UN Must Make Amends to Victims of Haiti Cholera Epidemic: The John...

The United Nations must stop refusing to provide remedies to the victims of Haiti's destructive cholera epidemic. That plea comes from The John Marshall Law School International Human Rights Clinic, whose leaders say that denying proper redress is a violation of the human rights of Haitian victims.

The United Nations must stop refusing to provide remedies to the victims of Haiti's destructive cholera epidemic. That plea comes from The John Marshall Law School International Human Rights Clinic, whose leaders say that denying proper redress - detailed in an IHRC report - is a violation of the human rights of Haitian victims.

In a letter to the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, the IHRC urges the U.N. to seek immediate redress for the victims of the massive cholera epidemic that hit Haiti four years ago. As of October 2014, the official death toll from cholera has risen to 8,647 and the number of those infected has risen to 711,442, according to the IHRC.

"The epidemic is a serious threat to life and a fundamental barrier to the realization of human rights in Haiti, including the rights to life, health, clean water, sanitation, and a healthy environment," the group writes.

The IHRC is accepting organizational signatures of support to the letter to the U.N. High Commissioner until Dec. 9.

According to a previous IHRC report, extensive evidence shows U.N. peacekeepers allegedly introduced the deadly strain to the country from reckless waste management that leaked into Haiti's principal river. The U.N. has been unwilling to accept responsibility for its alleged role in the outbreak, and a growing number of human rights advocates are calling on the agency to compensate victims or invest resources to fight the problem.

The report discusses the Haitian government's weakened water and sanitation infrastructure and its inability to protect the basic rights of its citizens, specifically within its most vulnerable populations. According to the report, the hurdles faced by Haitian cholera victims also illustrate a serious gap in accountability measures available when non-state actors, such as the U.N., are the human rights violators.

The IHRC continues in its plea to the U.N. Commissioner, "The U.N.'s refusal to provide redress to victims has become a growing concern among several of your colleagues." The IHRC cited recent remarks from advocates concerned about the cholera epidemic, including former U.N. Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, Stephen Lewis. Lewis said, according to the letter: "I would want to plead with the senior leadership of the U.N. to reverse their policy on cholera … to apologize, abandon the insistence on immunity, settle the claims."

The John Marshall Law School International Human Rights Clinic offers law students a background in human rights advocacy through the practical experience of working on international human rights cases and projects.

To sign the IHRC's letter or get an advanced copy, click here or contact Christine Kraly at ckraly@jmls.edu.

Source URL: http://prweb.com/releases/2014/12/prweb12375730.htm

About The John Marshall Law School

The John Marshall Law School, an ABA accredited law school in the South Loop of Chicago, Illinois, offers J.D., LL.M. and M.S. degrees -- as well as Continuing Legal Education, or CLE -- in the following programs: Advocacy and Dispute Resolution, Employee Benefits Law, Fair Housing Law, Intellectual Property Law, Information Technology and Privacy Law, International Law, Global Legal Studies, Tax


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