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HRCSA
was resolved to be 'an independent, voluntary,
nonprofit organisation which shall neither be
associated nor affiliated with the government or any
political party. We 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 right law.
More
than 50 dedicated professionals work for Human
Rights Commission South Asia. 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.
Human
Rights Commission South Asia researchers conduct
fact-finding investigations into human rights abuses
in all regions in south asia. Human Rights
Commission South Asia 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 Commission
South Asia 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 Commission South Asia 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
Commission South Asia provides up-to-the-minute
information about conflicts while they are underway.
WHERE - Human Rights Commission South Asia is
working with offices in India, Pakistan,
Afghanistan, Nepal, Srilanka, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
and Sweden. 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
Commission South Asia is located at www.hrcsa.org.
Human Rights Commission South Asia tracks
developments in South Asia countries around the
Asia. 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
Commission South Asia. We frequently call on the
South Asian countries to support human rights in its
foreign policy -- but we also report on human rights
abuse inside the South Asia, such as prison
conditions, police abuse, the detention of
immigrants, and the death penalty.
Human
Rights Commission South Asia 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 Commission
South Asia, we remain convinced that progress can be
made when people of good will organize themselves to
make it happen.
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