International: States must end reprisals against anti-corruption activists

International: States must end reprisals against anti-corruption activists - Transparency

Anti-corruption protest, Brazil. Photo: Rogerio Bromfman/Flickr

As the world celebrates the International Anti-Corruption Day and the 24th anniversary of the adoption of the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders on this day, 9 December 2022, we, the undersigned organisations and individuals, urge all UN Member States to end reprisals against anti-corruption human rights defenders, and to respect, protect, promote, and fulfil the human rights of everyone including those working to promote and defend the rights of other people and to fight and expose corruption.

Anti-corruption human rights defenders – journalists, members of civil society organisations, whistleblowers, and others – play a crucial role in the prevention of and in the fight against corruption and the promotion of human rights. Over the years, they have been instrumental in investigating and exposing corrupt practices and in demanding transparency and accountability and the protection of human rights. We observe, however, that those who work to expose corruption are often not recognized as human rights defenders, and their efforts may be invisible to the wider human rights community or seen as separate from or peripheral to human rights work.

We note that the role and active involvement of anti-corruption human rights defenders in anti-corruption efforts has been widely recognised in many international and regional anti-corruption instruments, including the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) adopted in 2003. Among other things, UNCAC requires state parties to promote the ‘active participation’ of anti-corruption defenders, by ‘respecting, promoting and protecting the freedom to seek, receive, publish and disseminate information concerning corruption’ (Article 13). In addition, the political declaration on corruption adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2021 reaffirmed the commitment of the international community to recognise the important role that civil society, academia, the private sector and the media play in the detection, prevention and fight against corruption.

We are seriously concerned about the escalating reports of violence, threats, harassment, intimidation, attacks and persecution of anti-corruption human rights defenders and the impunity following on from this persecution in several states. Anti-corruption human rights defenders continue to face real risk of physical attack, arbitrary arrest, and prosecution simply for exercising their human rights including to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly. And states continue to pass laws to restrict access to information while failing to take effective actions to prevent the harassment, intimidation and attacks against those who dare to expose corruption and its impacts on human rights, and to bring suspected perpetrators of the attacks to justice.

We note that the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders in her recent report documents several cases of violence, threats, intimidation, harassment, attacks and persecution against anti-corruption human rights defenders. According to the report, hundreds of defenders all over the world face smear campaigns, criminalization, and judicial harassment, and are killed every year for their peaceful work in defence of the rights of others. Very few perpetrators are brought to account for these murders, which only enables the cycle of killings to continue. 

We also note that some attacks on defenders are gender-based and that many defenders have been targeted for their work in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic or for fighting against corruption affecting their local communities. Women human rights defenders working against corruption are also often attacked not only for what they do but for who they are.

Continuous threats and attacks against anti-corruption human rights defenders

We continue to receive reports of increasing threats and attacks against anti-corruption human rights defenders, including whistleblowers. These constitute clear violations of internationally recognised human rights including to life, freedom of expression, association, peaceful assembly, access to information and media freedom. 

The threats, intimidation, harassment and persecution also amount to a breach of the legal obligations of states under the various human rights treaties to which they are states parties. We believe it is imperative to respect, protect, promote and fulfil the rights of anti-corruption defenders to ensure the effective promotion and protection of the rights of other people, and to improve the implementation of states’ legal obligations under the various human rights and anti-corruption treaties to which they are parties. 

We therefore call on all UN Member States to:

  • Foster a safe and enabling environment, to ensure that anti-corruption defenders are able to freely carry out their activities in full respect of their human rights and in the defence of the human rights of other people and the fight against corruption without fear of reprisals;
  • Adopt and implement legislative and other measures for the protection of anti-corruption human defenders, if they do not exist, in line with human rights and anti-corruption standards;

  • Effectively respect, protect, promote and fulfil the rights of everyone to freedom of expression, association, peaceful assembly including of those working to promote and defend the rights of other people and to fight and expose corruption, in accordance with Article 13 of UNCAC;
  • End impunity by thoroughly, impartially, independently, transparently and effectively investigating reports of attacks against defenders in their states, and bringing to justice suspected perpetrators, and ensuring access to justice and effective remedies for victims;
  • Publicly recognise the value of the work of anti-corruption human rights defenders and denounce threats and attacks against them, consistent with the provisions of UNCAC, the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, and human rights treaties including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

 

 

List of signatories

Organisations

Accountability Lab, United States/South Africa

Action pour les personnes vulnérables (APV), Guinea

African Centre for Media & Information Literacy (AFRICMIL), Nigeria

AfricanDefenders, Uganda

American University Washington College of Law, United States

Amnesty International, United Kingdom/ Senegal 

Appui à la Promotion du Développement Intégré (APRODI), Guinea

ARTICLE 19, United Kingdom

Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA), Thailand

Association Songtaaba des femmes unies pour le développement ASFUD, Burkina Faso

AWTAD Anti-Corruption Organization, Yemen

Be Just, Inc., United States

Bekker Compliance Consulting Partners, LLC, United States

Blueprint for Free Speech, United Kingdom

Bunge Mashinani Initiative, Kenya

Centre de Recherche sur L’Anti-Corruption, Democratic Republic of Congo

Centre d’Excellence du Droit de l’Environnement (CEDE), Guinea

Centre for Free Expression, Canada

Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria, South Africa

CiFAR – Civil Forum for Asset Recovery e.V., Germany

CIVICUS, South Africa

Coalition des Défenseurs des Droits de l’Homme au Bénin (CDDH-Bénin), Benin

Commission nationale des droits humains, Burkina Faso

Conseil Consultatif des enfants et jeunes de Guinée, Guinea

Corporate Crime Observatory, United Kingdom

Créativité et développement (C-DEV), Guinea

Defenders Coalition, Kenya

Environmental Investigations Agency, United States

Federation of Environmental and Ecological Diversity for Agricultural Revampment and Human Rights (FEEDAR & HR), Cameroon

FIDH (International Federation for Human Rights), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, France

Front Line Defenders, Ireland

Global Witness, United Kingdom

Government Accountability Project, United States

Gulf Centre for Human Rights, Lebanon

Haki Africa, Kenya

Improve Your Society Organization (IYSO), Yemen

Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), Namibia

International Commission of Jurists Kenya (ICJ-Kenya), Kenya

International Service for Human Rights (ISHR), Switzerland

Les Mêmes Droits pour Tous (MDT), Guinea

Ligue Congolaise de Lutte contre la Corruption (LICOCO), Democratic Republic of Congo

Lutte pour le Changement (LUCHA), Democratic Republic of Congo

Malagen, The Gambia

Mexiro AC, Mexico

Protect, United Kingdom

Platform to Protect Whistleblowers in Africa (PPLAAF), Senegal/South Africa

Publiez Ce Que Vous Payez, Senegal

Réseau de Lutte Contre la Faim (RELUFA), Cameroon

Réseau des Associations Guinéennes des Volontaires pour le Développement (RAGVD-GUINEE), Guinea

Réseau des Organisations de la Société Civile pour l’Observation et le Suivi des Elections en Guinée (ROSE), Guinea

Réseau Guinéen des Maisons et Foyers des Jeunes et de la Culture (REGUIMAJEC), Guinea

Sembrando Sentido, United States

Sherpa, France

Siasa Place, Kenya

Social justice centres Working Group, Kenya

SpeakOut SpeakUp Ltd, United Kingdom

The Daphne Caruaza Galizia Foundation, Malta

The Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime, Switzerland

The Institute for Social Accountability (TISA), Kenya

The Sentry, United States 

Tiger Eye Social Foundation, Ghana

Tournons La Page Togo, Togo

Transparency International Bangladesh, Bangladesh

Transparency International Cambodia, Cambodia

Transparency International Italy, Italy

Transparency International Secretariat, Germany

Transparency International Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe

Uzbek Forum for Human Rights, Uzbekistan/Germany

WAFRICA Guinée, Guinea

Whistleblower-Network, Germany

Whistleblower International Network (WIN), United Kingdom

Women Human Rights Defenders Hub, Kenya

World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), within the framework of the Observatory for the Protection of Human Rights Defenders, Switzerland

Xnet, Spain

Yemen organization for combatting human trafficking, Yemen

الإنسان – Watch for Human Rights (Watch4HR), Yemen

List of Individuals

Ms. Bangoura Aminata Edith, Women’s rights activist, Guinea

Professor David Lewis, Head of the Whistleblowing Research Unit, Middlesex University, United Kingdom

Dr Aled Williams, Principal Adviser, U4 Anti-Corruption Research Centre, Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway

Dr Costantino Grasso, Reader in Business and Law, Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom

Amb. (ret) Francisco Villagran de Leon, Lecturer, Elliott School of International Affairs, United States

Mr Feras Hamdouni, Development professional, Syria

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