For Immediate Release
Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) experts will be featured at Still Waiting for Tomorrow: The Law and Politics of Unresolved Refugee Crises (pdf), a conference that will explore the scope and consequences of global refugee crises as well as potential policy responses to these crises. The conference will be held April 2-4 in Boston.
On an April 2 session titled, “State Responses to Refugee Flows,” Kristine Huskey, Director of PHR’s Anti-Torture Program, will address the legal barriers that deny refugees access to safe countries. She will evaluate the impact and legitimacy of the exclusion from refugee status based on “material support of terrorism” and other counter-terrorism polices enacted by the US in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
“Since 9/11, the United States has increasingly used the overly broad definition of ‘material support of terrorism’ to prosecute, detain and deny rights to thousands of individuals, mostly non-US citizens,” said Huskey. “Despite the number of protracted armed conflicts across the world and the current refugee crises, the US continues to apply a vague and expansive terrorism bar to keep people from entering this country when they have no other options. In some cases, the people we are excluding also fought alongside US allies against Saddam Hussein, but are now considered “terrorists” under current immigration law.”
During the second day of the conference, Christy Fujio, Director of PHR’s Asylum Program, will appear on two panels. In the morning she will participate in a panel discussion following a screening of “REFUGE: Caring for Survivors of Torture.” Later she will moderate and speak on a panel featuring PHR experts Karen Naimer, Director of the Program on Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones, and Mike Corradini, Asylum Advocacy Associate.
Fujio will discuss how forensic medical evaluations are serving as critical pieces of evidence for asylum seekers in the US, as well as for prosecutions of torturers globally. Corradini will speak about the immigration detention system in the US, which incarcerates thousands of asylum seekers annually, and Naimer will discuss the creation of a medical and legal network in Africa to combat sexual and gender-based violence.
“Attorneys and prosecutors are woefully uninformed about the power of forensic medical evaluations in torture cases,” said Fujio. “Physical and psychological documentation of torture and other ill treatment provides compelling evidence – often the only evidence aside from witnesses’ story – that can be used to prosecute perpetrators, obtain redress for victims, and serve as a basis for asylum.”
The Boston University School of Law will host the conference, which is open to the public and is co-sponsored by the American Society of International Law and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The panel of experts will include legal scholars, United Nations advisors, and human rights professionals.
Since PHR’s inception, service to victims and survivors of torture through the application of medical and scientific expertise has been central to its mission, and through its Asylum Program PHR works to ensure that survivors of torture can find a safe haven in the United States.
Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) is a New York-based advocacy organization that uses science and medicine to prevent mass atrocities and severe human rights violations. Learn more here.