprisoned for their views or political activism.

The "Free the 20" campaign is designed to be tied in to the 20th anniversary of the Beijing declaration, which was signed by 189 countries to promote women's rights as human rights.

Unveiling the program and its promotional hashtag #FreeThe20, Samantha Power, the US ambassador to the United Nations, urged journalists and activists to publicize the 20 cases.

She said that each day for the 20 until the September 27 anniversary she would raise one case in particular, not because they are the worst injustices but because they represent a facet of the problem.

"Free these 20 women, and free the countless women and girls like them behind bars, because these 20 women only represent a tiny fraction of the women currently being unjustly imprisoned," she said.

"And the governments detaining them are just a handful of the governments around the world that are locking up women for exercising their fundamental freedoms."

The first prisoner cited by the campaign was 44-year-old Chinese lawyer Wang Yu, whom Power said had been imprisoned by authorities for fighting for justice for the excluded.

"For her work, Wang has been harassed, threatened and smeared in the state-run media. On July 9, 2015, Wang herself was detained.

So was her husband," Power said.

"She said, 'The truth cannot be long hidden.' In raising Wang's case today and others like it in the days to come, we aim to help her and others expose some of that truth," she said.

"We will continue to repeat Wang Yu's name and that of other women like her over the coming days."

The next woman on the list to be honored Wednesday is Khadija Ismayilova, a 39-year-old Azerbaijani journalist jailed on Tuesday for 7.5 years for tax evasion and other economic crimes.

Washington has strongly protested her trial, noting in particular that the Azerbaijani court had refused to hear exculpatory evidence from her employer, US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
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