Among 140 NGOs, Geneva Council calls on the UAE authorities to release Ahmed Mansoor on his 50th birthday

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140 international NGOs working around the world, including the Geneva Council for Rights and Liberties, issued an open letter to the UAauthorities demanding the release of human rights defender Ahmed Mansour, who is sentenced to ten years in prison. Full Letter:

Your Excellency, Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al Nahyan,

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has recently announced multiple projects promoting pluralism and tolerance both at home and abroad. 2019 has been declared the ‘Year of Tolerance’ and in 2020, Dubai will host the World Expo trade fair, under the theme ‘Connecting Minds, Creating the Future.’ Upon Dubai’s selection for this exhibition in 2013, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, said: “[w]e renew our promise to astonish the world in 2020.” We welcome these public commitments to tolerance and open-mindedness.

It is in this same spirit that we, the undersigned, call upon the UAE government to immediately and unconditionally release human rights defender Ahmed Mansoor, whose life we believe may be at risk following beatings and hunger strikes to protest deplorable and inhumane prison conditions. The Authorities have convicted and imprisoned him solely for his human rights work and for exercising his right to freedom of expression, which is also protected under the UAE’s Constitution.  Amnesty International considers him to be a prisoner of conscience.

Before his imprisonment, Mansoor was known as ‘the last human rights defender left in the UAE’ on account of his fearless work to document human rights violations in the country. His willingness to speak out publicly in defence of human rights on his blog, via social media and in interviews with international media was an example to us all. He is also an engineer, a poet, and a father of four. He is on the advisory boards of the Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR) and Human Rights Watch and was awarded the 2015 Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders.

UAE authorities arrested Mansoor on 20 March 2017 at his home and subjected him to enforced and involuntary disappearance for over six months, with no access to a lawyer and sparse contact with his family, who did not know his exact whereabouts. The authorities held him in solitary confinement for prolonged periods of time.

Shortly after his arrest, a group of United Nations human rights experts said that the UAE should release him immediately, describing his arrest as “a direct attack on the legitimate work of human rights defenders in the UAE.” They expressed fear that his arrest “may constitute an act of reprisal for his engagement with UN human rights mechanisms, for the views he expressed on social media, including Twitter.”

A year later, on 29 May 2018, Mansoor was sentenced under vague charges of “insulting the status and prestige of the UAE and its symbols, including its leaders”, “publishing false information to damage the UAE’s reputation abroad” and “portraying the UAE as a lawless land.” He received a sentence of 10 years in prison, a fine of 1,000,000 UAE Dirhams (US$272,000), three years of probation after completion of his sentence, and confiscation of his electronic devices. On 31 December 2018, the State Security Chamber of the Federal Supreme Court upheld his conviction and sentence.

The UAE’s Government actions against Mansoor have been widely criticised. For instance, on 4 October 2018, the European Parliament adopted a resolution condemning Mansoor’s “harassment, persecution and detention, and calling for his release.” In May 2019, after he ended a month-long hunger strike to protest his unjust conviction and his detention conditions in Al-Sadr prison, a group of UN Special Rapporteurs stated that his conditions of detention “violate[d] basic international human rights standards and risk[ed] taking an irrevocable toll on Mr Mansoor’s health.” In September 2019, Mansoor was severely beaten for continuing his protests and he undertook yet another hunger strike. Nevertheless, he continues to be held in an isolation cell with no running water or bed and is not permitted to leave his cell except for family visits.

In September 2019, the annual report of the UN Secretary General about reprisals against those who cooperate with the UN mechanisms cited Mansoor’s case. This was the fourth time that the Secretary General had denounced reprisals against him, having previously raised concerns in 2014, 2017 and 2018.

It is a tragedy and a disgrace for the UAE that this Tuesday, on 22 October of the UAE’s ‘Year of Tolerance’, Ahmed Mansoor will turn 50, alone in a prison cell in such deplorable conditions, simply for exercising his fundamental right to free speech and for speaking out against human rights violations.

Mansoor’s imprisonment is part of a larger and growing pattern of repression in the UAE. Since 2011, the authorities have embarked on an unprecedented campaign of repression on freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association in the country, shrinking the space for peaceful dissent to near-obliteration. Authorities have used privately manufactured technologies, such as those made by NSO Group, for the unlawful targeted surveillance of human rights defenders, including Mansoor, in order to monitor and clamp down on dissent. The authorities have arrested, detained, and prosecuted activists, human rights defenders and other critics of the government, including prominent lawyers, judges and academics, on broad and sweeping national security-related or cybercrime charges and in proceedings that fail to meet international fair trial standards.

The UAE has publicly declared itself a champion of tolerance in the Middle East and the world. Under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, it has an obligation to protect the rights of its citizens and residents. For this reason, we call upon the UAE government to uphold these principles, and to release Ahmed Mansoor without further delay.

Yours sincerely,

A Common Future, Cameroon

Abraham’s Children Foundation, Nigeria

ACAPE BURUNDI

ACAT-Belgium

ACAT-France

ACAT-Germany – Action by Christians for the Abolition of Torture

ACAT-Liberia

ACAT-Switzerland

Access Center for Human Rights, France

Access Now

Accountabilitylab Niger

African Monitoring Observatory on Climate, Waters, Earth, and Cultures (AMOClimWEC), Benin

American Association of University Professors – New York University Chapter

American Association of University Professors (AAUP)

Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB)

Amis des Etrangers au Togo (ADET)

Amman Center for Human Rights Studies, Jordan

Amnesty International

Angels in the Field, India

Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI)

ARTICLE 19

Asociación de Tecnología, Educación, Desarrollo, Investigación, Comunicación (TEDIC), Paraguay

Association de defense des libertas individuelles, Tunisia

Association For Promotion Sustainable Development, India

Association for Victims of Torture in UAE, Switzerland

Badhon Manob Unnayan Sangstha, Bangladesh

Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies (CIHRS)

Center for Civil Liberties, Ukraine

Center for Innovative and Pragmatic Development Initiative (CIPDI)

Centre d’Appui a l’Education et au Developpement Communautaire (CEDECO), Democratic Republic of the Congo

Centre for Social Mobilization and Sustainable Development, Ghana

Centro de Estudios y apoyo al desarrollo Local, Bolivia

CIVICUS

Comision Nacional de los Derechos Humanos, Dominican Republic

Committee for the Respect of Liberties and Human Rights in Tunisia

Community Initiative for Social Empowerment – CISE Malawi

Community Uplift and Welfare Development-CUWEDE, Uganda

Conacce Chaplains, Colombia

Construisons Ensemble le Monde, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Coordination Maghrébine des Organisations des Droits Humains, Morocco

Daniel Iroegbu Global Health Foundation, Nigeria

Educating Girls and Young Women for Development, Zambia

English PEN

Ensemble contre la peine de mort (ECPM)

European Centre for Democracy and Human Rights (ECDHR)

FINESTE, Haiti

Fraternity Foundation for Human Rights, Germany

Freedom Forum, Nepal

Freedom Now, Morocco

Front Line Defenders

Fundacion CELTA, Venezuela

Fundación Regional de Asesoría en Derechos Humanos (INREDH), Ecuador

Fundacion TEA Trabajo Educacion Ambiente, Argentina

Future Leaders Network Gambia Chapter, Gambia

Geneva Council for Rights and Liberties, Switzerland

Global Learning for Sustainability, Uganda

Global Participe, Congo

Global Vision     Democratic Republic of the Congo

Global Youth on the Quest for Developmental Networking, Gambia

Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR)

Gulf Institute for Democracy and Human Rights (GIDHR), Australia

HOPE Worldwide-Pakistan

Human Rights Defenders Network- ACPDH, Burundi

Human Rights First

Human Rights Foundation

Human Rights Watch

Humena for Human Rights and Civic Engagement, Egypt

Hunger Reduction International, Somalia

IFEX

Innovation for Change – Middle East and North Africa

International Campaign for Freedom in the United Arab Emirates (ICFUAE)

International Center for Supporting Rights and Freedoms, Switzerland

International Centre for Justice and Human Rights, Switzerland

International Commission of Jurists (ICJ)

International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), under the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders

International Legal Initiative, Kazakhstan

International Service for Human Rights (ISHR)

International Youth Alliance for Peace, Sri Lanka

Iraqi Network for Social Media (INSM)

Jeunesse Assistance, Niger

Justice Acess Point, Uganda

Kaimbu Sex Workers Association, Kenya

Kazakhstan International Bureau for Human Rights and the Rule of Law

Legal Clinic Adilet, Kyrgyzstan

Liberia Freedom of Information Coalition

Ligue Burundaise pour les Droits de la Femme

Maharat Foundation, Lebanon

Martin Ennals Foundation

MENA Rights Group

Middle East Studies Association of North America

Most at Risk Populations in Uganda (MARPS)

National Campaing for Sustainable Development, Nepal

National Sudanese Women Association

Norwegian PEN

Omani Association for Human Rights

Organisation Marocaine des Droits Humains (OMDH), Morocco

Pakistan NGOs Forum

Palestinian Center for Communication and Development Strategies, Palestine

Participatory Research Action Network-PRAN, Bangladesh

PEN America

PEN Canada

PEN International

PEN Iraq

Plateforme d’Autonomisation des organisations de jeunesses de Côte d’ivoire (Paojci)

Promo-LEX Association, Moldova

Qurium Media Foundation, Sweden

Reconciliation and Development Agency, Cameroon

Reporters Without Borders (RSF)

Resilient Youth for Change, Zambia

Rights Realization Centre

Rise Initiative for Human Advocacy, South Sudan

Rotel Foundation for Social Development, Nigeria

Rukiga Forum for Development (RUFODE), Uganda

Rural Development Foundation, Pakistan

Salam for Democracy and Human Rights

Scholars at Risk

Sentinel for Human Rights

Sierra Leone School Green Clubs

Society for Rural Women and Youth Development, Nigeria

SPEDYA-Africa Togo

Street Children Empowerment Foundation, Ghana

Sukaar Welfare Organization – Pakistan

Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression (SCM)

Terres des Jeunes Togo

TRIO Uganda

Tunisian Association For Supporting Minority Rights

Tunisian League of Defending Human Rights

Union des Frères pour Alternatif de Développement Intégré (UFADI), Haiti

Urnammu for Justice and Human Rights, Canada

Veritas Collective Foundation, Pakistan

Vigilance for Democracy and the Civic State, Tunisia

Vijana Hope, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Volunteers Welfare for Community Based Care of Zambia

Wales PEN Cymru

Women’s March Global

World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), under the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders

Young Men Association, Botswana

Youth Action for Relentless Development Organization, Sierra Leone

Youth Advocacy Nepal

Youth for the Mission – Jamaica

Youth Harvest Foundation Ghana

YOUTHAID-LIBERIA

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