CJA Executive Director Dixon Osburn in The New York Times
- March 9, 2015
Letter to the editor urges Sri Lanka to engage directly with the United Nations investigation and facilitate open and secure engagement for victims in conflict-affected areas. It should immediately appoint an independent prosecutor, autonomous from the attorney general, to investigate past crimes, as Sri Lanka’s own 1994 and 1998 disappearances commissions have recommended.
CJA Staff Attorney Scott Gilmore in The New York Times
- March 6, 2015
CJA Staff Attorney Scott Gilmore’s letter to The New York Times regarding the recent deportation of Bosnian war criminals calls on the Justice Department to step up prosecutions: “While commendable, treating war crimes as an immigration matter falls short of our international obligations. What is missing is criminal justice.”
Piden desestimar demanda en Florida por muerte de Jara
- March 5, 2015
Un teniente retirado del ejército chileno, acusado de haber participado en el asesinato de su compatriota Víctor Jara, pidió a un juez federal de la Florida que desestime la demanda civil en su contra, presentada hace más de un año por la familia del fallecido cantautor y activista político.
Sri Lanka’s Witness Protection Law Step Forward for Accountability
- February 20, 2015
CJA welcomes news that Sri Lanka has adopted a witness protection law. The announcement comes days after the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights agreed to temporarily delay until September a U.N. report on human rights abuses in Sri Lanka during and immediately following its 26-year civil war. Click here to read more.
Family of Víctor Jara Seeks Truth for 1973 Killing Under Pinochet
- February 18, 2015
CJA filed a brief yesterday in our historic case Jara v. Barrientos, accepting the defendant’s motion to set aside a default judgment and agreeing not to oppose the removal of the default judgment against former Pinochet Lieutenant Pedro Pablo Barrientos Nuñez, accused of torturing and killing Chilean folksinger and activist Víctor Jara. The family of Mr. Jara welcomed Barrientos’s motion, which, if granted, would allow the case to proceed to a full trial and bring to light the events that transpired surrounding their loved one’s death. Click here to read more.
Torture Victims from Abu Ghraib Should Have Their Day in Court
- February 6, 2015
CJA urges federal district court Judge Gerald Bruce Lee to hear claims by four Iraqi citizens about torture inflicted on them by U.S. military contractor CACI Premier Technology, Inc. Click here to read more in our press release and click here to read more about CJA’s involvement in this case.
Pope Francis recognises El Salvador’s slain Archbishop Oscar Romero as martyr and opens the way for beatification
- February 4, 2015
CJA’s case against one of Archbishop Romero’s killers is highlighted as Pope Francis recognizes Archbishop Romero’s martyrdom.
CJA Encourages U.S. Engagement on Sri Lanka’s Human Rights Record
- February 2, 2015
CJA sent a letter to U.S. Assistant Secretary Nisha Biswal, encouraging U.S. engagement on Sri Lanka’s human rights record to coincide with Biswal’s visit to Sri Lanka. CJA urged Biswal to acknowledge the positive actions taken by the Sirisena government to build reconciliation with the Tamil community and pressed for additional steps. Click here to read more.
Biswal should urge Sirisena to implement UNHRC report: CJA
- February 2, 2015
CJA urges US Assistant Secretary of State, Nisha Biswal to use her office to encourage Sri Lanka’s newly elected President Maithripala Sirisena to cooperate with the UNHRC in implementing the finding of the UN-led war investigation and take “steps to prosecute those responsible for the crime”.
El fin de la impunidad del ‘caso Ellacuría’
- February 1, 2015
Aquel día la Asociación Pro Derechos Humanos de España (APDHE) y el Center For Justice and Accountability (CJA) presentaron en la Audiencia Nacional una querella contra el entonces presidente de El Salvador, Alfredo Cristiani; Humberto Larios, ministro de Defensa; Juan Orlando Zepeda, coronel y viceministro de Defensa; Inocente Orlando Montano, coronel y viceministro de Seguridad Pública y un grupo del batallón de Infantería Atlacalt, encargados de ejecutar los asesinatos.