Amnesty’s 12-Point Plan to End Torture in Brazil

Amnesty International urges the Brazilian government to implement the following recommendations to stamp out torture and to take steps to ensure that its public security system is both effective and aimed at upholding justice and respect for human rights.

Amnesty International calls on the Federal Government:


1. To condemn torture in all its forms, and use its legislative, financial and other powers to encourage, and if necessary require, states to comply fully with international standards for the protection of all human rights.


2. To make the declaration under articles 21 and 22 of the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. To ratify the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture.


3. To set up an independent national preventive monitoring mechanism for the prevention of torture, according to the requirements of the Optional Protocol to the Convention Against Torture.


Amnesty International calls on State Governments:


4. To condemn torture in all its forms, and to ensure that all State agents responsible for acts of torture be brought to justice under Brazil’s torture law No. 9455/97.


5. To give the police and prison guards adequate resources and training to enable them to carry out their work without resorting to human rights violations, including torture.


6. In states where there is none, to take steps to establish an adequately resourced public defenders office to provide legal representation for all criminal suspects. In states where there already is a public defenders office, to ensure that it is adequately resourced.


7. To establish a specialist human rights unit in every state Public Prosecutors Office to oversee the prosecution of State agents accused of committing human rights violations, in order to guarantee the independence of these investigations.


8. To end the holding of pre-trial detainees and convicted prisoners in the custody of the Civil Police.


9. To set up a protection system for detainees not currently covered by witness protection schemes, to ensure the adequate protection of victims and witnesses of torture held in detention.


10. To establish fully independent forensic investigation units and to give detainees prompt access to an independent medical expert specifically where torture or ill-treatment is alleged or suspected.


11. To ensure that male guards respect the rights of all female prisoners and are always accompanied by a female guard.


12. To implement the safeguards and provisions relating to the incarceration of children and adolescents in Brazil’s own Statute of the Child and Adolescent (ECA).


Amnesty International – www.amnesty.org

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil: 20% Jobless in São Paulo

Almost 2 million people or 20 percent of the economically active population are without ...

FIFA Is Still Too Timid Against Racism, Says Brazilian Researcher

The International Soccer Federation (FIFA) should sponsor a more vigorous worldwide campaign against racism ...

LETTERS

Ten years ago Brazil had no public policy towards its youth. This July the ...

The WTO Battle Lost, Can Brazil Still Win the War?

In a statement made last week by Foreign Minister Celso Amorim, Brazil has withdrawn ...

Brazil’s Deforestation Falls 20%, But It’s Up 6% in Protected Areas

According to a report published on Sunday, July 6, by Rio's daily O Globo ...

Brasília, Brazil's capital city

Brazil Can’t Wait! It’s Time to Take On the Terrorist Animals

It took some time, but the big player entered the field for the second ...

Brazil’s Supreme Court Ends Indians’ 34-Year Fight for Land

After a 34-year-old struggle by a group of Brazilian Indians and four days of ...

While Brazil Pays Lip Service to Idea Uruguay Gives Every Student a Laptop

Brazil has been talking about it for years but never delivered. The little and ...

Brazil’s Scots Invited to Lend a Hand to Historical Tapestry Project

Expatriate Scots and descendants of Scottish immigrants across the world are being invited to ...

Shame, proclaims frontpage of Jornal do Brasil with Zidane eating a little canary, symbol of Brazil's national team

Brazil’s Fainthearts Let the Nation Down

"These guys don’t play with their hearts. They only play for money," was the ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`