Op-Ed : The time for US timidity is over: Rwanda should meet Magnitsky

Read the Op-Ed on The Hill

Published on The Hill 6/10/21
BY KATRINA LANTOS SWETT, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR

As I write this, Paul Rusesabagina, the real-life hero of the Oscar-nominated film “Hotel Rwanda,” has been unjustly imprisoned in Kigali, Rwanda, for more than 280 days. In all that time, the administrations of two American presidents have failed to make so much as a statement in support of this humanitarian, who also happens to be a U.S. Permanent Resident and a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. 

Rusesabagina, an outspoken critic of Rwandan President Paul Kagame, had no intention of going back to his native country. He publicly stated on several occasions that he could not return for fear of retribution. Nevertheless, that is where he found himself last August, when an associate secretly working with the Rwandan government tricked him into getting on a private jet he thought was bound for Burundi. Instead, the plane landed in Kigali, Rusesabagina was held for three days incommunicado, and finally reappeared handcuffed and in the custody of the Rwanda Investigation Bureau (RIB). 

This was a textbook case of enforced disappearance, a clear violation of Rusesabagina’s basic human rights and of the United Nations’ International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. Put in simpler terms, Rusesabagina was kidnapped. 

These events prompted some outrage among human rights groups and certain lawmakers in the U.S. and Europe, as it well should. But the deafening silence from official government channels has drowned out the chorus of voices calling for action. And what has that silence enabled? More than just the continued abuse and imprisonment of a Belgian citizen and U.S. Permanent Resident, as in the case of Rusesabagina. It has created a template for other dictators and apparently has given them carte blanche to use increasingly audacious methods to capture and arrest their most vocal critics. 

Consider what just happened in Belarus, where President Alexander Lukashenko used military jets to divert — some say hijack — a flight carrying 26-year-old dissident journalist Roman Proasevich, so that he could be arrested and thrown in jail. Only days after this incident, Russian President Vladimir Putin decided to try his own “airplane ploy” and had opposition leader Andrey Pivovarov hauled off an outgoing flight at St. Petersburg Airport.

The Belarusian event took place on May 23; in less than a week, the United States had raised its travel advisory for Belarus to a level 4, “Do not travel” warning and had announced forthcoming sanctions on Belarusian officials involved in the incident. All these actions were warranted and well justified. But it’s worth noting that it took no more than a few days for the U.S. to spring into action and censure Belarus on behalf of a Belarusian national; Rusesabagina, who renounced his Rwandan citizenship in 1996, has languished in prison for the better part of a year without any meaningful action from the countries he calls home.

The U.S. silence in the case of Paul Rusesabagina, and its unwillingness to call Rwanda to account for its human rights abuses, undoubtedly has much to do with the status of President Kagame as the so-called “darling tyrant.” Some hold him up as a paragon of democratic leadership, even against an ever-growing list of critics who have been forcibly disappeared, imprisoned or killed. But the time for timidity is over — we have seen its fruits in Belarus and Russia — and the U.S. no longer can afford to turn a blind eye to Rwanda’s crimes. 

For this reason, the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights & Justice has filed a formal submission to the State Department and Department of Treasury urging Global Magnitsky sanctions to be imposed on two Rwandan officials reportedly complicit in Rusesabagina’s kidnapping: Justice Minister Johnston Busingye and head of the RIB, Col. Jeannot Ruhunga.

Proving culpability in human rights abuses, such as an enforced disappearance, can be challenging. But in this instance, the Rwandan officials named in the sanctions submission have made it surprisingly easy to prove their guilt. Busingye admitted during a televised interview that the Rwandan government paid for the private plane that took Rusesabagina from Dubai to Kigali. Ruhunga not only made public comments about the unilateral “operation” carried out by the RIB (after initially, and falsely, claiming that the arrest was made with international cooperation), but he also was named in the sworn affidavit of Rusesabagina’s jailhouse testimony as one of only two people who had contact with him in an unknown facility during the three days between the flight leaving Dubai and the public news conference announcing the arrest in Kigali.

Rusesabagina faces terrorism charges in a show trial that began in late January and is ongoing. I mention this almost in passing because the charges, which I believe to be trumped up by Kagame and his supporters, are immaterial to this indisputable fact: Paul Rusesabagina was brought to Rwanda illegally under international law. Any individual, government or organization that truly values human rights and the rule of law must recognize this fact and acknowledge that whatever follows Rusesabagina’s kidnapping — the charges or any eventual, predetermined, conviction — is simply fruit of the poisoned tree. 

It is beyond time for the United States to stand up and lead on behalf of a man who once risked his own life to save more than 1,200 people amid the horror of the Rwandan genocide. It is beyond time to put President Kagame on notice that Rwanda’s free pass on human rights abuses has finally, and deservedly, expired. It is time to use targeted Magnitsky sanctions — one of the most potent and powerful tools for human rights — to hold accountable the men responsible for kidnapping Paul Rusesabagina.

Lantos Foundation Calls for Magnitsky Sanctions in Paul Rusesabagina Case

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Media contact:
Chelsea Hedquist
+1 603.229.2017
chelsea@lantosfoundation.org

 

 

Lantos Foundation Calls for Magnitsky Sanctions in Paul Rusesabagina Case

Formal petition filed for U.S. action against Rwandan officials complicit in his kidnapping

 

June 7, 2021 – The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights & Justice today announced that it has filed a formal submission to the U.S. Department of State and U.S. Department of Treasury recommending Global Magnitsky sanctions against Rwandan Justice Minister Johnston Busingye and head of the Rwanda Investigation Bureau (RIB) Colonel Jeannot Ruhunga for their role in human rights violations committed against Paul Rusesabagina – namely his extraordinary rendition and kidnapping in August 2020.

Paul Rusesabagina, the real-life hero of the Oscar-nominated film Hotel Rwanda and a Presidential Medal of Freedom awardee, was lured to Rwanda last August by an associate secretly working with the Rwandan government. Rusesabagina, a Belgian citizen and U.S. Permanent Resident, has been an outspoken critic of Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who human rights organizations, journalists and policymakers have increasingly characterized as a brutal dictator. Rusesabagina had stated publicly on several occasions that he could not return to his native country for fear of retribution, and last August he believed he was traveling from his home in Texas to a speaking engagement in Burundi. The private jet he boarded after a layover in Dubai in fact transported him to Kigali, the capital of Rwanda, whereupon he was disappeared for three full days before reappearing in the custody of the RIB.

It can sometimes prove difficult to build a case that establishes government officials’ direct involvement in and responsibility for human rights abuses. However, in the case of Paul Rusesabagina’s kidnapping, the complicity and responsibility of both Busingye and Ruhunga is crystal clear. Minister Busingye admitted during a televised interview on Al Jazeera in February 2021 that the Rwandan government had paid for the plane that transported Rusesabagina, without his knowledge, to Kigali. Likewise, Colonel Ruhunga, as head of the RIB, not only oversaw the operation to kidnap Rusesabagina but was also named in a recent jailhouse transcript as one of two people who visited Rusesabagina when he was held incommunicado in an unknown location during the three days between the time he was kidnapped and when he was presented in handcuffs in Kigali.

“For too long, the appalling actions of the Rwandan government under the leadership of Paul Kagame have gone without consequence,” said Lantos Foundation President Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett. “In this instance, there is unequivocal evidence that Minister Busingye and Colonel Ruhunga violated the basic human rights of a humanitarian hero. A strong response by the United States is fully warranted and anything less would only embolden the Rwandan government to continue its abuse.”

The Lantos Foundation’s submission to State and Treasury presents the overwhelming evidence that these two individuals can and should be held responsible for Rusesabagina’s kidnapping – a clear violation of the United Nations’ International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. The submission calls for the United States to hold Busingye and Ruhunga to account for this violation by imposing Magnitsky sanctions on them. The submission was simultaneously transmitted to officials in the United Kingdom and the European Union for consideration of their own respective sanctions.

Tragically, Paul Rusesabagina is not the first critic of the Rwandan government to find himself in this situation – or one that is even worse. Over the past several years under President Paul Kagame, the Rwandan government has demonstrated an alarming pattern of subjecting its critics to a range of gross human rights violations, including enforced disappearance, imprisonment and extrajudicial killings. Indeed, the Lantos Foundation’s submission includes an attachment that details numerous chilling examples of what has happened to a long string of Kagame’s opponents, among them Patrick Karegeya (assassinated in South Africa), Boniface Twagirimana (disappeared from Rwandan prison), Kizito Mihigo (died in Rwandan prison) and many others. Rwanda bills itself as a vibrant democracy and an inspiring success story, but its repeated and increasingly bold-faced efforts to stifle any form of dissent tell the story of a country that has descended deep into authoritarian rule.

Dr. Lantos Swett said, “The United States was quick to announce its intention to sanction Belarusian officials involved in diverting a commercial airline for the purpose of arresting a prominent Belarusian dissident. Yet, there has been shockingly little action from the U.S. in terms of censuring, let alone holding accountable, the individuals responsible for the unlawful kidnapping of this courageous man: a U.S. Permanent Resident who received our nation’s highest civilian honor and whose story has inspired millions of people around the world. The U.S. government has an important opportunity to right this wrong by moving to impose Magnitsky sanctions on Minister Busingye and Colonel Ruhunga. We must take action now – failure to do so may send the message that the Rwandan government has carte blanche to trample on the rights of Paul Rusesabagina. The consequences of such a message could be tragic and fatal.”

The Lantos Foundation filed its formal submission on May 18, 2021.

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About the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights & Justice: The Lantos Foundation was established in 2008 to carry forward the legacy of Congressman Tom Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to the U.S. Congress and a leading human rights champion. The Foundation works with a range of partners and often in cooperation with the U.S. Government on issues that span the globe. The Foundation’s key areas of focus include human rights issues related to religious freedom, rule of law, internet freedom and activist art. The Foundation also administers the Lantos Congressional Fellows Program, supports human rights advocates, activists and artists through its Front Line Fund grant program, and awards the annual Lantos Human Rights Prize to honor and bring attention to heroes of the human rights movement. Past recipients of the Prize include His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Professor Elie Wiesel, Israeli President Shimon Peres, Iraqi Parliamentarian Vian Dakhil, “Hotel Rwanda” hero Paul Rusesabagina, and Hong Kong Democracy activist Joshua Wong, among others.

Lantos Foundation Announces Activist Artist Scholarship Winners

For Immediate Release
March 5, 2021

Media Contact:
Chelsea Hedquist
chelsea@lantosfoundation.org
+1 603.229.2017

 

Lantos Foundation Announces Activist Artist Scholarship Winners
Three New Hampshire High School Seniors to Receive A Total $10,000 in Scholarship Funds

CONCORD: The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights & Justice today announced that Taylor Kenison, a senior from Newmarket Jr/Sr High School, has received the top award for its first-ever Activist Artist Scholarship competition. Ms. Kenison’s winning essay examined the impact of two separate pieces of art that address the pressing issue of human trafficking, and it described her own aspirations to attend law school and advocate on behalf of trafficking victims. She wrote that, while she is not a talented artist in the same form as those whose work she examined in the essay, “eventually through pen and voice I hope to influence progress to end human servitude in all forms.” Ms. Kenison will receive a $5,000 scholarship to be paid to Dartmouth College, which she will attend this fall.

The Foundation also awarded two runner-up prizes of $2,500 each to Michelle Eweka of Bow High School and Prescott Herzog of Stevens High School. Ms. Eweka received her award for her stirring original poem, “The Ceiling”, and its accompanying essay, while Mr. Herzog’s provocative winning essay focused on the impact of actor/rapper Childish Gambino’s “This is America” music video. Mr. Herzog will attend Dartmouth College in the fall, and Ms. Eweka has not yet committed to a university.

Katrina Lantos Swett, President of the Lantos Foundation, said, “We were inspired and deeply impressed by the dozens of thoughtful, thought-provoking and sophisticated applications that we received. The wealth of talent and intellect on display was a testament to the power and potential of New Hampshire’s youth. We are so delighted to honor these three outstanding young scholars and to support their continuing education. We hope that the experience of participating in the scholarship competition will motivate our winners, and all the participants, to continue shining a light on human rights issues and using their considerable talents to advocate for change.”

The Activist Artist Scholarship, launched in October 2020, challenged applicants to examine the influence of a particular Activist Artist and show how that artist used his/her medium to influence, inform and inspire during their lifetime or beyond. Alternatively, applicants were given the option to submit their own original piece of activist art. The scholarship competition was open to all New Hampshire residents graduating high school in Spring 2021 and intending to enroll in a 2- or 4-year college program. Funding for the scholarship was generously provided through a grant from the Bank of New Hampshire.

“Giving back to our communities is not just about making the donation, it’s about making a difference,”  said Cydney Shapleigh, EVP – Chief Wealth Management and Retail Banking Officer for Bank of New Hampshire. “Like the applicants for the Activist Artist Scholarship, we embrace our responsibility to be a leading corporate citizen. By supporting organizations like the Lantos Foundation, we can help strengthen our communities and enhance the lives of our neighbors in impactful ways.”

The scholarship winners were selected by a distinguished panel of judges from the New Hampshire arts and education communities, and beyond, including: Concord film-maker John Gfroerer, New Hampshire artist and gallery owner Pam Tarbell, Lantos Foundation Board of Trustees Member Ambassador Richard Swett , Bank of New Hampshire’s Cydney Shapleigh, Lantos Foundation President Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett, and Duke University student and former Lantos Foundation intern Daniel Wolf.

The Activist Artist Scholarship program falls within the Lantos Foundation’s “Global Citizenship” area of work. The Foundation recognizes the powerful, yet often overlooked, role that artists play in the human rights movement. Through the Activist Artist Scholarship and other programs, the Foundation seeks to encourage, support and elevate the work of artists who use their mediums to advocate for important causes.

To learn more about the Foundation’s Activist Artist work and to stay updated on future awards, visit: https://www.lantosfoundation.org/activist-artist

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About the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights & Justice: The Lantos Foundation was established in 2008 to carry forward the legacy of Congressman Tom Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to the U.S. Congress and a leading human rights champion. Based in Concord, NH, the Foundation works with a range of partners and often in cooperation with the U.S. Government on issues that span the globe. The Foundation’s key areas of focus include human rights issues related to religious freedom, rule of law, internet freedom and activist art. The Foundation also administers the Lantos Congressional Fellows Program, supports human rights advocates, activists and artists through its Front Line Fund grant program, and awards the annual Lantos Human Rights Prize to honor and bring attention to heroes of the human rights movement. Past recipients of the Prize include His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Professor Elie Wiesel, Israeli President Shimon Peres, Iraqi Parliamentarian Vian Dakhil, “Hotel Rwanda” hero Paul Rusesabagina, and Hong Kong Democracy activist Joshua Wong, among others.

New Episode of The Keeper Podcast : RULE OF LAW SEASON – Hong Kong Activist in Exile (Nathan Law)

In this episode, we focus on a part of the world that has become one of the front lines of the fight to uphold the Rule of Law – Hong Kong. In recent years, the Chinese Communist Party has been imposing increasingly strict measures on the once autonomous and democratic Hong Kong, designed to erode that autonomy. The response has not come from the powerful or well-connected members of Hong Kong society, but from the vibrant, beating heart of Hong Kong: its youth. Nathan Law, who became the youngest lawmaker ever elected to the Hong Kong Legislative Council in 2016, has emerged as one of the most recognizable and respected voices on the Hong Kong democracy movement. He spoke to us from the UK, where he is now living in exile, about China’s spreading authoritarianism, the global importance of Hong Kong’s struggle for freedom and autonomy, and his optimism that democracy will prevail in the end. 

Nathan Law – The Magnitsky Human Rights Award

Give Hong Kong the Autonomy It Was Promised, Nathan Law in The New York Times

Mr. Biden, Keep the Pressure on Hong Kong, Nathan Law in The New York Times

No More Waiting: The Time Has Come to Fight for Hong Kong, Katrina Lantos Swett in The Hill

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Lantos Foundation Statement: Restoring U.S. Leadership on Human Rights

Nearly six weeks into new Administration, the human rights community continues to watch carefully to see whether President Biden will seize the opportunity to re-establish the United States as a beacon of hope for freedom, justice and democracy around the world. In some instances, the community has reason to feel encouraged – such as the announcement that the U.S. Government will sanction several Russian individuals and businesses for their involvement in the poisoning of Alexey Navalny. Likewise, the move to sanction the Myanmar generals involved in the coup demonstrated President Biden’s commitment to holding human rights abusers accountable. However, last week the Administration missed an important opportunity with its response to the report that unambiguously identified Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as the impetus behind Jamal Khashoggi’s brutal murder. It cannot be said that the U.S. did nothing, but the State Department’s “Khashoggi Ban” certainly does not hold the most culpable and highest profile human rights abuser to account.  

We recognize that rebuilding America’s diplomatic ties and restoring its credibility on human rights will be a complicated process. We fully understand that each small action taken can have a ripple effect of consequences across a range of geographic areas and political interests. We do not expect the Biden Administration to be able to approach each human rights issue with the boldness and singular focus of, for example, an organization dedicated entirely to advocating for human rights. But we do expect the Administration to make good on its promise for America to, once again, lead on human rights. This will require a strong, unambiguous response to human rights abuses ranging from brutal military coups to extrajudicial killings, oppression of minority communities, and flagrant violations of the rule of law. Sometimes it will require a forceful response even when it comes with a political or diplomatic cost. True leadership is a product of making hard choices, not easy ones.

Sadly, there is no shortage of opportunities for President Biden to demonstrate his commitment to leading on human rights. On February 11, an investigative report was released that clearly identified the would-be assassins of twice poisoned Russian opposition politician Vladimir Kara Murza. The men named in this report could easily be added to the Magnitsky sanctions list. Paul Rusesabagina, the hero of “Hotel Rwanda” and Presidential Medal of Freedom awardee, currently faces a show trial in Kigali, with little hope of ever returning to his home in Texas. The Biden Administration could use its influence to help free Rusesabagina from Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s authoritarian grasp. Hong Kong democracy activists Agnes Chow and Joshua Wong languish in prison; the U.S. could do more to negotiate their release. And millions of Uyghurs are experiencing a modern-day genocide in the Xinjiang province of China; a strong condemnation from the U.S., backed up with substantive economic and political pressure, could ease the plight of this long-suffering but proud Uyghur population.

We urge President Biden to seize the opportunities before him and hope that, in doing so, he will restore America as a beacon of hope and will send a powerful message to countries and leaders who would violate human rights.

Establishing the Senate Human Rights Commission Elevates Human Rights as a Bipartisan Priority

Media Contact:

Chelsea Hedquist

chelsea@lantosfoundation.org

+1 603.229.2017

March 1, 2021 – The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice and 21Wilberforce applaud the introduction of the Senate Resolution Establishing the Senate Human Rights Commission – fully institutionalizing the current Senate Human Rights Caucus and equipping it with the resources to support paid staff. At a time when it is critical to strengthen U.S. leadership on human rights, the Commission would provide a powerful platform for elevating efforts to protect and advance fundamental human rights globally.

 

The world faces myriad human rights challenges today – from the persecution of ethnic and religious minorities in Burma and China, to the suppression of free speech in Russia, to the rise of authoritarianism in countries around the globe. The U.S. Congress has always played an important role in addressing these challenges and providing global leadership on the most pressing human rights issues of the day, including lending its powerful voice on behalf of the oppressed. Such efforts, however, require a robust framework and dedicated resources.

 

In 2008, the U.S. House of Representatives adopted a resolution to institutionalize the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, founded by Congressman Tom Lantos and Congressman John Porter in 1983, as a full entity in the House – the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission. Senators Chris Coons (D-Del.), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and James Lankford (R-Okla.), who introduced the resolution, clearly recognize that it is time for the Senate to follow suit. The existing Senate Human Rights Caucus has provided a valuable forum for dialogue about human rights issues, but its lack of dedicated funding for staff members has long limited its capacity to fully respond to a growing and increasingly urgent set of human rights priorities. By creating a Senate Human Rights Commission with paid staff, the Senate will have the means and resources to strengthen the bipartisan human rights efforts of its Committees and offices through briefings, enhanced collaboration with the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, and leadership on initiatives such as the Defending Freedoms Project to protect prisoners of conscience. The Commission will also bolster opportunities for collaboration between government and civil society on important international human rights priorities. 

 

Dr. Randel Everett, President of 21Wilberforce, said, “The need for Congressional leadership to preserve and protect fundamental human rights around the world through U.S. foreign policy has never been more critical. A Senate Human Rights Commission would increase the volume and effectiveness of bipartisan work focused on human rights abuses across the world.”

 

Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett, President of the Lantos Foundation, said, “Global leadership on human rights requires more than words; it requires action and real engagement. My father understood that when he created the Congressional Human Rights Caucus, and I know he would be incredibly proud to see human rights elevated to the level of a Commission in both chambers. The resolution to create a Senate Human Rights Commission signals the Congress’ willingness to dedicate real resources to advancing the bipartisan cause of human rights and fighting against human rights abuses worldwide.”

 

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About the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights & Justice: The Lantos Foundation was established in 2008 to carry forward the legacy of Congressman Tom Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to the U.S. Congress and a leading human rights champion. The Lantos Foundation works with a range of partners and often in cooperation with the U.S. Government on issues that span the globe. The Foundation’s key areas of focus include human rights issues related to religious freedom, rule of law, internet freedom and activist art. The Foundation also administers the Lantos Congressional Fellows Program, supports human rights advocates, activists and artists through its Front Line Fund grant program, and awards the annual Lantos Human Rights Prize to honor and bring attention to heroes of the human rights movement.

New Episode of The Keeper Podcast: Rule of Law Season – Freedom's Counsel

On the first episode of this Rule of Law season, we talked about the rule of law as a “a government of laws and not men”. Our guest on this episode, Professor Irwin Cotler, has his own shorthand for the rule of law: “the pursuit of justice”. If anyone in this world is intimately familiar with the tireless, unrelenting, undaunted pursuit of justice, it is Irwin Cotler – an accomplished academic, renowned international human rights lawyer, former Member of Parliament in Canada, as well as former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Founder and Chair of the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights, and currently Canada’s first ever Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Anti-Semitism. In this episode, we discuss his four decades of serving as counsel for some of the world’s most prominent dissidents and political prisoners of conscience, as well as what he sees as worrying signs of a global resurgence in authoritarianism. 

Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights

For Irwin Cotler, neither a pandemic nor retirement from politics can slow his fight for human rights (The Globe and Mail)

Irwin Cotler named special envoy for Holocaust remembrance and the fight against anti-Semitism (CBC)

Irwin Cotler speaks at the 2012 Oslo Freedom Forum

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New Episode of The Keeper Podcast: Rule of Law Season – A Government of Laws Not Men

Rule of Law Season – A Government of Laws Not Men

This episode kicks off our new season, where we will be exploring the significance of three simple words: Rule of Law. But what does that phrase actually mean? Is it an abstraction? An impossible ideal? Or something real and practical that holds democratic societies together? To help answer these questions and more, we spoke to one of America’s preeminent legal scholars on the rule of law, Professor Harold Koh.

Professor Koh is the Sterling Professor of International Law at Yale Law School and one of the Lantos Foundation’s Rule of Law lecturers. In addition to his legal scholarship, he has served as U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, and as the legal adviser of the State Department. In this episode, we cover everything from what the rule of law means, to where we see it being violated in the world, to how we can best preserve and uphold it at home in America.

Harold Koh Biography

Peter Gruber Rule of Law Clinic

2018 Lantos Rule of Law Lecture

United Nations and the Rule of Law

World Justice Project – What is the Rule of Law

American Bar Association – Rule of Law

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Lantos Foundation Statement: A shared commitment to global human rights can help us find common ground

Today, with the inauguration of President Biden, the U.S. observes one of its time-honored traditions and a true cornerstone of democracy – the peaceful transfer of power. In recent days, however, we have seen the rule of law and, indeed, the very fabric of our democracy tested and strained in ways that many of us would never have imagined. The events of January 6 brought into sharp focus the words of our esteemed namesake Congressman Tom Lantos, who often said, “The veneer of civilization is paper thin. We are its guardians, and we can never rest.”

Were Tom with us today, we have no doubt that he would urge us to face the challenges to our democracy at home with vigor, courage and an unrelenting commitment to freedom and justice for all. He would express his optimism that America remains the bedrock of democracy; it will weather the storm of current divisions and threats to its core values, and will emerge a better and more just nation. He would likely invoke another favorite turn of phrase: “We are just bending a windy corner of history, but around this corner are blue skies and wonderful opportunities.”

In 2020, and now into 2021, we have been sorrowfully reminded of the ways in which our country has fallen short of our high ideals. We must resolve to do better at closing this gap at home so we will be worthy of the human rights leadership that we have long exercised around the world. Though politics and pandemics may separate us, we can still come together around our dedication to universal human rights. In the coming year and beyond, it is our hope that a shared commitment to global human rights can help us find common ground and choose to walk a more unified and respectful path.  

We look forward to the coming years of collaboration with President Biden’s administration. Over the course of their more than 30-year relationship as colleagues and dear friends, President Biden and Congressman Lantos often worked closely on human rights issues. We were pleased to honor President Biden in 2018 with our decennial Lantos Legacy Award for his bold defense of human rights. We know that he will continue to be a passionate and steadfast advocate for human rights – both at home and abroad – and we anticipate a strong partnership with his administration on human rights issues ranging from international religious freedom to the rule of law, and many others.

Lantos Foundation Statement: China Must Provide Answers about Jack Ma

The global stir surrounding the mysterious disappearance of business mogul Jack Ma demands answers, and China must provide these immediately. If Ma is “laying low”, as has been reported, then he is clearly doing so out of fear that he will be taken into custody by the Chinese government for nothing more than achieving a level of success that Chinese Communist Party officials have deemed unacceptable. If the worst has happened and Ma has been disappeared against his will, it is an outrageous human rights violation that should prompt governments to respond forcefully and without delay. Moreover, such an abuse would starkly indicate that the global business community cannot trust China, which is clearly not afraid to threaten and intimidate those that are part of international business at the very highest levels. For years, China has manipulated global corporations and industries that wish to do business inside its borders, and now the government appears to be attacking the very businessmen that have helped put the country front and center in the global economy.

We call on global corporations and governments around the world to demand answers about Jack Ma from the Chinese, and we counsel them to be very wary of the corrupt and lawless Chinese government. China’s economic might should never provide cover for its appalling human rights abuses.