Human Rights Day: Phhtttt!
Isn’t it
ironic that today, December 10, is Human Rights Day?
Human Rights
Day is a global observance, not a national holiday, and nothing that will give
kids a day off, close banks or stop your daily mail. It was developed by the UN way back in the
1940s, following the Second World War.
Its
observance is marred today.
ON THE NATIONAL LEVEL, The United States has been
disgraced by newly released reports showing that our country used torture on
detainees who, it was believed, may have been involved with or had contact with
those who brought about the 9/11 attack in New York. It’s a shameful day in U.S. history.
But torture
isn’t limited to just the national and international arenas.
ON THE STATE LEVEL, our office is dealing with
a first-hand report from inside the women’s prison located in Ypsilanti
regarding a mentally ill inmate: The
last 18 months she has been locked in an Observation Cell without showering,
reading material, or any form of human contact, for mail is not allowed. Now she is locked in a room without a mattress,
for they say she tore off a string. The
food the mentally ill are served is a joke:
peanut butter/jelly sandwiches, cookies, sliced bananas, graham crackers,
for EVERY MEAL for a year! That’s cruel
and unusual punishment.
And just
this week we received a report
ON THE LOCAL LEVEL: Three local police officers show up at a
downstate woman's home in the evening while her children were there. They tell
her she's under arrest because she has not gotten her blinker repaired in the
time frame her fix-it ticket specified. (She gets paid every two weeks and was
waiting for a paycheck.) The amount needed was $285. Her parents wired the
money via Western Union and it arrived at 9:30 p.m. She was not released until
1:30 a.m.
The mother tells me she called the police department to make sure her daughter was there and a male officer said, "Oh, the fat lady?" The mother told the officer her daughter was diabetic and had a heart condition and asked if her daughter had her meds with her. They said not. The mother said, "You can't do that to her." The officer said, "We can do anything we want."
In jail the woman was put in a holding cell with other men and women, some bloodied from domestic and other violence. She asked for something to eat. The officer told her, "You look like you should lose some weight." She never received anything to eat -- or meds.
The mother tells me she called the police department to make sure her daughter was there and a male officer said, "Oh, the fat lady?" The mother told the officer her daughter was diabetic and had a heart condition and asked if her daughter had her meds with her. They said not. The mother said, "You can't do that to her." The officer said, "We can do anything we want."
In jail the woman was put in a holding cell with other men and women, some bloodied from domestic and other violence. She asked for something to eat. The officer told her, "You look like you should lose some weight." She never received anything to eat -- or meds.
It’s past
time to sit in our easy chairs and cluck our teeth over alleged human rights
violations. It’s past time to say things
like that only happen in other places. On Human Rights Day, 2014, let’s get off our duffs
and say, “No more!” Support your
favorite organization that deals with these issues, and express your immediate
displeasure with any and all of your elected public officials who don’t
represent what you feel and believe. Your
dollars and your voices count!
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