Archive for August, 2009

Vanished by the state

What are you doing this evening? Are you planning to see family or friends?

Imagine that they don’t show up.

At first you think nothing of it. They must be delayed, or maybe their phone is out of battery. But as the hours tick by, you begin to worry. You make a few calls, ‘Yes, they were at work today, I saw them leaving around 6pm’ says a colleague.

The next morning, when they still haven’t appeared, you go to the police. But they too, know nothing. In fact they are rather dismissive. You search frantically, but every turn leads to a dead end.

Now imagine that four years have passed, and you are no closer to knowing where they are.

For Amina Janjua, this is reality.

In 2005, her husband disappeared while taking a bus across Pakistan.

‘This is the worst thing to happen to anyone.’ she says, ‘If someone dies you cry and people console you and after some time you come to terms with it, but if someone disappears, you cannot breathe, it is the bitterest of agonies.’

When Amina was able to piece together the truth, she discovered that both her husband and his colleague Faisal had been taken into secret detention by the ISI, Pakistan’s intelligence agency. Sadly for her, there has still been no official confirmation of what happened to them both.

Figures from the UN suggest that four people are subject to enforced disappearance every day, a crime that is often carried out by the state, or with their full knowledge.


Speak up for those that have been disappeared:

On social networks

1. Change your avatar to the image below:

2. Change your status e.g. I will not be contactable on Facebook / Twitter for the foreseeable future. Here’s why:  http://bit.ly/siSky

If you are on Twitter, you can add a Twibbon saying ‘Missing’ to show solidarity with the Day of the disappeared

3. [Twitter only] Change your location to ‘Unknown’ and your website to http://bit.ly/siSky [this page]


Act now

Email Justice Minister Jack Straw, urging the UK government to sign the UN Convention on Enforced Disappearance.

Speak up on five of our highlighted cases

Mapping hell stations

After the success of our webchat with Shell, and the revealing answers we were given, it is time for the next stage of our campaign to Make Shell Come Clean

Join us as we target Shell on Google Maps, turning Shell stations into ‘hell stations’ to publicly highlight the damage Shell is doing in the Niger Delta (see Amnesty’s report for further details)

We can’t do this without you, so please get involved by taking photos that obscure the S of the Shell sign from view, and sending them to us. Click on one of the logos below to get the idea.

Wherever you are in the world, we want your hell stations!


View Hell stations in a larger map

Task 1: Start snapping those Hell Stations!

Instructions

  • Find a Shell station in your area, by searching ‘Shell’ or ‘Shell UK Ltd’ on Google Maps. Alternatively you could use Shell’s own station finder (UK only)
  • Use a prop to block the view of the ‘S’ of Shell, as others have done on the map above. Get creative! You could use a friend’s hand, or better still an object that represents your outrage at Shell’s disregard for human rights in the Niger Delta.
  • Snap away!

Send them to us

  • Simply send an MMS to +44 7733 134670 or amnesty.amnesty@gmail.com with the location of the station, and we’ll do the rest

Task 2: Give Shell stations bad reviews

  • Find any Shell station on Google Maps, and give it a one star review, ensuring that your main message is in the first line of the review. It will then show up in searches like this: