Global Campus of Human Rights Magazine n 5 (December 2021)
Date
2021-12Author
Nowak, Manfred
Aquino, Elisa
Ballarin, Giulia
Esposito, Isotta
Gilmore, Eamon
O'Flaherty, Michael
Quinn, Rob
Samar, Sima
Vardanyan, Ruben
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The Global Campus of Human Rights is not only an impressive
network of 100 universities and more than 6,000 graduates of
our seven regional Master programmes, training and e-learning
activities, it is also an impressive network of outstanding human
rights scholars and practitioners in all regions of the world. On 12
November 2021, our President Veronica Gomez, who coordinates
the Latin American Master at the University of San Martin in Buenos
Aires, was elected as one of seven judges of the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights. One of our Vice-Presidents, Frans Viljoen,
Director of the Human Rights Centre at the University of Pretoria who
heads up the African Master programme, was elected to the United
Nations Human Rights Council Advisory Committee on 11 October
2021. I most warmly congratulate my two colleagues and friends to
these highly prestigious and well deserved expert functions in the
international human rights community!
As the world’s largest human rights network in human rights
education, the Global Campus has a particular responsibility in
providing future human rights defenders and change makers with
excellent knowledge, skills and attitude that are necessary to make
the world a better place to live in. However, our responsibility goes
far beyond teaching and training. Thanks to our close cooperation
with the Sakharov Laureates and Fellowship Programme of the
European Parliament during the annual Venice School for Human
Rights Defenders, to our partnership with the Right Livelihood
and its prestigious “alternative Nobel Prize” Laureates, to our
cooperation with the Aurora Prize for present day heroes and with
similar initiatives, we support the courageous activities of those who
defend human rights and democratic values on the front lines.
Universities specialised in human rights also have a particular
responsibility to defend academic freedom and the right to stand up
for human rights and democracy in their own countries and beyond.
At a time when these values are under attack in a growing number
of countries, we feel the duty to assist scholars and students at
risk of being expelled from their universities, persecuted for their
intellectual activities or even arrested, tortured or killed. With the recent takeover of the Taliban in Afghanistan, hundreds of
thousands of Afghan human rights defenders, journalists, judges,
scholars and students, mostly women and girls and those who
worked in close collaboration with the international community, had
and still have to fear for their lives. Hundreds of thousands were able
to leave the country, o!en via chaotic evacuation operations, others
are still desperately trying to flee their country. When we launched
our initiative of providing a safe space for Afghan scholars and
students at our universities around the world, we were overwhelmed
by the positive response of an impressive number of professors
and rectors, students and alumni, individual activists and relevant
organisations, such as “Scholars at Risk”, World University Service
or the International Association of Women Judges. We are most
grateful to the spontaneous reaction of the European Commission
(INTPA) of providing us with funds, which were recently doubled by
Right Livelihood and supplemented by other donors, such as the
Fondazione Venezia and the Kahane Foundation. With these funds
and the voluntary work of many members and friends of our network,
we are now able to provide Afghan scholars, students and their
families with the possibility of finding a safe space for their studies,
research or teaching at various universities of our global network. I
sincerely hope that our Afghanistan project is only the beginning of
a more ambitious programme to support scholars and students at
risk in other countries as well.