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Conference hydra::dejavu

Title:Psychic Phenomena
Notice:Please read note 1.0-1.* before writing
Moderator:JARETH::PAINTER
Created:Wed Jan 22 1986
Last Modified:Tue May 27 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2143
Total number of notes:41773

554.0. "Amnesty International" by CLUE::PAINTER (Trying to reside in n+1 space) Wed Nov 04 1987 21:29

    
    Hello all.  I've been reading up on South Africa recently (which
    in some instances is very tough going for me) and have been thinking 
    about these sorts of issues for quite sometime.
    
    As a result, I've decided to join Amnesty International, and have come 
    to ask you for help.
    
    I hope to be receiving more information in the coming weeks, however
    from the brochures that I've already read, it seems that the most 
    effective way of shedding light on a particular individual being held 
    and tortured is to write letters.....and lots of them.  
    
    If you would be interested in perhaps participating in some letter
    writing of this sort, or even just finding out more about the
    organization, please contact me offline and I will start a mailing
    list unless the demand is great enough to continue this within this
    conference.  Perhaps one alternative would be for me to put in a
    draft letter here and then let those of you who are interested pull
    it, sign it and mail it.  
    
    This conference came to mind because of the 'New Age' connection
    and not putting up with the old ways (which include torturing people
    because of their religious or political beliefs).  I am joining Amnesty
    Int'l in particular because I'd really like to do something about these
    terrible situations which exist in the world today.  According to
    the brochure, this organization has won the Nobel Peace prize in
    the past for their work.
    
    Looking forward to hearing from anyone who would like to either
    participate or find out more.   If you would like to remain anonymous,
    please state that in your note to me.
    
    Cindy
    
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
554.1YES !SSDEVO::ACKLEYand the final word is 'oof!'Wed Nov 04 1987 21:346
    
    	I am interested !   I didn't realize anyone could join
    Amnesty International.    What are the dues ?   Where do you
    write for information ?
    
    	alan.
554.2DemainCLUE::PAINTERTrying to reside in n+1 spaceWed Nov 04 1987 21:567
    
    I'll bring in the information tomorrow and enter it in here.
         
    They must have put me on their fundraising list due to either New
    Age Journal or Mother Jones.  (:^)
    
    Cindy
554.3InformationSCOPE::PAINTERTrying to reside in n+1 spaceThu Nov 05 1987 18:32294
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

Below is information from their recent fundraising mailing on or about
October 15th, 1987. 


Membership form
---------------
Torture can be stopped! .... and I want to help Amnesty International carry 
on its courageous efforts to bring worldwide pressure against offending 
governments and end the barbaric practice of torture.

Suggested amounts are $15, $25, $50, $100, $500 and Other  (with $25 
suggested).  This is a non-profit organization and Digital will match 
contributions of $15.00 or more.

Please make your check payable to: Amnesty International USA
				   322 Eighth Avenue 
				   New York, New York 10001.

A copy of the last financial report filed with the New York State 
Department of State may be obtained by writing to:  New York State 
Department of State, Office Of Charities Registration, Albany, New York 
12231, or to Amnesty International.
    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

		Caution - this is not easy reading.
    
Introductory Letter
-------------------
"We are God in Here..."

...That's what the guards taunted the prisoner with as they applied 
electrical shocks to her body while she lay handcuffed to the springs of a 
metal bed.  Her cries were echoed by the screams of other victims and the 
laughter of her torturers.

Dear Friend,

Though frightening and shocking to even comtemplate ...right now, today, 
the horrors of torture and political detention are every day incidents
in fully one-third of the world's governments.

Torture is terrible and disgusting.  It mocks the most sacred and most 
universal human value  - the sanctity of human life.  It is physical and 
mental degradation, assault, burning of flesh with cigarettes, electric 
shock, living a year or more blindfolded in total darkness, being stretched 
and broken on a rack, having the unspeakable become a living nightmare.

Believe me, I do not recount these facts to be morbid or to provide 
excessive shock value.

We at Amnesty International have learned that the truth must be told so 
that the world's peoples can respond with the moral outrage required to 
stop the hideous crime against humanity that torture is.

	My plea to you is that you join me and more than half a
	million compassionate fellow human beings worldwide in 
	Amnesty International.  I urge you to add your name to the 
	roster of members of the only organization of its kind in
	history to have won the Nobel Prize for Peace.

It is the mission of Amnesty International to abolish torture.  We work 
impartially on behalf of victims of human rights violations.  The great 
majority of cases we undertake involve what we call "prisoners of 
conscience" - men and women who are imprisoned anywhere for their beliefs, 
color, sex, ethnic origin, language, or religion, provided they have 
neither used or advocated violence.

We work to end their torture.  We work to secure for them fair and prompt 
trials.  We work to prevent their execution.  We work to secure their 
freedom.  And a critical tool in Amnesty's fight against torture is our 
Urgent Action Network.

This extraordinary international Network is a highly organized system of 
concerned people who agree to be on call to send immediate Urgent Action 
letters on behalf of tortured prisoners of conscience.

When Amnesty receives reliable information about a detainee needing 
immediate aid, we activate our Network at virtually a moment's notice.  Our 
researchers verify facts about the case.  The facts are fed into our 
massive telecommunications network.  And volunteers respond with telegrams 
and letters - all within a matter of hours.

About 50.000 people belong to the Urgent Action Network worldwide; 5,000 of 
them are Americans.  And our Network works.  Our surveys show 40 to 45% of 
prisoners are either released or treated better when the Network is 
mobilized on their behalf.

I'm convinced our Network is so extraordinarily effective because it's 
ordinary people, more than governments, who have the power to stop torture. 
The thousands of responses that governments receive from caring people 
around the world give notice to prison and government officials that their 
actions have been exposed.  Even the most tyrannical governments don't want 
to appear repressive before their own citizens or before other countries.  
Their bankers have to negotiate with representatives of other countries, 
and their ships have to dock in foreign ports.

So our Urgent Action Network effectively strips away the masks of decency 
through which governments rationalize their human rights violations, 
forcing them to address questions arising from their abuses.  Eventually, 
governments must ask themselves, "Is this particular prisoner worth all 
this negative publicity?"  "Is keeping this individual in jail or torturing 
this person worth all the trouble it's causing?"  "Can we afford further 
damage to our internal and international image?"

We at Amnesty International know governments ask these questions, because 
they do in fact release prisoners of conscience whom we have adopted and 
fought for and because former prisoners have contacted us to thank us...

	A released prisoner from Malaysia wrote about the letters
	he received while in prison:  "It is hard to describe the
	feelings in my heart ... these [letters] I regarded as
	precious jewels."

	A freed Paraguyan prisoner aided by Amnesty wrote: "On
	Christmas Eve the door to my cell opened and the guard
	tossed in a crumpled piece of paper.  It said, "Take 
	heart.  The world knows you're alive.  We're with you."
	That letter saved my life.

But our Urgent Action Network is only one part of our wide-ranging efforts 
to abolish torture.

Amnesty International also brings pressure to bear against offending 
governments through our consultative status with the United Nations and the 
Council of Europe, and through cooperative relations with governmental 
bodies in Africa and Latin America.

Within the United States, we are expanding our network of legal, medical, 
and political experts.  In fact, we already have 1500 lawyers from 25 
states on our Legal Support Network and over 1200 health professionals who 
participate in actions to release prisoners of conscience.

Also, in hearings before Congress and in private meetings with lawmakers, 
Amnesty representatives urge U.S. officials to carefully consider human 
rights data when making foreign policy.  We even press our officials to pay 
personal visits to prisoners of conscience.

On another front, Amnesty will be working more closely with target groups 
- such as business, labor, politicians - meeting with them and sharing ways 
they can work with us to help stop the torture of innocent people.  

And over the coming months and years, we intend to intensify our pressure 
upon governments to adopt specific measures for eliminating the practice of 
torture.

We at Amnesty do not believe - as some do - that torture is a regrettable, 
but incurable, disease.  Slavery was once viewed in a similar light; is now
all but distinguished throughout the world.  The same fate is possible for 
torture.

Perhaps the words of one small child whom Amnesty helped speak most 
eloquently for the worth of our work.

Alfonso Hernandez, a small El Salvadorian boy, was kept hidden indoors for 
over two years by his grandparents to avoid death squads while his mother 
was illegally imprisoned and tortured.

Little Alfonso is so happy to be free, he now says he "wants to kiss 
everybody" he meets.

	Your name has been suggested as one who might wish to support
	Amnesty's vital efforts to free the "Alfonsos" - and prisoners
	of conscience - around the world whose lives are living nightmares.

	So I sincerely hope you'll take this opportunity to join 
	Amnesty International.

Torture can be stopped.  Prisoners can be freed.  Lives can be saved 
through direct action by Amnesty International.

But...our life-saving work can only continue to function if caring, 
unselfish people who abhor the practice of torture are willing to play just 
a small - yet important - role in stopping it.

Our need for your support is so terribly urgent because, even as I write 
this letter to you, someplace in the world - in Communist countries, in 
Western societies, in the Third World - innocent victims of government 
abuse are imprisoned, suffering unspeakable physical and mental agonies.

In Vietnam...a prominent poet, Hoang Cam, is in prison for attempting to 
deliver a collection of unpublished poems to the United States.  In Benin, 
Boniface Koundou, an agronomy student has been detained without charge or 
trial in the Cotonou Central Prison where extremely low hygienic standards 
result in rapidly spreading disease.  In Chile, Ricardo Weibel Navarrete, 
abducted from his home in 1975, is among 650 Chileans who disappeared 
between 1973 and 1977 and whose fate has never been clarified by Chilean 
officials.

It is up to us - you and me - to free these prisoners of conscience and 
thousands like them around the world.

And that's why I urge you to take a moment right now, while you have my 
letter in front of you, to complete the enclosed membership form and return 
it to me with your tax-deductible membership check for $15 - or more if you 
can possibly manage.

As soon as I hear from you, I'll see that you begin receiving our 
newspaper, Amnesty Action, which will keep you up-to-date on every facit of 
Amnesty's work.

"The letters kept coming," "precious jewels," "the world knows you're 
alive," "kiss everybody."  These words echo the hope and love people in 
need share with people who care.

We are these people, and they are us.  So please, join Amnesty 
International today.  We need you.  Mail your enclosed membership form 
today.  Thank you.

				Sincerely yours,
				John G. Healey, Executive Director

P.S.  Once you join Amnesty you will play a direct, personal role in 
      freeing prisoners of conscience and stopping torture.  And what
      a warm feeling of satisfaction that will give you!  Here's what
      one prisoner told us after he was freed:

	"When the first 200 letters [from Amnesty] came, the guard
	gave me back my clothes.  Then the next 200 letters came and
	the prison director came to see me.  The letters kept coming.
	The President called the prison and told them to let me go."

=====================================================================
Additional sheet in the package:

"Enclosed is a personal story about torture.  It is a story you may find 
difficult to read.  Yet it is only one of hundreds Amnesty International 
receives each year.

Innocent men, women, and children are tortured routinely some place in the 
world every day.  But this barbarism can be stopped; it must be stopped!

Please help."

By Sema Ogur:

"I loosened the blindfolds and looked around.  The scene was horrid."

Those are the words of Sema Ogur, a student when Turkish officials arrested 
her and her husband at a friend's house three years ago.

After blindfolding the couple, authorities took them to the Security 
Police's "Evaluation and Research Laboratories" in Ankara, Turkey's capital 
city.

"They wanted us to reveal our address," Sema recalls vividly.  "They said I 
could save my husband if I gave them the address."  Fearing that they would 
endanger their friends, the couple refused to tell interrogators where they 
lived."

As she began her first period of detention, which lasted 21 days, Sema saw 
fellow inmates "piled up in the corridor, waiting their turn to be 
tortured.  Ten people were being led blindfolded and naked up and down the 
corridor and were being beaten to force them to sing reactionary marches.  
Others, who were incapable of standing, were tied to hot radiator pipes.

"An old man of about 50 had been stripped naked and was being made to hand 
out bread rations.  The same man was forced to watch while his children 
were torture, and vice-versa."

During here 21 days of interrogation and torture Sema was hospitalized 
twice.  She asked doctors to record the torture marks on her body, but they 
refused to do so.  Officials then transferred her to a woman's prison, 
where she remained for 25 days before being released.  Six months later 
authorities arrested her again, detaining and torturing her for another 26 
days.

Sema's ordeal included being tied to ceiling pipes and left hanging in a 
crucifixion position.  "It was if my arms were coming off," she told a 
representative of Amnesty International.  "The pain became so bad that my 
screams drowned [the torturer's] voices."  Interrogators also beat the 
soles of her feet and subjected her to electrical shock torture.

"Even when they stop torturing you physically, the screams of others began 
to torment you psychologically.  After a while, I was able to pick out 
which torture was being applied from the screams."

One day she thought she heard the screams of her husband.  Guards took her 
to another cell, and when they removed her blindfold, she saw her husband 
"lying naked beside a black tiled wall.  His hands were tied behind his 
back, and they were administering electricity to his genitals."

Sema's husband, convicted after a group trial of belonging to an 
organization declared illegal by Turkey's military government, was recently 
freed.  He has joined Sema in England, where they are being aided by the 
United Kingdom's Amnesty International medical group.

Despite repeated requests from Sema, Amnesty International and others, 
Turkish authorities have not investigated her charges of ill treatment at 
the hands of state security officials.  AI's current information indicates 
a continuation of systematic torture by the government of Turkey.
  --------------------------------------------------------------
554.4On South AfricaSCOPE::PAINTERTrying to reside in n+1 spaceThu Nov 05 1987 18:5354
    There is a movie being released at the end of the month called
    "Cry Freedom", based on the true story and friendship between
    a 5th generation white South African journalist named Donald
    Woods, and Steve Biko, a black 30 year old working for freedom
    from the apartheid government.  The movie is based on two books
    by Woods entitled "Biko" and "Asking For Trouble".
    

    Excerpted from "Biko", by Donald Woods:
    
    "If I could speak to every person on this globe, I would speak of
    my friend Steve Biko, who died naked on the floor of a prison cell
    after suffering torture and torment at the hands of men who represent
    an especially horrible form of evil - the evil of racism, which
    inflicts hatred and rejection upon its victims for being born with
    a dark skin.  I would tell of how the society that bred such a system
    then exonerated his killers, condoned the laughter with which their
    superiors greeted the news of his death, and voted the man chiefly
    responsible for it back into office with an increased majority.
    
    For many of his fellow citizens, Steve Biko ended such deaths of
    morale.  He shattered many of the psychological bonds that used
    to shackle young blacks in South Africa.  In terms of the spiritual
    self-esteem of young blacks in South Africa, particularly, he was
    a breaker of chains.
    
    Perhaps that, for more than any other, was the reason why the System
    killed him.   ...
    
    Help to finish the work of Steve Biko.  Help to smash the remaining
    links of the chains he broke, and let the sound of this work echo
    around the world so that chains may be broken wherever they hold
    in bondage the bodies and minds of men (all)."
                          
    "After Steve Biko's death (in 1977) there had been a period of trauma 
    in the Security Police, and orders had obviously been issued to
    handle political detainees less violently.  But after a brief lull,
    the sad list of deaths in detention began growing again....."
    
    Between the years of 1963 and (March 26th) 1987, there have been
    over 74 people who have died while in detention.  The official cause
    of Biko's death is listed as a hunger strike - but the evidence
    is not there to back this up as written in the book.  Other reasons
    for other prisoners include epileptic seizures, falling down 7 flights 
    of stairs, jumping 5 stories and the most chilling - no details given 
    (which appears next to over 14 names).
                                                                 
    Woods goes into great detail about his own torture experience while
    being held in detention in the book - and also tells the story of
    how his children were attacked by receiving t-shirts with chemicals
    to cause severe pain for a long period of time.  He and his family
    eventually escaped from South Africa with their lives and the 
    clothes on their backs.

554.5A few commentsHPSCAD::DDOUCETTECommon Sense Rules!Mon Nov 09 1987 20:1912
    Re: .4,
    
    Wood also got out of South Africa with the "Biko" Manuscript
    under his arm.
    
    "Asking For Trouble" is Woods story about getting out of SA and
    getting "Biko" published.
    
    Peter Gabriel wrote a song called "Biko" which is also about
    the same situation.
    
    Dave
554.6Add'l commentSCOPE::PAINTERTrying to reside in n+1 spaceMon Nov 09 1987 21:172
    
    Possession of 'Biko' in South Africa is a criminal offense.
554.7And on the human side...CLUE::PAINTERWonders never cease.Tue Sep 27 1988 17:2214
             
    Finally!  Dave Stanley has incited me - good work, Dave!
    
    I have the latest newspaper from Amnesty International and there
    are 3 names of prisoners being held.  My life is in chaos right
    now so I don't have time to write the letters this week, however
    if anyone is interested in receiving the information about the 3
    prisoners...if only just to read it and see what it's all about, 
    contact me offline and put Amnesty Int'l in the title of your 
    message. 
    
    More later.
    
    Cindy
554.8Amnesty ConcertATSE::FLAHERTYImagine...Fri Nov 04 1988 15:0629
    I saw this in another notes files and although it is a little late
    notice, I thought I'd cross-post it here in case anyone was interested.
    
    Ro
    
================================================================================
Note 1970.0                  NOV 5 AMNESTY CONCERT!                   No replies
HIGHFI::MOUSE                                        18 lines   4-NOV-1988 09:10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    NOTICE:
    
    	Amnesty International Group #344 (Nashua branch) is having a
    	Human Right's Day Celebration Saturday November 5th, from
    	noon to 6PM.  Music, comedy, food and information will be
    	available.  Bands to play are:  Sound Trax (instrumental rock),
    	After the Fact (rock and roll), Body Politics (original rock),
    	and Tattoo (folk rock).  Comedians will be Jimmy Tingle (poli-
    	tical comedian - heard on 'bcn) and Randy Credico (political
    	impressionist).  MDK (92FM) will be broadcasting live from the
    	site.  T-shirts and pins will be on sale, all proceeds to
    	benefit Amnesty's work.
    
    	Come find out about Amnesty, and the Human Right's declaration,
    	enjoy the music and comedy!  To be held at St. Stanilaus Hall
    	in Nashua, N.H.  Take exit 6 off Route 3, follow signs for
    	Nashua airport (Pine Hill Road).  Tickets $3.00 in advance,
    	$4.00 at the door - door prizes to be awarded as well.
    
554.9For our Scottish readers and frequent fliersAYOU17::NAYLORDrive a Jaguar, fly a CheetahMon Nov 07 1988 08:025
    Amnesty are having a "Moroccan Evening" at the Candletree Restaurant
    in Prestwick on 10th December to celebrate (?) 40 years of the United
    Nations.
    
    Northwest operates daily flights out of Boston to Prestwick ......
554.10AI Freedom Writer CampaignCGVAX2::PAINTEROne small step...Thu Oct 12 1989 18:02256
							September 1989      
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), please 
    take a look at what is below. 
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    If you decide to participate, please send me your name offline directly 
    and let me know as I'll be keeping a count for tallying purposes only 
    (I promise not to publish names). 

    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is October 31st.
                                                         ------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

Text of September Newsletter:

**************************************************************************
*                                                                        *
*                 Freedom Writers Newsletter - September 1989            *
*                                                                        *
*                      Amnesty International, USA                        *
*                          322 Eighth Avenue                             *
*                         New York, NY  10001                            *
*                                                                        *
**************************************************************************

You Can Help!

The people described here need your help.  Some may be prisoners of
conscience - men and women imprisoned solely for their beliefs or ethnic
origins who have not used or advocated violence.  Others may have been
denied a fair and prompt trial.  While others may have been tortured or
"disappeared," or may be facing execution. 

All are of great concern to Amnesty International.  Personal letters from
caring people can help bring about a prisoner's release, secure vital
information, launch an investigation, and even save a life. While each of
these cases receives ongoing attention by Amnesty International, your
letters at this time can make a tremendous difference in the fate of
these prisoners. 

You may copy the sample letters inside on your own stationery or compose
your own letters, using the sample letters as guides.  Courteous letters
have the greatest impact.  After you've written the suggested letters, 
please pass this bulletin on to a friend or colleague.  

Please mail your letters within a month of receiving this bulletin.
Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).

You will be updated periodically on the status of the prisoners featured 
here.  Anyone interested in becoming a member of Amnesty International
and the Freedom Writers Network should write to the address below.

		Amnesty International USA
		322 Eighth Avenue
		New York, NY  10001

Amnesty International is an independent worldwide movement working
impartially for the release of all prisoners of conscience, fair and
prompt trials for political prisoners, and an end to torture and
executions.  It is funded by donations from its members and supporters
throughout the world. 

=========================================================================

In the September Issue:

	1. CHINA - Xiao Bin
	
	2. JORDAN - Salem al-Nahhas

	3. PHILIPPINES - Benjamin Lazaro

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 Prime Minister Li Peng
 Guowuyuan
 Beijingshi
 PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA


 Your Excellency,

 I am most concerned about the imprisonment of Xiao Bin, a 49-year-old
 worker from Dalian in northeast China.  He was arrested on June 11, 1989, 
 after being shown on Chinese television speaking to an American ABC 
 television crew in Beijing earlier in June.  He was subsequently 
 sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment for "counter-revolutionary 
 incitement".

 During the television interview, Xiao Bin had said that 20,000 people has 
 been killed in Beijing during the military intervention on June 4, 1989, 
 and that some had been crushed by tanks.  Other witnesses have concurred 
 that the civilian death toll was in the thousands.
 
 It is a basic human right that one be able to express non-violently what 
 one believes to be the truth.  Xiao Bin has done no more than this.  I 
 respectfully urge your government to release Xiao Bin immediately.


						Most sincerely yours,



						<name>



 copy to:
 Embassy of the People's Republic of China
 2300 Connecticut Avenue NW
 Washington, DC  20008




						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 His Majesty King Hussein bin Talal
 King of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
 The Royal Palace
 Amman
 The Hashemite Kingdom of JORDAN


 Your Majesty,

 I write to you concerning the detention without charge or trial of 
 Salem al-Nahhas, a well-known Jordanian writer of novels and short 
 stories.

 He was detained during a wave of arrests following riots which broke out 
 on April 18, 1989.  Most of these detained were released shortly 
 afterwards, but over 60 political prisoners are reported to remain in 
 detention.  They are held in al-Swaqa Prison, except for a few detained 
 in the General Intelligence Department Headquarters in Amman.
 
 Salem al-Nahhas was a leading figure in the establishment of the 
 Jordanian Writers' Association in 1974, and was its vice-president when 
 the government dissolved it in June 1987 under martial law provisions.  
 He worked for several years for Jordanian newspapers.  He has previously 
 been imprisoned for protesting the closure of a newspaper.
 
 I appeal to Your Majesty to release Salem al-Nahhas in recognition of the 
 fact that he has been imprisoned solely for exercising his human rights 
 in the non-violent expression of his political beliefs.


						Sincerely,



						<name>


 copy to:
 His Excellency Ambassador Hussein A. Hammami
 Embassy of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
 3504 International Drive NW
 Washington, DC  20008




						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 Brigadier General Galileo Kintanar
 Head of the ISAFP
 Camp General Aguinaldo
 Quezon City
 PHILIPPINES


 Dear General,

 As a member of the independent human rights organization Amnesty 
 International, I am greatly concerned at the "disappearance" of Benjamin 
 Lazaro, a freelance scriptwriter.  He was detained in Manila on October 
 29, 1988, by armed men claiming to be military intelligence agents.  
 While military authorities have denied holding Lazaro, Amnesty 
 International believes that he was detained by government forces and that 
 the Philippine Government should be held accountable for his fate.

 Benjamin Lazaro was seized by a group of heavily armed men upon leaving a 
 performance of "Base Militar", a play critical of the United States 
 military bases in the Philippines.  The men said that they were members 
 of the Intelligence Service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines 
 (ISAFP).  Benjamin Lazaro was taken away in a white Lancer vehicle with 
 plate number EAV-846.  His wife later received a threatening note warning 
 her not to get involved in criticism of the United States.
 
 As am American, I am horrified that someone could be "disappeared" for 
 merely attending a play critical of the United States.  I implore you to 
 make public the whereabouts of Benjamin Lazaro and to order his immediate 
 release if he is not charged with a recognizable criminal offense.  I 
 thank you sincerely for your assistance.
 
						Yours truly,



						<name>

 copy to:
 His Excellency Ambassador Emmanuel Pelaez
 Embassy of the Philippines
 1617 Massachusetts Avenue NW
 Washington, DC  20036

554.11Questions, answers, and regular newsletter textCGVAX2::PAINTEROne small step...Sat Nov 11 1989 01:4384
Amnesty International - Freedom Writer Campaign

Questions and Answers
=====================

Q:  Should I copy the letter in the bulletin or should I re-write it?

A:  You may do either.  Photocopied, typed or hand-written (if neat and
    legible letters are all acceptable.  You may also compose your own 
    letter using the information provided.


Q:  To which of the two addresses provided do I send my letter?

A:  Please send a letter to *both* addresses.  The address at the top
    is the official to who the letter is directed; the address below is
    that of the country's embassy in the U.S.  By sending a copy of your
    letter to the embassy, you double its potential effectiveness.


Q:  Should I put my return address on the letter?  Will there be any 
    actions taken against me if I do this?

A:  We encourage you to include your return address, but you do not have 
    to do so.  Many Freedom Writers have received replies to their letters
    to government officials.  This would not have been possible without
    a return address.  It is unlikely that you will suffer any retaliation
    as a result of yoru letters.  If you do receive a reply to one of your
    letters, please send a copy of it to:  Amnesty International, Dept. 
    FWN, 322 Eighth Ave., NY, NY 10001.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Text of the October Newsletter:

**************************************************************************
*                                                                        *
*                 Freedom Writers Newsletter - October 1989              *
*                                                                        *
*                      Amnesty International, USA                        *
*                          322 Eighth Avenue                             *
*                         New York, NY  10001                            *
*                                                                        *
**************************************************************************

You Can Help!

The people described here need your help.  Some may be prisoners of
conscience - men and women imprisoned solely for their beliefs or ethnic
origins who have not used or advocated violence.  Others may have been
denied a fair and prompt trial.  While others may have been tortured or
"disappeared," or may be facing execution. 

All are of great concern to Amnesty International.  Personal letters from
caring people can help bring about a prisoner's release, secure vital
information, launch an investigation, and even save a life. While each of
these cases receives ongoing attention by Amnesty International, your
letters at this time can make a tremendous difference in the fate of
these prisoners. 

You may copy the sample letters inside on your own stationery or compose
your own letters, using the sample letters as guides.  Courteous letters
have the greatest impact.  After you've written the suggested letters, 
please pass this bulletin on to a friend or colleague.  

Please mail your letters within a month of receiving this bulletin.
Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).

You will be updated periodically on the status of the prisoners featured 
here.  Anyone interested in becoming a member of Amnesty International
and the Freedom Writers Network should write to the address below.

		Amnesty International USA
		322 Eighth Avenue
		New York, NY  10001

Amnesty International is an independent worldwide movement working
impartially for the release of all prisoners of conscience, fair and
prompt trials for political prisoners, and an end to torture and
executions.  It is funded by donations from its members and supporters
throughout the world. 

=========================================================================
554.12October 1989 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTEROne small step...Sat Nov 11 1989 01:43213
							October 1989      
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the October letters.
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    If you decide to participate, please send me your name offline directly 
    and let me know as I'll be keeping a count for tallying purposes only 
    (I will not publish your name.) 

    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is November 30th.
                                                         -------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the October Issue:

	1. CHAD - Abderahmane and Dari Tchere

	2. IRAQ - "Disappeared" Children

	3. SRI LANKA - Kayathiri Vino Sangaralingam

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 S.E. Monsieur Hissein Habre
 President de la Republique
 La Presidence
 N'Djamena
 REPUBLIC OF CHAD


 Your Excellency,

 I write to you concerning two 13-year-old brothers who were arrested in 
 July 1987 along with some 180 other members of the Hadjerai ethnic group. 
 Since their arrest they have been held in secret detention in the 
 capital city of N'Djamena.

 Abderahmane Tchere and Dari Tchere were arrested in Bitkine in 
 south-eastern Chad apparently because of their ethnic origin and because 
 of their family's connections wit a suspected government opponent.  Many 
 members of the Hadjerai group have been regarded by authorities as 
 potential opponents of the government.

 The independent human rights group Amnesty International has received 
 reports of torture and extrajudicial executions of suspected government 
 opponents at detention centers in N'Djamena.  It fears that these two 
 boys may be tortured and that their lives may be in danger.

 I respectfully urge you to establish publicly the whereabouts of 
 Abderahmane Tchere and Dari Tchere and ensure that they are in good 
 health and are being treated humanely.  If they are not to be charged 
 with a recognizably criminal offense and brought to trial, then I ask 
 that they be promptly released.  I am most grateful for your intervention 
 in this instance.

						Most sincerely yours,



						<name>



 copy to:
 H.E. Ambassador Mahamat Ali Adoum
 Embassy of the Republic of Chad
 2002 R Street NW
 Washington, DC 20009



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 His Excellency President Saddam Hussain
 Presidential Palace
 Karadat Mariam
 Baghdad
 REPUBLIC OF IRAQ
 

 Your Excellency,

 I am greatly concerned at reports of a consistent pattern of abuses 
 against children and young people in your country.  The independent human 
 rights organization Amnesty International has documented the arrests of 
 hundreds of Iraqi children by government forces and the subsequent 
 "disappearance" of these children.

 Nizar Najm was an intermediate school student and Samir Najm was a 
 secondary school student when they were arrested in May 1981 in Basra.  
 Their whereabouts today are unknown.  Shaikhomar Yassin Isma'il, one of 
 315 Kurdish children detained in August 1983, was eight years old when he 
 was arrested in Qoshtapa and subsequently "disappeared".  'Abd al-Rahman 
 Qasem Hatem was a 17-year-old student when he was arrested on February 2, 
 1982, at his home in Baghdad.  His family was deported to Iran after 
 Iraqi officials declared them to be of Iranian descent.  His fate and 
 current whereabouts are unknown.

 I strongly urge you to investigate these cases and hundreds of others 
 like them.  It is every government's responsibility to ensure the safety 
 of its citizens.  Children, however, deserve and even higher level of 
 care.  I appeal to you to stop the pattern of abuse that has prevailed 
 upon Iraq's children for so many years now.


						Sincerely,



						<name>


 copy to:
 H.E. Ambassador Mohamad Sadeq El-Mashat
 Embassy of the Republic of Iraq
 1801 P Street NW
 Washington, DC  20036




						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 President R. Premadasa
 Presidential Secretariat
 Republic Square
 Colombo 1
 SRI LANKA


 Your Excellency,

 I write to you concerning the arrest and subsequent "disappearance" of 
 10-year-old Kayathiri Vino Sangaralingam from Nallur in Jaffna District. 
 She was arrested on November 12, 1987, with her mother and two sisters 
 by the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF), which apparently suspected the 
 women of being sympathetic to the aims of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil 
 Eelam, and armed secessionist group.

 IPKF authorities have repeatedly denied that Kayathiri Vino 
 Sangaralingam or her family are in their custody.  However, a relative 
 of the family has said that she say Kayathiri, although she could not 
 speak with her, in detention at an IPKF camp on the day of her arrest.

 The independent human rights organization Amnesty International has 
 recorded over 800 cases of "disappearances" in Sri Lanka since 1983, 
 allegedly committed by both the Sri Lankan security forces and the IPKF.

 All governments have the responsibility to protect their citizens.  Yet, 
 appeals to the Sri Lankan and Indian authorities about this case have 
 brought no response.  I urge the Sri Lankan government to investigate 
 thoroughly the "disappearance" of Kayathiri Vino Sangaralingam and her 
 family and to make public their whereabouts.

 						Respectfully yours,



						<name>

 copy to:
 H.E. Ambassador Susantha de Alwis
 Embassy of Sri Lanka
 2148 Wyoming Avenue NW
 Washington, DC  20008
554.13December 1989 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTERPray for peace, people everywhere.Wed Dec 13 1989 20:30205
							December 1989      
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the December letters.
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    If you decide to participate, please send me your name offline directly 
    and let me know as I'll be keeping a count for tallying purposes only 
    (I will not publish your name.) 

    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is January 30th.
                                                         -------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the December Issue:

	1. MALAWI - Dr. George Mtafu

	2. MYANMAR (formerly "Burma") - Aung Din

	3. SYRIA - Hakem Sultan al-Faiz

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 Life-President Ngwazi Dr. H. Kamuzu Banda
 Life-President of the Republic of Malawi
 Office of the President and Cabinet
 P. Bag 388
 Lilongwe 3
 MALAWI


 Your Excellency,

 I am greatly concerned about Dr. George Mtafu, Malawi's only 
 neurosurgeon, who has been detained without charge or trail at Blantrye 
 Central Prison since February 1989.  He was reportedly detained after he 
 refused to apologize for challenging certain statements made by Your 
 Excellency in which you accused senior state employees from northern 
 Malawi of disloyalty to the rest of the country.

 Since shortly after independence in 1964, the Malawi government has 
 criticized and sometimes discriminated against northern Malawians.  Many 
 have been imprisoned without trial, held in poor conditions, and 
 tortured.  Since 1988 many detainees from northern Malawi have died in 
 unacknowledged detention, reportedly from torture.

 A man with Dr. Mtafu's skills is surely a valuable asset to Malawi, and 
 asset which is now sadly being wasted.  I respectfully appeal to you, a 
 man of medicine yourself, to order the release of Dr. Mtafu, thereby 
 reversing an injustice and returning to the people of Malawi one of their 
 finest surgeons.

						Sincerely,



						<name>



 copy to:
 H.E. Ambassador Robert Mbaya
 Embassy of Malawi
 2408 Massachusetts Avenue NW
 Washington, D.C.  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 Gen. Saw Maung
 Prime Minister and Minister of Defense 
	and of Foreign Affairs
 Minister's Office
 Yangon (Rangoon)
 UNION OF MYANMAR (BURMA)


 Your Excellency,

 I am writing on behalf of Aung Din, a 26-year-old engineering student 
 who was arrested on April 24, 1989.  He is the leader of the All-Burma 
 Federation of Student Unions, the country's best-known student group.

 The international human rights organization Amnesty International 
 believes that Aung Din was arrested, like many others, for his 
 participation in peaceful demonstrations in 1988 and 1989 that called for 
 an end to the one-party rule that has existed in Myanmar for 26 years.  
 The government imposed martial law late in 1988 and began to suppress the 
 opposition groups.
 
 A few hours before his arrest, Aung Din said in an interview that he was 
 working peacefully for the democracy in Myanmar.  He believes that 
 violent opposition would only lead to suffering and destruction.  I urge 
 you to seek his immediate and unconditional release as he has been 
 imprisoned for the peaceful expression of his political beliefs.


						Most sincerely,



						<name>


 copy to:
 H.E. Ambassador U Myo Aung
 Embassy of Myanmar
 2300 S Street NW
 Washington, DC 20008  USA




						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 H.E. Muhammad Harba
 Minister of Interior
 Ministry of Interior
 Merjeh Circle 
 Damascus, SYRIA


 Your Excellency,

 I write to you concerning Hakem Sultan al-Faiz, a 56-year-old Jordanian 
 national who has been in al-Mezze military prison in Damascus for 18 
 years.  He was arrested in 1971 following the 1970 coup which brought 
 the present government to power.  He is reportedly held for refusing to 
 cooperate with the current government, although he was arrested when 
 government forces abducted him from his home in Lebanon where he had
 moved after the coup.

 Neither he nor the 18 others detained with him have been charged or 
 tried.  Some of them were allegedly tortured after their arrest, and all 
 are said to be in poor health due to inadequate medical facilities and 
 prolonged detention in harsh conditions.  Hakem al-Faiz was critically 
 ill in 1983, but the prison did not supply any medicine.

 Amnesty International, the worldwide human rights organization, has 
 repeatedly called on the government to release Hakem al-Faiz, but there 
 has been no response to these requests.  I strongly encourage you to 
 honor these requests and seek his release.

 
 					Sincerely and respectfully,



					<name>


 copy to:
 Ms. Bushra Kanafani, Charge d'Affaires
 Embassy of the Syrian Arab Republic
 2215 Wyoming Avenue NW
 Washington, DC  20008
554.14Letter correctionCGVAX2::PAINTERPray for peace, people everywhere.Thu Dec 14 1989 14:055
    
    Thanks to a fellow reader - there is a spelling error in .1.  Search
    for the word 'trail' and substitute with 'trial'.
    
    Cindy
554.16AI ConferenceCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Mon Feb 12 1990 14:378
         
    New conference announcement:
    
    		GAMBLN::AMNESTY
    
    Hit KP7 to add this conference to your notebook.  (;^)
    
    Cindy
554.17January 1990CGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Tue Feb 13 1990 21:40216
							January 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the January letters (sorry for the delay).
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    If you decide to participate, please send me your name offline directly 
    and let me know as I'll be keeping a count for tallying purposes only 
    (I will not publish your name.) 

    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is February 28th.
                                                         -------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the January 1990 Issue:

	1. EL SALVADOR - Six Jesuit Priests and others

	2. ISRAEL - Sha'wan Jabarin

	3. PHILIPPINES - Leonardo Bellaza and Others

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 S.E. Alfredo Christiani Burkard
 Presidente de la Republica
        de El Salvador
 Casa Presidencial
 San Salvador, EL SALVADOR


 Your Excellency,

 I am deeply disturbed by the murders on November 16, 1989, of six 
 Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and her daughter.  Several uniformed 
 men carrying automatic weapons reportedly entered Jesuits' residence 
 in San Salvador in the early morning, interrogated the men and then 
 brutally killed them.  I understand that there is substantial evidence 
 that the murders were committed by members of the Salvadoran Army.
 
 I realize that yours is a war-torn country, but surely this cannot 
 justify the murder of unarmed civilians by the Salvadoran security 
 forces.  I am encouraged by your promise to investigate these 
 killings, but the record of promised investigations into previous 
 political killings is dismal and makes me very pessimistic.  That is 
 why I am strongly urging you to make this extraordinary effort that 
 will be required to ensure that these killings are thoroughly 
 investigated and that those responsible are brought to justice.
 
 Unless murderers are held accountable, I do not see how the killings 
 will end.

						Sincerely,



						<name>



 copy to:
 His Excellency Miguel Angel Salaverria
 Embassy of El Salvador
 2308 California Street NW
 Washington, DC  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 Yitzhak Rabin
 Minister of Defense
 Ministry of Defense
 7 "A" Street - Hakirya
 Tel Aviv  67659
 ISRAEL


 Your Excellency,

 I am deeply concerned about the allegations that Sha'wan Rateb 
 'Abdullah Jabarin, and employee of the human rights organization 
 al-Haq, was tortured while in the custody of Israeli security forces 
 after being arrested at his home on October 10, 1989.  He was first 
 taken to a police detention center in Hebron, being beaten en route as 
 well as after his arrival.  Eyewitnesses claim that an army doctor 
 tried to intervene and examine Jabarin, but the beating continued even 
 during the examination.  Jabarin was then taken to a hospital at the 
 doctor's recommendation.
  
 He was later transferred to the Dhahariyah detention center.  When 
 al-Haq investigated his detention, the Military Legal Advisor for the 
 West Bank confirmed that Jabarin had been beaten.  Jabarin has been in 
 poor health since his release from administrative detention a year 
 ago.  He has heart ailments for which he takes medication, and back 
 problems which require physiotherapy.
 
 Amnesty International is concerned that Sha'wan Jabarin may be a 
 prisoner of conscience imprisoned for his human rights activities. 
 If this is the case, I strongly urge you to seek his immediate release.  
 I also ask that you see to it that he is not beaten or tortured 
 further and that he receive the necessary medical treatment for his 
 physical problems.
 
						Most sincerely,



						<name>


 copy to:
 His Excellency Moshe Arad
 Embassy of Israel
 3514 International Dr. NW
 Washington, DC  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 Attorney Silvestre Bello III
 Undersecretary of Justice
 Department of Justice
 Padre Faura
 Manila, PHILIPPINES


 Your Excellency,

 I write to you on behalf of Leonardo Bellaza, one of 25 farmers from 
 Leyte who were arrested in November 1987 in Manila.  These 25 farmers 
 and 125 others said that they and their families had fled to Manila from 
 Leyte fearing they would be killed by "vigilante" groups - civilian 
 paramilitary forces reportedly acting under military supervision.
 
 While staying at a university in Manila, they publicized their accounts 
 of these abuses to government agencies, Congress, and the media.  Soon 
 afterward, they were arrested and accused of rebellion and other acts of 
 violence in Leyte province and involvement in the Communist-led New 
 People's Army (NPA).  This case has received widespread publicity and 
 several people associated with the farmers have faced threats or acts of 
 violence.  As you know, one of their defense attorneys, Alfonso Surigao, 
 was killed in June 1988.  A Philippines Constabulary Major has now been 
 charged with his murder.
 
 Although trial proceedings concluded in February 1989, the court has 
 evidently not yet rendered a decision.  The imprisoned farmers who have 
 now been in custody for more than two years, continue to deny the charges 
 against them, saying they were detained because they publicized abuses 
 by "vigilante" groups.  The human rights organization Amnesty 
 International believes Leonardo Bellaza and his 24 co-defendents are 
 prisoners of conscience, imprisoned for their non-violent activities and 
 beliefs.  While I do not wish to interfere in any way with the judicial 
 process, as a member of Amnesty International I urge their immediate and 
 unconditional release.
 
  					Sincerely and respectfully,
 
 
 
 					<name>
 

 copy to:
 His Excellency Emmanuel Pelaez
 Embassy of the Philippines
 1617 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
 Washington, DC  20036
554.18Special section from the January 1990 NewsletterCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Fri Mar 02 1990 23:13117
FREEDOM WRITER - UPDATE

Additional page in the January 1990 Freedom Writer Campaign issue.  
The three topics below are:

		1. Prisoner Releases
		2. What is Prisoner Casework?
		3. Letter from Jack Healey		

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Prisoner RELEASES!
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
  o  Nezhati Ahmedov of Bulgaria      (FW January 1989 bulletin)
  o  Otakar Veverla of Czechoslovakia (FW November 1989 bulletin) 
  o  Agripino Quispe Hilario of Peru  (FW August 1988 bulletin)

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Prisoner Casework at AI
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

Prisoner casework is the area of Amnesty International's work with which 
most people are familiar.  It is the connection that links a prisoner 
somewhere in the world with Amnesty members perhaps thousands of miles 
distant.  It was the early foundation of AI's work and continues to be 
one of our most essential activities.

There are several facets to Amnesty USA's Casework program.  There is the 
long-term work done by AIUSA's community groups on behalf of an individual 
prisoner whose case is assigned to a particular group.  These groups of 
AI members "adopt" the prisoner, working for his release or for 
information on his case until the case is resolved.  Community groups 
often work with other AI networks to help accomplish the goals of their 
case.  For example, their efforts may be joined by Amnesty's network of 
student groups or legal or health care professionals.  In fact, many of 
the cases featured in the Freedom Writers bulletins you receive each 
month are assigned for long-term work to AIUSA community groups.

The Freedom Writer network itself is another key component of AIUSA's 
Casework Program.  Each month cases are selected to be featured in a 
Freedom Writers bulletin and sample letters are written.  Most of the 
prisoners addressed in these bulletins are serving prison sentences of 
one or more years.  The cases featured are those most likely to benefit 
from the pressure of a surge of appeals at that moment.  The Freedom 
Writers Network applies that pressure where it's needed and when it's 
needed.

Many of you may also be members of AI's Urgent Action Network.  This 
network deals only with those cases that require the swiftest of 
responses.  Its members send telegrams and letters concerning urgent 
situations, such as the fear that a newly detained might be tortured or 
extrajudicially executed.  Amnesty also has a variety of action-oriented 
newsletters that regularly highlight appeal cases and encourage their 
readers to get involved in casework.  These newsletters include "Amnesty 
Action", the newsletter for general members; "Student Action", the 
monthly newsletter for student groups; and "Interact", a quarterly 
newsletter on women and human rights.

Any time a letter is written on behalf of someone unjustly imprisoned, 
that is casework.  Any time a member of Congress is enlisted to appeal 
for a prisoner's release, or for inquiry into allegations of torture, 
that is casework.  Any time a prisoner's name is raised in the media or 
another public form, that is casework.

The following quote from a former prisoner of conscience in the Dominican 
Republic continues to be a testimony to the effectiveness of and the 
necessity for Amnesty's casework:

	"When the first two hundred letters came, the guards gave me
	back my clothes.  Then the next two hundred letters came, and
	the prison director came to see me.  When the next pile of 
	letters arrived, the director got in touch with his superior.  
	The letters kept coming and coming: three thousand of them.  
	The President was informed.  The letters still kept arriving,
	and the President called the prison and told them to let me go.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Letter from Jack Healey
-------------------------------------------------------------------------	

Dear Freedom Writer,

When I look back on the accomplishments of Amnesty International USA 
during the past decade, I count the creation of the Freedom Writers 
Network as a major advance in our ability to fight human rights abuses 
around the world.  Founded in 1986, the Freedom Writers Network now has 
more than 55,000 members who battle injustice through their letters each 
month.  Your support and good work has provided us with a powerful means 
of commanding the attention of government leaders.

We are all heartened by the reforms sweeping many Eastern European 
nations, resulting in amnesties for political prisoners and other signs 
of greater respect by the governments there for human rights.  Other 
countries, however, have not gone that route.  At least 1,000 unarmed 
demonstrators calling for democratic reforms were killed by Chinese 
troops in Beijing last June; thousands more have been imprisoned.  In 
Guatemala, "disappearance" and death still threaten anyone perceived to 
be an opponent of the government.  So while we are justified in 
celebrating the changes in Czechoslovakia and East Germany, we must keep 
in mind that the list of countries that violate human rights of their 
citizens is still far, far longer than the list of those that do not.

Let our resolution for the new year and the new decade be to work even 
harder to preserve human rights everywhere, in both the countries that 
make the headlines and in those that rarely do.  Pressuring governments 
to stop human rights abuses is our raison d'etre.  Let's do it better in 
the 1990's.
					With best wishes,

					John G. Healey
					Executive Director

Amnesty International USA
322 Eighth Avenue
New York, NY 10001
USA
554.19February 1990 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Fri Mar 02 1990 23:53207
							February 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the February letters.
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is March 31st.
                                                         ----------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the January 1990 Issue:

	1. CUBA - Elizardo Sanchez and 2 others

	2. GREECE - Angelos Voyiannis

	3. INDONESIA - A.Warouw and M.Effendi

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 Su Excelencia Comandante en Jefe
 Dr. Fidel Castro
 Presidente de la Republica
 Ciudad de Habana
 CUBA


 Your Excellency,

 I write to you on behalf of Elizardo Sanchez Santa Cruz, the
 45-year-old president of the Cuban Commission of Human Rights and
 National Reconciliation.  He was arrested at his home on August 6,
 1989, by state security agents and charged with "spreading false news
 with the aim of endangering the prestige or standing of the Cuban
 state."  The charges were apparently the result of interviews he and 
 two other human rights activists gave to foreign journalists 
 regarding the trial and execution of several former army officers in 
 July 1989.  The others, Hiram Abi Cobas Nunez and Hubert Jerez Marino, 
 were also arrested.

 Following his trial on November 17, Sanchez was sentenced to two 
 years' imprisonment.  He is held at Combinado del Este prison in 
 Havana.  The others were sentenced to 18 months' imprisonment each.

 As a member of Amnesty International, I believe these men are 
 prisoners of conscience imprisoned for their non-violent work to 
 promote human rights.  Human rights transcend political and national 
 boundaries, and abuses of these rights cannot be tolerated under any 
 political system.  I urge you to take this opportunity to promote and 
 respect human rights by immediately and unconditionally releasing 
 Elizardo Sanchez, Hiram Abi Cobas Nunez and Hubert Jerez Marino.


						Sincerely,



						<name>



 copy to:
 Mr. Jose Antonio Arbesu Fraga
 Cuban Interests Section
 2630 16th Street N.W.
 Washington, D.C.  20009



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 President Christos Sartzetakis
 Office of the President
 17 Stisichorou Street
 Athens, GREECE


 Dear President Sartzetakis,

 I wish to bring to your attention the plight of Angelos Voyiannis, a 
 follower of the Jehovah's Witness faith, who is imprisoned for 
 refusing to perform military service.

 Angelos Voyiannis's religion prohibits him from serving in the armed 
 forces.  As you know, the unarmed service offered to conscientious 
 objectors in Greece is double the length of armed service and is 
 within the military structure.  The extended length of the unarmed 
 service seems punitive in nature and, therefore, is not an acceptable 
 alternative.
 
 United Nations Resolution 1989/59, Council of Europe Recommendation 
 No. R (87) 8, and European Parliament Resolution of 13 October 1989 
 all recommend that member states amend their national laws to provide 
 for alternative civilian service of non-punitive length for 
 conscientious objectors.  I urge you to follow these recommendations 
 by releasing Angelos Voyiannis and others imprisoned for their 
 conscientious objection to military service, and by introducing an 
 alternative service that is completely separate from the military 
 system and not of a punitive length.
 
					Sincerely and respectfully,



					<name>


 copy to:
 Ambassador Christos Zacharakis
 Embassy of Greece
 2221 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
 Washington, D.C.  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 Let. Ismail Saleh S.H.
 Menteri Kehakiman
 Jalan Hayam Wuruk 7
 Jakarta Pusat
 INDONESIA


 Dear Minister,

 I appeal to you on behalf of Alexander Warouw, age 72, and Manan 
 Effendi, age 69, who were arrested in October 1965, a few weeks after 
 an attempted coup and the murder of six army generals which the 
 government blamed on the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI).
 
 Effendi and Warouw were linked to the PKI in Kalimantan, but there 
 were no acts of violence in that area at the time and there is no 
 evidence that either man had prior knowledge of the coup.  They were 
 brought to trial in May 1967 on charges of subversion.  Manan Effendi 
 was sentenced to death;  Alexander Warouw was sentenced to life 
 imprisonment.  Warouw's appeals were rejected, but Effendi's death 
 sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.

 Both men would have been released in August 1988, were it not for a 
 presidential decree in March 1987 which ruled out remission for any 
 prisoner sentenced to life imprisonment or anyone whose death sentence 
 was commuted.  Both of these men are considered by the human rights 
 organization Amnesty International to be prisoners of conscience, 
 imprisoned for exercising their right to freedom of association.  I 
 respectfully appeal to you to grant the immediate and unconditional 
 release of Alexander Warouw and Manan Effendi.
 
	  					Most sincerely,
 
 
 
	 					<name>
 

 copy to:
 Ambassador Abdul Rachman Ramly
 Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia
 2020 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
 Washington, D.C.  20036
554.20April 1990 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Sun Apr 22 1990 23:59212
						 	April 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the April letters.  I apologize for not having time to enter 
    the March letters.
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is May 15th.
                                                         ---------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the April 1990 Issue:

	1. SUDAN - Al-Tijani al-Taieb

	2. SYRIA - Muhammad Nabil Salem

	3. VIET NAM - Father Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly
           (there is a space between VIET and NAM on the newsletter)
	   (there is also no 'copy to:' address with this letter)

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 His Excellency
 Lieutenant-General Omar Hassan al-Bashir
 Head of State
 People's Palace
 P.O. Box 281
 Khartoum, SUDAN


 Your Excellency,

 I wish to draw your attention to a case of wrongful imprisonment.  
 Al-Tijani al-Taieb, a newspaper editor and leading member of the Sudan 
 Communist party, had been detained at Kober prison in Khartoum without 
 charge or trail since June 30, 1989, when your government was 
 installed following a military coup.
  
 Al-Tijani al-Taieb, age 65, was active in the anti-colonial movement 
 from the late 1940s onward.  During the 1950s, he was a journalist and 
 a trade unionist, and in 1954 helped found the newspaper "al-Maidan".
 He has exposed human rights abuses under successive Sudanese 
 governments and has been previously imprisoned as a result.  The human 
 rights organization Amnesty International declared him to be a 
 prisoner of conscience during his 1980-85 imprisonment under the 
 Nimeiri Government, and Amnesty International considers his current 
 detention by your government to be a violation of international human 
 rights standards.  It again considers Al-Tijani al-Taieb to be a 
 prisoner of conscience, detained solely for his non-violent political 
 views.
 
 I urge your government to grant his immediate and unconditional 
 release.  I thank you for your assistance.


					Respectfully and sincerely,



					<name>



 copy to:
 His Excellency Hassan Elamin el-Bashir
 Embassy of the Republic of the Sudan
 2210 Massachusetts Avenue NW
 Washington, DC  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 His Excellency Khaled al-Ansari
 Minister of Justice
 Nasr Street
 Damascus
 SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC


 Your Excellency,

 I write to you to express my great concern that Muhammad Nabil Salem, 
 a member of the Syrian Engineers' Association, remains detained 
 without charge or trial since his arrest in Aleppo in March 31, 1980.

 He was among a group of engineers arrested in the wake of a one-day 
 national strike organized on March 31 by the Damascus Bar Association, 
 which was supported by other professional associations throughout 
 Syria.  The strike called for political reforms, including an end to 
 the state of emergency in force since 1963, and to violations of human 
 rights committed under emergency legislation.  In April 1980 the 
 government ordered the dissolution of the councils of the Bar, medical 
 and engineers' associations, and hundreds of their members were 
 arrested.  Many have remained in untried detention since that time.

 Muhammad Nabil Salem, age 50, was a professor of soil mechanics and 
 head of the Department of Civil Engineering at Aleppo University at 
 the time of his arrest.  He is held in 'Adra Civil Prison in Damascus.

 The detention of Muhammad Nabil Salem is a clear violation of the 
 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights which guarantees 
 the right to express non-violently one's political views.  I urge your 
 government to honor Syria's commitment to this declaration by granting 
 Muhammad Nabil Salem's immediate and unconditional release.
 
					Most sincerely,



					<name>


 copy to:
 Ms. Bushra Kanafani
 Embassy of the Syrian Arab Republic
 2215 Wyoming Avenue NW
 Washington, DC  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 Vo Chi Cong
 Chairman of the Council of State
 The Council of State
 35 Ngo Quyen Street
 Ha Noi
 SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF VIET NAM


 Your Excellency,

 As a member of the independent human rights organization Amnesty 
 International, I have received reports concerning a man imprisoned in 
 your country.  Father Thadeus Nguyen Van Ly is a Roman Catholic parish 
 priest who was arrested in May 1983 after trying to organize an 
 unauthorized religious pilgrimage and was sentenced to 10 years' 
 imprisonment for "opposing the revolution".
 
 In August 1982 Father Thadeus was arrested when police prevented him 
 and two others from embarking upon a pilgrimage to a shrine in the La 
 Vang Valley, near Quang Tri.  In November 1982 he was ordered by a 
 court to return to his native village and cease practicing as a 
 priest.  Father Thadeus protested the authority of the government 
 officials to prevent him from being a priest and refused to abandon 
 his parish at Doc So unless so ordered by church officials.  Father 
 Thadeus reportedly barricaded himself into the presbytery of his 
 church and appealed for freedom of religion.  In May 1983 
 approximately 200 police officers are reported to have broken into the 
 presbytery and seized Father Thadeus.  He is believed to be imprisoned 
 in Binh Tri Thien province.
 
 Freedom of religion is a basic human right.  I respectfully urge your 
 government to show its respect for this and all human rights by 
 granting the immediate and unconditional release of Father Thadeus 
 Nguyen Van Ly.
 
	  					Most sincerely,
 
 
 
	 					<name>

554.21June 1990 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Wed Jun 13 1990 21:48209
						 	June 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the June letters.  For some reason, I never received a bulletin
    containing the May letters.
    
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is July 15th.
                                                         ---------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed in header and at end of letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the June 1990 Issue:

	1. MALAWI - Thoza Khonje

	2. MYANMAR - U Aung Lwin

	3. SOUTH KOREA - Paik Ok-kwan

========================================================================



 						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

 Life-President Ngwazi Dr. H. Kamuzu Banda
 Office of the President and Cabinet
 Private Bag 388
 Lilongwe 3
 MALAWI


 Your Excellency,

 I am greatly concerned about Thoza Khonje, a 42-year-old area manager 
 for the Sugar Company of Malawi, who has been detained without charge 
 or trial at Mikuyu Prison since February 28, 1989.  He was reportedly 
 detained after being overheard making a statement which was allegedly 
 critical of government policy.
 
 Thoza Khonje is from northern Malawi, and his arrest coincides with a 
 series of campaigns in which northern Malawians have been accused of 
 planning to secede from Malawi and trying to develop the northern 
 economy to the detriment of the rest of the country.  The independent 
 human rights organization Amnesty International has documented the 
 arrest of at least 13 other northern Malawians arrested in early 1989 
 under similar circumstances and considered to be prisoners of 
 conscience.  It believes that Thoza Khonje is being held solely for 
 expressing his beliefs.
 
 I respectfully appeal to you to order the release of Thoza Khonje.
 

					Very sincerely yours,



					<name>



 copy to:
 His Excellency Robert Mbaya
 Malawi Embassy
 2408 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
 Washington, DC  20008



						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 General Saw Maung
 Prime Minister and Minister of Defense
    and of Foreign Affairs
 Ministers' Office
 Yangon (Rangoon)
 UNION OF MYANMAR (BURMA)


 Dear General,

 I write to you on behalf of U Aung Lwin, a well-known actor and 
 founding member of the National League for Democracy Central Executive 
 committee, who was arrested on June 28, 1989, "as a preventative 
 measure," according to a government spokesman.  Considering the 
 National League of Democracy's stature as a prominent opposition party 
 in Myanmar, the arrest of U Aung Lwin appears to be an attempt to 
 silence peaceful political dissent.
 
 U Aung Lwin was reportedly surrounded on a Yangon street on June 28 by 
 15 to 20 plainclothes security officials who beat him, put a bag over 
 his head, and made him lie handcuffed face down in a truck.
 
 He is believed to be detained in Insein Prison in Yangon.  Amnesty 
 International, the independent human rights organization, has no 
 information as to whether he has regular access to his lawyer and 
 family.  Amnesty International believes he has been detained for 
 peacefully exercising his rights to freedom of expression and 
 assembly.  I, therefore, respectfully ask for the immediate and 
 unconditional release of U Aung Lwin.

 
					Yours sincerely and respectfully,



					<name>


 copy to:

 His Excellency U Myo Aung
 Embassy of the Union of Myanmar
 2300 "S" Street N.W.
 Washington, D.C.  20008




						<name>
						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


 His Excellency Mr. Lee Jong-nam
 Minister of Justice
 1 Chungang-dong
 Kwachon-myon
 Shihung-gun
 Kyonggi Province
 REPUBLIC OF KOREA


 Your Excellency,

 Please accept my congratulations on your recent appointment as 
 Minister of Justice.  I wish to bring to your attention a great 
 injustice which has concerned the international community for many 
 years now.  I speak of the arrest of Paik Ok-kwan on October 8, 
 1975, in Seoul.  He is one of several hundred Korean residents of 
 Japan who were arrested while studying at Korean universities.  
 Charged with espionage on behalf of the Democratic People's Republic 
 of Korea, he was sentenced to death in 1976.  His sentence was later 
 commuted to life in prison under a presidential amnesty.
 
 I am alarmed at reports that Paik Ok-kwan was tortured by security 
 officials into making a confession which was later used in his 
 conviction.  The independent human rights organization Amnesty 
 International believes that Paik Ok-kwan was imprisoned for the 
 non-violent exercise of his rights to freedom of expression and 
 association because he openly discussed political matters with fellow 
 students in Korea and Japan.
 
 I respectfully urge you to truly let justice reign during your tenure 
 and free Paik Ok-kwan immediately and unconditionally.
 

	  					Most sincerely,
 
 
 
	 					<name>

 copy to:

 His Excellency Tong-Jin Park
 Embassy of Korea
 2370 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
 Washington, D.C.  20008
554.22July 1990 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Fri Jul 13 1990 19:56226
    July 1990 Issue - GOOD NEWS!!!!!!

 	Freedom Writer Prisoners Released	Issue Featured In
 	---------------------------------       -----------------
 	Adem Demaci of Yugoslavia		December 1987
 	Vehbi Beqiri of Yugoslavia		May 1989
	Suzanne Lacaille of Cameroon		March 1990
	Tsai Yu-chuan of Taiwan			March 1990
	Paik Ok-kwan of South Korea		June 1990

===========================================================================

						 	July 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the July letters. 
     
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is August 15th.
                                                         -----------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed at the end of the letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the July 1990 Issue:

	1. PERU - Guadalupe Ccallocunto Olano - "disappearance"

	2. SRI LANKA - Dr. Manorani Saravanamuttu - death threats

	3. USSR - Pavel Solovyov - prisoner of conscience

========================================================================



						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

  President Alberto Fujimori
  President of the Republic
  Palacio de Gobierno
  Plaza de Armas
  Lima 1, PERU


  Dear President Fujimori,

  I wish to extend my congratulations on your presidential victory.  As 
  a concerned observer of global human rights, I sincerely hope that 
  your administration will address the rising tide of human rights 
  violations in your country. 
 
  I am particularly grieved by the "disappearance" of Guadalupe 
  Ccallocunto Olano of Ayacucho, a 40-year-old human rights leader and 
  mother of four.  Guadalupe Ccallocunto became active in the protection 
  of human rights after her own husband, health worker Eladio Quispe 
  Mendoza, was "disappeared" after detention by members of the Peruvian 
  Army in November 1983.

  Guadalupe Ccallocunto Olano was detained in Ayacucho on June 10, 
  1990.  Authorities have refused to acknowledge her detention, but 
  human rights organizations believe that she was detained by members of 
  the army since she had been repeatedly harassed by them over the past 
  months.  The independent human rights organization Amnesty 
  International is particularly concerned with Ms. Ccallocunto's case as 
  there has been no news of her whereabouts since her detention.

  As president, you now have the opportunity to reverse the 
  deteriorating human rights situation in Peru; I ask that you start 
  with Guadalupe Ccallocunto Olano.  I urge you to ensure that her 
  whereabouts are made public and that she have access to lawyers and 
  relatives.  I further urge that, if detained, she be released 
  immediately unless she is charged with a recognizably criminal 
  offense.  I thank you in advance for your assistance.


					Most sincerely,



					<name>



  copy to:

  His Excellency Cesar G. Atala
  Embassy of Peru
  1700 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
  Washington, D.C. 20036



						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


  President Ranasignhe Premadasa
  Presidential Secretariat
  Republic Square
  Colombo 1
  SRI LANKA
 

  Your Excellency,

  I am deeply disturbed to hear of the threats being leveled against Dr., 
  Manorani Saravanamuttu and her lawyer Batty Weerakoon.  Dr. Manorani 
  Saravanamuttu's son, Richard de Zoysa, was taken from his home by six 
  armed men on February 18, 1990, and was found on the beach the next 
  morning dead from gunshot wounds.  While Dr. Manorani Saravanamuttu 
  has been positively identified one of her son's abductors as a Senior 
  Superintendent of Police, the Ministry of Defense denied involvement 
  of the security forces and said that the murder was being investigated 
  by the Crime Detection Bureau of the police.

  Simply for pursuing a fair investigation into the murder of her son, 
  Dr. Manorani Saravanamuttu has become the target of harassment and 
  death threats urging her to drop the case.  One intimidating letter 
  received by Dr. Manorani Saravanamuttu warns, "Only silence will 
  protect you."

  I commend your government for providing police protection to Batty 
  Weerakoon, but still fear for the safety of Dr. Manorani 
  Saravanamuttu.  I urge you to ensure that steps are taken to halt the 
  threats against Dr. Manorani Saravanamuttu and Batty Weerakoon.  I 
  further urge you to identify those responsible for issuing the death 
  threats, as well as those responsible for the murder of Richard de 
  Zoysa, and bring them to justice.
 
					Respectfully yours,



					<name>


  copy to:

  His Excellency W. Susanta De Alwis
  Embassy of the Democratic Socialist
      Republic of Sri Lanka
  2148 Wyoming Avenue N.W.
  Washington, D.C.  20008




						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


  Yu. Reshetov
  Head of Human Rights Section
  USSR Ministry of International Affairs
  pr. Kalinina 9
  Moscow
  USSR


  Dear Mr. Reshetov,

  I write to you on behalf of Pavel Solovyov, a Pentecostalist from 
  the Ukrainian city of Slavyansk who is serving a three-year prison 
  term for holding an open-air religious meeting.  He was arrested in 
  February 1989 after leading a youth group singing hymns in a part, 
  and charged with "malicious hooliganism" under Article 206 of the 
  Ukrainian Criminal Code.  It is not known where he is serving his 
  sentence.
  
  The right to practice religion in public or in private, singly or in 
  groups, is guaranteed by Article 18 of the International Covenant on 
  Civil and Political Rights.  The independent human rights organization 
  Amnesty International believes that Pavel Solovyov's imprisonment 
  violates his right to freedom of religion and regards him as a 
  prisoner of conscience.

  I respectfully appeal to you for the immediate and unconditional 
  release of Pavel Solovyov.

	  					Yours sincerely,
 
 
 
	 					<name>

  copy to:

  His Excellency Yuriy V. Dubinin
  Embassy of the USSR
  1125 - 16th Street N.W.
  Washington, D.C.  20036 
554.23August 1990 lettersSCARGO::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Tue Aug 14 1990 21:53219
						 	August 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the August letters. 
     
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is September 15th.
                                                         --------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed at the end of the letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the August 1990 Issue:

	1. CUBA - Hiram Abi Cobas & 2 others - prisoner of conscience

	2. MOROCCO - Abdallah Oufkir and family - prisoner of conscience

	3. TURKEY - Ilker Demir - prisoner of conscience

===========================================================================


						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

	Su Excelencia Comandante en Jefe
	Dr. Fidel Castro
	Presidente de la Republica
	Ciudad de La Habana
	CUBA


  	Your Excellency,

	I am greatly concerned about the arrest of Hiram Abi Cobas Nunez, 
	acting Secretary General of the Party for Human Rights in Cuba 
	and a former philosophy professor.  He was arrested on August 6, 
	1989, along with two others on charges of "spreading false news 
	with the aim of endangering the prestige or standing of the Cuban 
	state."

	The charges apparently resulted from statements made by Hiram Abi 
	Cobas Nunez and the others during interviews with foreign press 
	correspondents concerning the trial and execution of several 
	former army officers in July 1989.  You may recall that I wrote 
	to you in February of this year concerning his case and those of 
	the two other human rights activists arrested with him, Elizardo 
	Sanchez Santa Cruz and Hubert Jerez Marino.

	It is the belief of the independent human rights organization 
	Amnesty International that these men were not endangering the 
	state, but working for the protection of human rights in Cuba.  
	Hiram Abi Cobas Nunez is currently serving an 18-month sentence 
	in Combinado del Este Prison merely for exercising his right to 
	freedom of speech.

	My interest in these men is not generated by any political 
	differences that might exist between the governments of Cuba and 
	the United States.  Rather, it is based in a genuine concern for 
	the human rights of all the world's citizens, and it is in that 
	light that I implore you to order the immediate and unconditional 
	release of Hiram Abi Cobas Nunez and his associates.


					Respectfully and sincerely,



					<name>

	copy to:

	Mr. Jose Antonio Arbesu Fraga
	Cuban Interests Section
	2630 - 16th Street N.W.
	Washington, D.C. 20009



						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


	Sa Majeste le Roi Hassan II
	Palais Royal
	Rabat
	MOROCCO
 

	Your Majesty,

	I wish to direct your attention to the tragic case of Abdallah 
	Oufkir who was a three-year-old child when he was first detained 
	by Moroccan security agents.  He has been held for the past 18 
	years without charge or trial, together with four sisters, one 
	brother, his mother and an aunt, apparently because of his family 
	links with General Mohamed Oufkir.  General Oufkir, Abdallah 
	Oufkir's father, died in unknown circumstances the day after a 
	failed coup attempt in 1972.
	
	Following the mourning period, during which they were under house 
	arrest, Abdallah Oufkir and his family were taken to various 
	places of detention, and from 1974 to 1977 were imprisoned in a 
	house in Tazenakht.  In 1977, they were moved to a farm near 
	Casablanca where each member of the family was held in 
	incommunicado detention and kept in separate, windowless cells.  
	During this time, the family received no medical attention, not 
	even Abdallah's sister Myriam who suffers from epilepsy.
	
	Since 1987, the family has been held at a farm in Targa and their 
	living conditions have reportedly improved.  However, Abdallah 
	Oufkir and his family remain isolated from the world purely as a 
	consequence of their relation to General Oufkir.  Their detention 
	is a gross violation of their right to freedom of association as 
	guaranteed in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human 
	Rights.  I respectfully urge you to grant Abdallah Oufkir and his 
	family their long-deserved freedom.
 
					Most sincerely,



					<name>


	copy to:

	His Excellency Ali Bengelloun
	Embassy of Morocco
	1601 - 21st Street N.W.
	Washington, D.C.  20009



						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


	Yildirim Akbulut
	Office of the Prime Minister
	Basbakanlik
	06573 Ankara
	TURKEY


	Your Excellency,

	I am writing on behalf of Ilker Demir, a 37-year-old journalist 
	who was imprisoned in April 1984 on charges of making communist 
	propaganda and insulting the Turkish authorities.  He is 
	reported to be in poor health owing to torture he suffered during 
	several weeks in incommunicado detention following his arrest.
	
	Ilker Demir's arrest is the result of articles published in the 
	late 1970's in the Turkish Socialist Workers' Party magazines, 
	'Ilke' and 'Kitle', of which Demir was then editor.  After the 
	military coup in September 1980, the party and its magazines were 
	banned, as were most other political organizations and 
	publications.
	
	The Turkish Socialist Workers' Party has never advocated in 
	violent activities and there is no indication that Ilker Demir 
	has done so, according to the independent human rights 
	organization Amnesty International.  It considers the imprisonment 
	of Ilker Demir to be a violation of his right to freedom of 
	expression as set out in Article 10 of the European Convention on 
	Human Rights to which Turkey is a State Party.
	
	I respectfully appeal to you for the immediate and unconditional 
	release of Ilker Demir from Nazilli E Type Prison.


	  					Most sincerely,
 
 
 
	 					<name>

	copy to:

	His Excellency Nuzhet Kandemir
	Embassy of the Republic of Turkey
	1714 Massachusetts Avenue N.W.
	Washington, D.C. 20036
554.24Sorry, cannot believe every letter I readEMASS1::ISLERThu Sep 27 1990 14:5815
    It really saddens me to see these letters. I would not be able judge
    each one of them separately. But, do you know how much publicity
    Amnesty International gets and collects money thanks to these letters 
    and other posters and brochures; which "Are not necessarily doing justice
    to some of the countries?"
    
    I have seen a few other letters for cases in Turkey, and could not
    believe how unrealistic they were. My friends have seen the posters in
    the subways of London of children being totured in Turkey. What a
    bologni!! Children are not tortured in Turkey, but some posters hanging
    on a subway really succeeds in creating hatred against Turkey, and that
    is really the goal at times.
    
    I just cannot believe some of these letters, thinking by whom and how
    they were written and the real motive behind them is. 
554.25Yes?CGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Tue Oct 02 1990 02:0110
    
    Re.24 (Isler)
    
    Please elaborate - I am a truthseeker above all else.  If there are
    false claims in these letters, I would like to know about them.
    
    Please also consider posting in the AI conference as well.  I don't
    have the location handy at the moment - contact me offline for that.
    
    Cindy
554.26September 1990 lettersCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Tue Oct 02 1990 20:10222
						 	September 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the August letters. 
     
    I've endeavored to make this as simple as possible.  Instructions for
    ease of use are included.
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is October 15th.
                                                         ------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed at the end of the letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the September 1990 Issue:

	1. BULGARIA - Ibrayim Aliev Mehmedov

	2. COLUMBIA - Alirio de Jesus Pedraza Becerra

	3. KENYA - K. Matiba, C. Rubia, R. Odinga

===========================================================================


						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>

	President Zhelyu Zhelev
	Office of the President
	Blvd. Dondukov 2
	Sofia, BULGARIA


	Your Excellency,

	Ibrayim Aliev Mehmedov, a 69-year-old retired photographer from 
	the town of Targovishte, is one of many ethnic Turks who remain 
	imprisoned in connection with Bulgaria's former assimilation 
	campaign.

	The forcible assimilation of the ethnic Turkish minority in 
	Bulgaria began in December 1984 with a state policy of forcing 
	ethnic Turks to sign "voluntary declarations" renouncing their 
	Islamic names in favor of Bulgarian ones.  Other measures taken 
	included a ban on speaking Turkish and on the practice of many 
	Islamic customs.  Hundreds who opposed the assimilation campaign 
	were jailed.  The "Bulgarian" name given to Ibrayim Aliev 
	Mehmedov was Ivo Iliev Iliev.

	Following the change in leadership in Bulgaria in November 1989, 
	the name-changing campaign was declared "illegal" and many ethnic 
	Turks were freed from prison in amnesties.  However, up to 100 
	people remain imprisoned, most serving sentences in excess of 10 
	years in connection with opposing the assimilation campaign, 
	according to the human rights organization Amnesty International.

	Ibrayim Aliev Mehmedov was sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment 
	under Article 104 of the criminal code for espionage, reportedly 
	in connection with photographs he had taken of ruined mosques.  
	He is detained in Varna prison.

	Little is known concerning the precise changes against Ibrayim 
	Aliev Mehmedov or the evidence with which he was convicted.  I 
	urge your new administration to make public any evidence which 
	would indicate that he is being held for reasons other than his 
	peaceful opposition to the assimilation campaign.

					Respectfully yours,



					<name>

	copy to:

	Embassy of Bulgaria
	1621 - 22nd Street N.W.
	Washington, D.C.  20008



						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


	Presidente Cesar Gaviria Trujillo
	Presidente de la Republica
	Palacio de Narino
	Bogota, COLUMBIA
 

	Dear President Gaviria,

	Please accept my congratulations on your recent inauguration as 
	president of Columbia.  I wish to direct your attention to a 
	serious matter concerning the safety of Alirio de Jesus Pedraza 
	Becerra, a 40-year-old lawyer and human rights worker, who was 
	last seen on the night of July 4, 1990, leaving a bakery in 
	Bogota's Suba district.  Various eyewitnesses reportedly say that 
	about eight heavily armed men identified themselves to two police 
	agents who stood by during the abduction.

	Amnesty International believes that Alirio Pedraza's "disappearance" 
	is a result of his membership in the Political Prisoners solidarity
	Committee (CSPP), a human rights organization, and his legal work
	on behalf of the trade unionists.  He was abducted shortly after
	attending a meeting of the CCSP.  Despite efforts to locate
	Pedraza, the armed forces and police authorities continue to deny
	his detention, and his whereabouts remain unknown.  Other human
	rights workers in the past months have also been subject to
	detention, mistreatment and death threats. 

	I appeal to you to ensure that the investigation into the abduction 
	of Alirio de Jesus Pedraza Becerra is conducted swiftly and
	thoroughly.  If Alirio Pedraza is in detention, I ask that he be
	immediately released on the grounds that he is a prisoner of
	conscience detained solely for his lawful activities in defense of
	human rights.  I further implore your new administration to create
	a safe environment in Columbia for all human rights workers to
	conduct their activities. 

					Sincerely,



					<name>


	copy to:

	His Excellency Victor Mosquera
	Embassy of Colombia
	2118 Leroy Place N.W.
	Washington, D.C.  20009



						<addr>
						<csz>
						USA

						<date>


	President Daniel arap Moi
	President of the Republic of Kenya
	Office of the President
	PO Box 30510
	Nairobi, KENYA


	Your Excellency,

	I am very alarmed at the continued detention without charge or 
	trial of Kenneth Matiba, Charles Rubia and Raila Odinga since 
	their arrest in early July 1990.  The men are being held under 
	Public Security Regulations which provide for indefinite 
	administrative detention without charge or trial of anyone said 
	to be endangering the security of the state.

	Kenneth Matiba and Charles Rubia, both former government 
	ministers, has led calls in recent months for amendments to the 
	Kenyan Constitution which would allow for the existence of 
	political parties other than the ruling Kenya African National 
	Union.  Raila Odinga, former deputy director of the Kenya Bureau 
	of Standards, is the son of former Vice-President and government 
	critic Oginga Odinga.

	Despite claims by a Kenyan official that Kenneth Matiba and 
	Charles Rubia were "plotting to overthrow the government, 
	assassinate ministers and incite workers to strike," the human 
	rights organization Amnesty International believes that all 
	three men were in fact imprisoned for the nonviolent expression 
	of their political opinions and their advocacy of a multi-party 
	system in Kenya.

	I respectfully request that you act to correct this injustice, 
	and order the immediate and unconditional release of Kenneth 
	Matiba, Charles Rubia and Raila Odinga.

	  					Most sincerely,
 
 
 
	 					<name>

	copy to:

	His Excellency Denis D. Afande
	Embassy of Kenya
	2249 R Street N.W.
	Washington, D.C. 20008
554.27FYI - additionalMEMV01::PAINTERTue Oct 16 1990 17:5236
           <<< GAMBLN::SYS$SYSDEVICE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]AMNESTY.NOTE;2 >>>
             -< Amnesty International Letter Campaign Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 44.0        Convention Against Torture--Act Today, Please!       No replies
SANDS::DUNNE                                         28 lines  16-OCT-1990 10:57
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
People at this moment are trying to get The Convention Against Torture on
    the Senate floor for a vote. It is being blocked by Senator Helms only.
    Please write your senator now. This is a U.N. Convention, and if it
    is ratified worldwide, it will establish an international ban on the
    use of torture.  Pressure can then be brought on governments that use 
    torture. 

<FROM_ADDRESS>
<DATE>
<TO_ADDRESS>(Senator\531 Senate Hart Office
Building\Washington D.C. 20501-2901\)



<SALUTATION>(Dear Senator :)
<p>
The practice of torture is a worldwide epidemic. We must do all we can 
to help the victims of torture and rid the world of this practice.
<p>
The Convention Against Torture is an important tool to prevent torture.
The United States should ratify this convention as soon as possible.
<p>
Please request [for Republican senators, Senator Dole; for Democrats,
    Senator George Mitchell] to schedule a senate floor vote on the
convention before the end of this Congress, and please vote for
ratification. I cannot overestimate the importance of your action on
this matter.
<CLOSING>(Sincerely,\)

554.28OfferCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Tue Oct 23 1990 19:5712
    
    I've received a mailing from Amnesty asking for referrals - people
    interested in receiving information and an invitation to become a new
    member.  The initial information is free and without obligation. 
    Membership is $25.00 per year, non-profit, tax-deductible, and
    matched by Digital. 
    
    If anyone is interested in having their name added to the list, send
    your mail address to me offline and I'll send it in to them.
    
    Cindy
                                              
554.29Newsletter additional text - fyiCGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Wed Nov 14 1990 16:47160
Freedom Writer Newsletter - October 1990

Case Updates
------------

'Abd al-'Aziz' Abbas al-Shatti of Kuwait:

        (Featured in Nov. 1988 FW bulletin):   Escaped from prison 
        during the early days of the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.

Audilia Quijada of the United States:

        (Featured in May 1990 FW bulletin); Despite testifying for
        over seven hours about her arrest and torture in Honduras,
        Audilia Quijada was denied political asylum by an immigration 
        judge.  Ms. Quijada plans to appeal to the Board of Immigration
        Appeals, and Amnesty International continues to support her
        claim.

Dr. Manorani Saravanamuttu of Sri Lanka:        

        (Featured in July 1990 FW bulletin); The magisterial inquiry
        into the death of Dr. Saravanamuttu's son, Richard de Zoysa,
        was halted August 30, 1990.  Claiming lack of evidence, the
        Attorney General decided to take no action against the 
        senior police officer named by Dr. Saravanamuttu as having
        been among those who abducted her son in February 1990.  No
        one has yet been held responsible for the death threats
        received by Dr. Saravanamuttu.

========================================================================

From: Freedom Writer Newsletter - October 1990

Questions and Answers 
---------------------

Q:  Should I send copies of my letters to my Members of Congress?

A:  Please do.  Decisions made by the U.S. Congress can sometimes have
    a tremendous impact on other countries.  For this reason, embassy
    staff in Washington try to feed key Members of Congress with favorable
    information on their countries.  It is important that Members of
    Congress be made aware of human rights violations wherever they occur.
    A letter, cable or telephone call from a Member of Congress can be
    highly influential in obtaining vital information or winning the
    release of a prisoner of conscience. 


Q:  Why does AI so often use "Your Excellency" as a salutation, even
    when addressing state presidents? 

A:  While it is most appropriate to address the president of the United
    States as "Dear Mr. President" or "Dear President Bush," other state
    presidents much prefer to be addressed as "Your Excellency."  Amnesty
    has found through experience that courteous letters are usually more
    effective than uncourteous ones.  Therefore, we strive to be
    respectful when addressing any government official so that our
    concerns are taken seriously and perhaps acted upon. 


========================================================================
Update letter from Jack Healey, Executive Director of Amnesty Int'l:


Dear Freedom Writer,

...I will be leaving shortly for Chile to participate in an exciting 
event there.  On October 12 and 13 international performing artists
from around the world will come together in two benefit concerts for
Amnesty International.  What makes these concerts very special is 
their location - Santiago's National Stadium, which 17 years ago was 
the scene of hundreds of cases of torture and extrajudicial execution 
following a military coup in 1973.  The performers scheduled to appear 
include New Kids on the Block, Sting, Sinead O'Connor, Wynton 
Marsalis, Ruben Blades, Jackson Browne, and the Chilean groups 
Congreso and Inti Illimani.  The concerts are expected to draw record 
numbers carrying the human rights message to a Chilean audience that 
spent a decade and a half in cultural isolation under the government 
of General Augusto Pinochet.

The idea for the Chile concerts emerged from the tremendous impact of 
the "Human Rights Now!" tour organized by Amnesty International in 
1988.  At the same time, it was not possible to hold a concert in 
Chile due to the presence of the military regime, although more than 
15,000 Chileans crossed the border to attend the concert in Mendoza, 
Argentina.  Today, the Chilean section of Amnesty International ranks 
as perhaps the most consolidated in the developing world and certainly 
the largest with 2,000 members.  It functioned for more than a decade 
under Pinochet's military government, and, with the financial help the 
concerts will provide, will continue to carry the flag of human rights 
in Chile for years to come.

Just as the international movement seeks to diversify the worldwide 
membership of Amnesty International by placing special emphasis on 
expansion within the developing or "Third World" countries, Amnesty 
USA has set upon a program to increase the ethnic and cultural 
diversity of AI members here in the United States.  Our Cultural 
Diversification program will have a strong impact upon our development 
through the 1990s, and I encourage you to see the enclosed Program 
Focus for more details on this important work.

                                        With best wishes,

                                        John G. Healey
                                        Executive Director

Attachment:
=======================================================================

PROGRAM FOCUS:  Cultural Diversification

In 1986, Amnesty International USA took a significant step toward the 
realization of the AI motto "one movement, one message, many voices" by 
launching its Cultural Diversification program, which is intended to 
ensure that the U.S. section of Amnesty International more accurately 
represents the workforce and population of the United States.  The 
Cultural Diversification (CD) program permeates every aspect of 
Amnesty ranging from its staff to its volunteers by trying to 
cultivate both participation and leadership among ethnic and racial 
minorities, women and foreign nationals.  In this manner, Amnesty USA 
strives to achieve and maintain a cultural, ethnic and religious 
pluralism within the movement.

Cultural Diversification incorporates existing outreach programs and 
brings new initiatives to the U.S. section of Amnesty.  One noteworthy 
facet of the CD program is the Ralph J. Bunche Human Rights Fellowship 
for traditionally recognized "minority" groups.  The ten-month program 
is intended to provide students of ethnically diverse backgrounds with 
the opportunity to participate in day-to-day human rights work 
undertaken at AIUSA's offices around the U.S.  The objective of the 
fellowship is to develop leaders in the field of human rights advocacy 
in diverse cultural communities.

Although the CD program naturally encourages the enhancement of AIUSA 
membership, it is not limited solely to expanding the makeup of the 
organization's membership.  A further goal of the program is to 
strengthen the ties between Amnesty and other organizations and 
leadership representative of different cultural ethnic, women's and 
religious groups.  Many of these organizations have historically been 
involved in aspects of the human rights struggle, and Amnesty 
International has learned much about techniques and strategy from 
them.

Human rights violations occur every day to people with vastly 
different ethnic and cultural backgrounds.  In order to most 
effectively combat these violations, the U.S. section of Amnesty 
International must take full advantage of the unique multi-ethnic 
character of our country.  Through its CD program, AIUSA has taken a 
major step forward toward harnessing the concerns for human rights 
shared by all residents of the United States.

Those of you interested in receiving more information on Amnesty 
International USA's Cultural Diversification program may write to:

                Cultural Diversification Program
                 Amnesty International USA
                740 West Peachtree Street NW
                Atlanta, Georgia  30308
554.30Letters for Oct. and Nov. 1990CGVAX2::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Wed Nov 14 1990 16:50367
554.31Letters for December 1990MEMCL1::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Fri Jan 04 1991 18:23198
                                                         December 1990
    Hi everybody,
    
    For those of you who are interested in participating in the Amnesty
    International Freedom writers campaign (3 letters per month), here 
    are the December letters.
            --------     
    
    Deadline for posting letters from this newsletter is January 15th.
                                                         -------------
    Cindy

===========================================================================

    Hints for editing and printing:

    Do a global search and replace on these tags:

     <name> - your name - will be changed at the end of the letter
     <addr> - street, apt., etc.
     <csz>  - city, state, zip
     <date> - today's date
     USA    - is included and assumed - if not the USA then substitute for 
              your country

    Airmail Postage is $.45 for a one-page letter (overseas).  Copies sent
    to US embassies can be mailed domestically ($.25).

    NOTE - check the text of each letter as some assume that you are an 
           *American* citizen, and also assume that you are a supporter/
           member of Amnesty International.

===========================================================================

In the December 1990 Issue:

        1. ALBANIA - Ramiz Kaca

        2. ETHIOPIA - Ishetu Latu

        3. SOUTH KOREA - Pang Yang-kyun

===========================================================================


                                                <addr>
                                                <csz>
                                                USA

                                                <date>


        Ramiz Alia
        President of the Presidium of People's Assembly
        Tirana
        The People's Socialist Republic of
           ALBANIA


        Your Excellency,

        I write to you on behalf of Ramiz Kaca, age 78 who is imprisoned 
        for writing letters to the Albanian government officials 
        denouncing the arrest and ill-treatment of peaceful demonstrators 
        in January 1990.

        The demonstrators had conducted a silent vigil in Skanderbeg 
        Square to display their support for democratic reform in Albania. 
        Hundreds were arrested, but most were soon released.  Kaca wrote 
        to government officials protesting police violence against the 
        demonstrators, and was summoned to the Ministry of the Interior 
        in March, where he was interrogated.  Ramiz Kaca was tried 
        without defense counsel and is now serving a three-year sentence 
        in Tirana Prison.  He is reported to be in poor health following 
        a hernia operation this summer.

        Amnesty International, the independent human rights organization, 
        considers Ramiz Kaca to be a prisoner of conscience, detained 
        solely for the peaceful expression of his political beliefs.  I 
        respectfully urge you to ensure that Ramiz Kaca receives 
        appropriate medical treatment, and I request that he be 
        immediately and unconditionally released.


                                                Most sincerely,


        
                                                <name>




                                                <addr>
                                                <csz>
                                                USA

                                                <date>


        Mengistu Haile-Mariam
        President of the People's 
           Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
        Office of the President
        Addis Ababa
        ETHIOPIA


        Your Excellency,

        I am deeply concerned about Ishetu Latu, a former student at the 
        National University of Addis Ababa, who was arrested in February 
        1980 along with hundreds of other members of the Oromo ethnic 
        group suspected of having links with the armed opposition group, 
        the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF).

        Latu is still being held in Addis Ababa after many of those 
        initially detained were released in September 1989 on the 15th 
        anniversary of Ethiopia's revolution.  He has been held for over 
        10 years without a trial or explanation of his arrest.  given 
        that fact, one can only assume that he has been detained because 
        of his ethnic origin rather than for any actual evidence of OLF 
        involvement.

        Amnesty International, an independent human rights organization, 
        considers Ishetu Latu to be a prisoner of conscience.  I 
        respectfully appeal to you to grant his immediate release.
        
                                               Sincerely,



                                               <name>


        copy to:

        Mr. Girma Amare
        Embassy of Ethiopia
        2134 Kalorama Road, N.W.
        Washington, D.C.  20008




                                                <addr>
                                                <csz>
                                                USA

                                                <date>


        President Roh Tae-woo
        The Blue House
        1 Sejong-no
        Chongno-gu
        Seoul
        REPUBLIC OF KOREA


        Your Excellency,

        I write to you on behalf of Pang Yang-kyun, who was arrested on 
        July 2, 1989, and sentenced on December 20, 1989, in Seoul 
        District Court to seven years' imprisonment.  Pang Yang-kyun is a 
        principal aide to Suh Kyung-won, a member of the National 
        Assembly.  The two men were detained as a result of visits they 
        made to Europe in 1988 and a visit by Suh Kyung-won to North 
        Korea in August 1988.

        The international human rights organization Amnesty International 
        considers that travelling to North Korea without evidence either 
        of espionage activities or of the use of advocacy of violence 
        can not justify imprisonment.  It believes that Pang Yang-kyun 
        has been detained for his peaceful political activities and his 
        views on the reunification of North and South Korea.  The 
        organization is also concerned about Mr. Pang's claims that he 
        was ill-treated during interrogation by authorities.

        My concern for Pang Yang-kyun is based on a sincere request for 
        the human rights of all people.  It is in this spirit that I 
        urge you to release Pang Yang-kyun.


                                                  Yours respectfully,
 
 
 
                                                 <name>

        copy to:

        His Excellency Tong-Jin Park
        Embassy of Korea
        4801 Glenbrook Road, N.W.
        Washington, D.C.  20016

554.32January and February 1991 - sorry I'm a bit behindMEMCL1::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Thu Mar 07 1991 16:29410
554.33March 1991 lettersMEMCL1::PAINTERAnd on Earth, peace...Mon Mar 18 1991 19:38214
554.34Letters for January 1992TNPUBS::PAINTERlet there be musicMon Feb 03 1992 21:12233