A landmark court hearing in Warsaw today shows just how poisonous #Poland’s right-wing government has become in its assault on women’s rights.

Activist Justyna Wydrzyńska is essentially accused of helping a domestic violence victim get health care.
#IAmJustyna
🧵
Specifically, she allegedly helped a woman in an abusive relationship access pills for an abortion in 2020.

Wydrzyńska is being prosecuted for assisting someone to have an abortion and, even more bizarrely, illegally “marketing” medication without authorization. Image
This is the first known prosecution in Europe of an abortion activist for allegedly providing abortion pills.

My colleague @ClaudiaZygmunt has been reporting from outside the courthouse in Warsaw today...
The prosecution of Wydrzyńska is part of the government’s sustained attack on sexual and reproductive rights.

It’s clearly designed to intimidate people and further curb Poland’s already extremely restricted access to abortion.
hrw.org/news/2022/07/1…
In the face of government hostility toward their health, women and girls in Poland depend on civil society initiatives like Wydrzyńska’s organization, @aborcyjnydream, to provide access to science-based sexual and reproductive care and information.
The Polish government can pursue a case like this with such venom in part because the ruling party has undermined the independence of the courts.
In 2020, Poland’s politically compromised Constitutional Tribunal virtually eliminated legal abortion in the country. hrw.org/news/2021/10/1…
And the initial hearing of Wydrzyńska’s case in April showed how unfair courts have become generally.
Representatives from human rights groups were barred from even entering the courtroom in April.

At the same time, the judge permitted the ultra-conservative organization Ordo Iuris to defend the “rights of the fetus,” even though a fetus has no legal standing under Polish law.
The hostile environment the ruling party has created in Poland may be hard for some people outside to imagine, but consider one final detail:

👉 This whole case began when the domestic violence survivor’s husband reported his wife’s intent to terminate her pregnancy to police.
In short, #Poland’s ruling party has created a poisonous system that sides with the abuser over the abused.

#IAmJustyna
📢 This is the top story in my newsletter today.

📲 READ the whole edition online and SUBSCRIBE here: hrw.org/the-day-in-hum… Image

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More from @astroehlein

Oct 14
Human Rights Watch has analyzed video showing the extrajudicial execution of at least 7 #Armenian POWs, apparently by #Azerbaijani forces.

"Killing soldiers who have surrendered is a heinous war crime." - @HughAWilliamson

Read more: hrw.org/news/2022/10/1… Image
The killings took place during fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces that broke out in mid-September, when Azerbaijan made incursions into Armenia and along the border.
The fighting was one of several breakdowns of the Russia-brokered 2020 truce that ended hostilities over the unresolved conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.
Read 21 tweets
Oct 14
Since my recent thread on the 51st session of the UN Human Rights Council was well received... (I know, I know...)

Here's a thread on the voting for new UN Human Rights Council members...
🧵 Image
With every intake of new members at the UN Human Rights Council, there’s often a mixture of exasperation and relief among rights defenders. This time was no different…
This week 193 UN member states cast their secret ballots at the UN General Assembly to select members for the UN’s top rights body.

17 countries ran for 14 spots on the 47-nation Council for 2023-2025.
Read 11 tweets
Oct 13
HEADLINE: "US Stops Funding Some Militaries That Use Child Soldiers"

Great, right? Because, you know, child soldiers... forcing kids to fight in armed conflicts is horrif...

Wait...

"Some"?! Image
It’s another example of how, in human rights work, “good news” is sometimes more like “less bad news.”
Let’s go back to the beginning here…

The landmark Child Soldiers Prevention Act of 2008 withholds certain types of US military assistance from governments that use children in their forces or support militias that recruit children.
Read 10 tweets
Oct 13
Ever since demonstrations erupted across #Iran, schoolgirls have been at the forefront of growing outrage.

They’ve been protesting in their schools and the streets, chanting “Woman, Life, Freedom,” and removing, waving, and burning their head coverings.

1/ Image
That girls & young women would be the kernel of dissent makes sense of course. After all, what set everything off initially was the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, following her arrest on a headscarf “violation” by the ludicrously named & bitterly detested “morality police”
2/
Crowds have grown over the past weeks, as have their grievances – and the dangers people face.
3/
Read 13 tweets
Oct 13
Top subject lines (by open rate) for my newsletter last month:

1⃣ Outrageous Depravity in Iran, 19/9;

2⃣ Myanmar’s Hidden Cruelty, 13/9;

3⃣ A Checklist for the UN’s Annual Meetup, 20/9;

4⃣ Europe’s “Let Them Die” Policy, 14/9;

5⃣ Myanmar Junta Gunships Hit School, 21/9.
I'm not sure what to make of this...

Open rates, that is, the percentage of people who read the subject line and open the email don't vary hugely and are quite strong generally (27-33%).

Surely the way you write a subject line matters, but I don't see much of a pattern yet...
Links to all of them:

1⃣ Iran, 19/9, hrw.org/the-day-in-hum…;

2⃣ Myanmar, 13/9, hrw.org/the-day-in-hum…;

3⃣ UN Checklist, 20/9, hrw.org/the-day-in-hum…;

4⃣ Europe, 14/9, hrw.org/the-day-in-hum…;

5⃣ Myanmar, 21/9, hrw.org/the-day-in-hum…
Read 4 tweets
Oct 12
POLL (and thread)

What would you do if, after you’d worked for months on end, your employer refused to pay you?

1/
You might think of making a legal complaint – you have a contract, after all – but what if the legal system refuses to address it?

Would you stop working for that employer?

Would you join in protests with others in the same situation to demand the pay that’s rightfully yours?
Say you protested... what if then, for daring to ask to be paid for your work, the government authorities threatened to deport you from the country?
Read 11 tweets

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