Like Water on Stone: The Story of Amnesty International

Like Water on Stone: The Story of Amnesty International

by JonathanPower (Author)

Synopsis

Founded forty years ago and almost immediately dubbed one of the larger lunacies of our time , Amnesty International is now the most influential non-governmental organization in the world. With a membership of over one million, its power to influence political debate has become almost legendary and its press releases receive front-page treatment. Scolded and prodded by Amnesty, democratic governments have made human rights a central tenet, if not always the practice, of policy. Even totalitarian governments are wary of its influence. Like Water on Stone tells the story of the organization from day one to the present. In its early days Amnesty nearly tore itself apart over suspicions that it had been penetrated by the British intelligence agencies; its founder, Peter Benenson, resigned and many predicted its quick demise. Beginning with the personal story of his long-time friendship with one of Amnesty's best-known adopted political prisoners, Olusegun Obasanjo, now the democratically elected president of Nigeria, Jonathan Power looks at Amnesty's work worldwide, including Guatemala, where their personnel risked life and limb to help those facing the death squads, and in the Central African Republic, where they highlighted the horrific massacre of defenceless children. Other chapters examine the attempt to bring General Pinochet to justice, Britain's dirty war in Northern Ireland and one of the black marks in Amnesty's own history, their mistaken support of the Baader-Meinhof gang. Finally, Power focuses on the USA and its failure to address its own widespread human-rights violations. Forty years on, Amnesty continues to question orthodoxies -even liberal ones. Under Secretary-General Pierre Sane, it has radically reassessed its objectives. The struggle to free political prisoners around the globe goes on, but it also recognizes the need to fight for human rights in whatever form they are denied or abused. Its successes often bring no more reward than that which comes from the constant dripping of water on stone. But as Jonathan Power asserts, Amnesty may not yet have changed the world, but it hasn't left it as it found it either .

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: Allen Lane
Published: 21 May 2001

ISBN 10: 0713993197
ISBN 13: 9780713993196

Author Bio
For seventeen years a columnist for the International Herald Tribune, Jonathan Powers' column is syndicated to over twenty newspapers worldwide. He writes or has written for, among others, The New York Times, the Washington Post, Encounter and Prospect on international affairs, politics and human rights,as well as writing and presenting BBC radio documentaries and films for both the BBC and ITV, winning the silver medal at Venice Film Festival in 1972.