Wednesday 29 February 2012

Women's Writes

By Victoria Ashdown

It is International Women’s Day on March 8th this year, so what better time to open your eyes to the daily injustice suffered by women? In Mexico, since 2006, at least forty-five journalists, writers and bloggers have been murdered or have simply ’disappeared’ for speaking out against injustice. Many of whom were women, who paid with their lives in an attempt to gain equality between the sexes.

Susan Chavez Castillo was a prominent poet and social activist in Mexico. She increased awareness towards injustice and headed marches campaigning against the unsolved murders of women who had been raped by their attackers in Ciudad Juárez. The thirty-seven year old activist was found strangled, with a bag over her head and her left hand cut off in the centre of Ciudad Juárez on 6 January 2011. The authorities were very quick in stating that the murder had no links to Castillo’s poetry or activism. However, the symbolism behind the removed hand arguably speaks volumes about the motives of her attackers. Officials have claimed that the attack was random, and that the deliberately removed hand was an attempt to make the murder look like organized crime.

María Esther Aguilar Cansimbe was a reporter for the daily newspaper El Diario de Zamora in Mexico. She was last seen leaving her home in November 2009, and is now declared as missing. Her disappearance occurred after publishing articles on organized crime and the local corruption of higher authorities. She published many controversial pieces, such as a reveal on the arrest of a local politician’s son in relation to organized crime and a report on police abuse, which forced a high-ranking police official to resign. Cansimbe is still missing; her relatives are giving up hope.

English PEN is committed to helping the causes of these, and many other, cases. They provide support for the families of those who have been unjustly murdered and declared missing. They are also working to change the law in Mexico, to make crimes against journalists a federal offence. They aim to spread the news about these abused women in the form of campaigns, protests, and in publishing obituaries.

So, how can you help? You can help English PEN’s valuable work by writing to the Mexican government to demand an end to impunity and detailed investigations into the cases of writers who have been murdered, or have disappeared. Lend your voice and state that crimes against journalists should be made a federal offence, punishable under the law. Details of where to send letters can be found on English PEN’s website.

Friday 24 February 2012

English PEN; It's About Science Too

by Victoria Ashdown

Since its inception, PEN has been committed to preventing censorship caused by the unjust libel system in England. Combining forces with Index for Censorship and Sense about Science, English PEN created The Libel Reform Campaign in an attempt to preserve freedom of speech. The libel laws in England promote an archaic system that benefits the wealthy and powerful. Pursing libel trials often costs an excess of £1 million, forcing individuals such as journalists, academics and performers to drop their appeals for justice.

A recent example of a victim of this system is Dr Ben Goldacre, a scientist and journalist. He visited South Africa in 2007 and was shocked to discover a company claiming that Antiretroviral drugs were ineffective in treating AIDS. Matthaias Rath, a German millionaire, began an advertising campaign in South Africa built on claims that lacked any firm evidence. He stated that the commonly prescribed Antiretroviral drugs should be replaced by his own brand of vitamin pills for successful treatment of the disease. On his return to England, Dr Goldacre wrote a number of articles exposing the injustice of what he saw, and was consequently sued for libel by Mr Rath. The ensuing case lasted for nineteen months, before Mr Rath dropped his charges and cost The Guardian newspaper £535,000 in legal costs. They were eventually awarded over £200,000 to compensate for their losses, but were forced to pay highly for their perusal of justice.

Another case of the negative effects of libel laws in England is that of Simon Singh, an acclaimed author and journalist. In 2008, he published an article in The Guardian newspaper stating his opinion on the British Chiropractic Association’s treatment of children. He wrote that there was ‘not a jot of evidence’ to support the treatments promoted by the BCA for younger patients. Despite publishing his article through a newspaper, Singh was sued personally by the BCA and in early 2009 the judge ruled in their favour. The court decided that Mr Singh’s claims were stated as fact, ignoring his insistence that the article was based on opinion. Therefore, it was viewed as a direct attack on the BCA and implied that they were being deliberately dishonest. However, the case was retried in a court of appeal later that year, and Mr Singh was found innocent of misconduct. As a result of the case, he was charged £20,000 in fees and lost two years of his salary.

These are just two of many cases where the right to express personal opinion is being suppressed. The Libel Reform Campaign acts to help those who are abused by this system and restore justice to our legal system. Show your support, join English PEN at Surrey at: http://www.facebook.com/SurreyEnglishPEN and sign the petition at: http://libelreform.org/.