This presentation is an example of how the concept of threats and risk can be introduced to the group, facilitators should use this to develop their own explanation points.
It is clear that there are strategies behind many of the threats human rights defenders receive. These are targeted threats.
Even though we do not always know who is behind them, these threats also always have a source – an individual or a group of individuals, acting alone, or as part of a sanctioned institutional policy.
There is an irony to threats, as well.
People only react when what you do attracts their attention and on some level, threatens them although it sounds strange, ‘threats are almost a measure of effectiveness’.
You are not normally threatened or attacked if what you are doing is ineffectual. It is when you touch on powerful interests that your opponents take notice. And get scared – of you.
And women human rights activists do scare their opponents.
Sometimes this is simply because there is a lack of awareness or knowledge, about who you are and what you do. The media or community members might portray you as home-wreckers, wanting a world without men. Or they may call you a spy or traitor. But when they get to know you better, you can dispel these fears. People begin to understand that you want a better world for everyone.
Sometimes, though, your opponents really should fear you. Because if women activists win their battles, there will be losers. Powerful people will lose political control. Money. Freedom. Their lives.
Repressive regimes will fall. Organised criminal gangs will see their profits from human trafficking and drug-running disappear. Politicians and corporations will be exposed for corruption. Scores of people will face trial at last. Many will spend the rest of their lives in jail.
This is why so many people – politicians, paramilitaries, friends and even family members – try their best to stop you.
They will use a number of different tactics to threaten you. Direct violence is one. But there are so many other ways – often more subtle.
Isolating women is a key tactic, particularly because women human rights defenders draw so much of their power – and protection – from relationships and from solidarity with others.
There are a number of ways to isolate women directly:
There are more indirect, but effective ways of increasing isolation as well, such as planting seeds of doubt and mistrust within communities (through defamation and slander) and even among women defenders themselves.
Another tactic is to wear women down psychologically to discourage them from continuing their work. Sometimes this is done through persistent, constant harassment – such as when the police visit and search offices daily for weeks on end.
Other times it is through ongoing surveillance intended to create a climate of fear.
We need to be clear about the threats you are facing – to uncover them, to extract them from this hidden, subtle, context, by:
By talking about these threats, sharing them openly, in a way, we shine a light on them.
And by seeing them together, by using tools, we can recognise and strengthen our strategies to combat them.