The IBA Profile – Azizah al-Hibri

Here is my latest article published in IBA Global Insight:

The founder and chair of KARAMAH – Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights was appointed to the US Commission on International Religious Freedom in June 2011. Here she shares her views on women’s rights in the Middle East, the developments and implications of the Arab Spring and Western perceptions of the Muslim world since 9/11.

In March this year, over the course of some of the most turbulent days in recent Egyptian history, US-based charitable and education organisation KARAMAH – Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights – conducted three workshops in Cairo. While many other organisations would have shied away from tackling contentious issues on Egyptian soil during this period, KARAMAH took the opportunity to bring together hundreds of scholars and intellectual leaders to discuss Islam, the rule of law and women’s rights in the country’s capital.

Published on 06-10-11. Read on here

Eurozone crisis: reform fatigue a key trend says EBRD chief counsel

Here is my latest piece published in the IBA Global Insight newsfeed:

Following in the footsteps of its Eurozone neighbours Spain, Ireland, Greece, Portugal and Cyprus, fears of deteriorating growth this week saw Italy become the latest country to fall victim to Standard & Poor’s credit downgrading.

As this most recent downgrading demonstrates, the challenges facing the European financial markets are numerous and increasingly complex.

During a plenary session at Session 480, ‘The Rule of Law in a Globalized World’, at the Salzburg Global Seminar, Carlos Primo Braga, Special Representative and Director for Europe External Affairs at the World Bank, and Michel Nussbaumer, chief counsel of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), spoke about the short-term and long-term prospects and challenges to growth in Europe.

Published on 23-09-11. Read on here

Mining Conflicts are a Great Challenge Facing Humala’s Government

My latest blog for Huffington Post UK:

Last month UK-based company Monterrico Metals agreed to an out-of-court settlement to 33 Peruvian farmers over claims of abuse during protests in Rio Blanco in northern Peru in 2005. As incoming President Ollanta Humala lines up his cabinet, there are still many questions hanging over the exploitation of Amazon territory and the treatment of indigenous communities.

As with many other Latin American countries, Peru is no stranger to protests over mineral exploitation or other energy-related projects. Yet as a country which has some of the most sought after mineral resources in the world, the recent case with Monterrico has exposed the ugly side of foreign investment in Peru. In August 2005, 33 farmers were taking part in a protest over human rights when they were detained and tortured at a copper mine owned by Monterrico in Rio Blanco. Five protesters were shot and two female protesters were sexually abused in the attack. Although the exact amount of compensation has not been disclosed, the settlement marks a significant milestone in accountability and corporate social responsibility for mining companies in the country. Richard Meeran, a partner at UK firm Leigh Day & Company that represented the farmers, said “This constitutes a salutary lesson for multinationals operating in developing countries.”

Published on 08-08-11. Read on here

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