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World News See other World News Articles Title: Amnesty International’s Troubling Collaboration with UK & US Intelligence Some troubling connections contradict Amnestys image as a benevolent defender of human rights and reveal key figures at the organization during its early years to be less concerned with human dignity and more concerned with the dignity of the US and UKs image in the world. LONDON Amnesty International, the eminent human-rights non-governmental organization, is widely known for its advocacy in that realm. It produces reports critical of the Israeli occupation in Palestine and the Saudi-led war on Yemen. But it also publishes a steady flow of indictments against countries that dont play ball with Washington countries like Iran, China, Venezuela, Nicaragua, North Korea and more. Those reports amplify the drumbeat for a humanitarian intervention in those nations. Amnestys stellar image as a global defender of human rights runs counter to its early days when the British Foreign Office was believed to be censoring reports critical of the British empire. Peter Benenson, the co-founder of Amnesty, had deep ties to the British Foreign Office and Colonial Office while another co-founder, Luis Kutner, informed the FBI of a gun cache at Black Panther leader Fred Hamptons home weeks before he was killed by the Bureau in a gun raid. These troubling connections contradict Amnestys image as a benevolent defender of human rights and reveal key figures at the organization during its early years to be less concerned with human dignity and more concerned with the dignity of the United States and United Kingdoms image in the world. A conflicted beginning Amnestys Benenson, an avowed anti-communist, hailed from a military intelligence background. He pledged that Amnesty would be independent of government influence and would represent prisoners in the East, West, and global South alike. But during the 1960s the U.K. was withdrawing from its colonies and the Foreign Office and Colonial Office were hungry for information from human-rights activists about the situations on the ground. In 1963, the Foreign Office instructed its operatives abroad to provide discreet support for Amnestys campaigns. Peter Benenson | Amnesty International Amnesty International staff pay tribute to founder Peter Benenson in Mexico City, Aug. 9 2005. Eduardo Verdugo | AP Also that year, Benenson wrote to Colonial Office Minister Lord Lansdowne a proposal to prop up a refugee counsellor on the border of present-day Botswana and apartheid South Africa. That counsel was to assist refugees only, and explicitly avoid aiding anti-apartheid activists. Communist influence should not be allowed to spread in this part of Africa, and in the present delicate situation, Amnesty International would wish to support Her Majestys Government in any such policy, Benenson wrote. The next year, Amnesty ceased its support for anti-apartheid icon and the first president of a free South Africa, Nelson Mandela. The following year, in 1964, Benenson enlisted the Foreign Offices assistance in obtaining a visa to Haiti. The Foreign Office secured the visa and wrote to its Haiti representative Alan Elgar saying it support[ed] the aims of Amnesty International. There, Benenson went undercover as a painter, as Minister of State Walter Padley told him prior to his departure that We shall have to be a little careful not to give the Haitians the impression that your visit is actually sponsored by Her Majestys Government. The New York Times exposed the ruse, leading some officials to claim ignorance; Elgar, for example, said he was shocked by Benensons antics. Benenson apologized to Minister Padley, saying I really do not know why the New York Times, which is generally a responsible newspaper, should be doing this sort of thing over Haiti. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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