About this Violation
You may be illegally arrested and detained by the authorities, due to your work on business-related human rights abuses.
You may be illegally arrested and detained by the authorities, due to your work on business-related human rights abuses.
Being arrested means being bodily confined by the police.
To be lawful, an arrest should be based on a warrant, issued after an investigation of a non-cognisable offence.
Arrest without a warrant from the police or members of the public can be carried out under one of the reasons provided for in the Code of Criminal Procedure:
A combined reading of different Sections of the Constitution protects you against unjustified restraint, as well as violence and torture during arrest and detention.
To the Constitutional Protections, one should add the Torture and Custodial Death (Prohibition) Act, and the relevant provisions of the Criminal Code.
From the moment you are arrested, you should be brought before a Magistrate within 24 hours. If the investigation cannot be completed in 24 hours, the magistrate can authorise the detention of the person for a maximum of 15 days.
A person detained under a law that allows preventive detention, such as the Special Powers Act, can be detained for up to six months. The detention can be prolonged if an Advisory Board has decided that there are grounds for doing so after the person has been given a hearing.
The Bangladesh Constitution includes protections against judicialisation and criminalisation. Section 35 foresees protection from ex post facto laws, and double jeopardy.
According to the Code of Criminal Procedure, the person making the arrest must touch or confine the person being arrested. The least force possible should always be used. If the person resists or attempts to escape, any means necessary can be used to arrest them. However, deadly force can only be used against someone, trying to flee, who is suspected of having committed an offence punishable by death or life imprisonment. If necessary, the police may break open and enter any place where a person is hiding if they are denied access and they believe that the person will escape if they first have to apply for a search warrant. And if the police enter a place to arrest someone and are then locked up in it, they may break a window or door to get out.
The presumption of innocence is included in the Evidence Act. The presumption of innocence is a principle in law that everyone must be presumed to be innocent and treated as such.
Section 101 of the Evidence Act states that anyone who wants a Court to pass judgment on any facts must prove those facts. In other words, when the state charges a person with committing a crime, they must prove that the person committed the crime. Until they have done so, the person must be regarded as innocent. The presumption of innocence can also be seen in other parts of the law and procedure in Bangladesh - for example, people are generally entitled to bail until they are convicted and sentenced.
Warning: Before taking any of the steps listed below, you can strategically assess the risks involved with taking certain actions and make sure that you prioritise your physical and psychological safety and security.
During your arrest and detention, you have the following rights:
If any of your rights above are violated during your arrest or detention, you should raise the issue with the authorities.
If you are already arrested and detained, you can ask for bail by the police, namely, to be released on the condition that you appear in Court whenever you are required to.
Note that not all offences are bailable. Bail can be asked for less serious offences. Section 496 of the Criminal Procedure Code states that the Officer in Charge of a police station must grant bail for bailable offences, if you are prepared to furnish a bail bond. If the police officer does not comply with Section 496, this will amount to dereliction of duty.
In contrast, more serious offences are non-bailable. For those offences, bail cannot be granted if there is evidence that the person could be found guilty of an offence punishable by death or life imprisonment. However, in a few cases, persons charged with non-bailable offences might be granted bail.
Beyond the rights that you have when you are arrested or detained, it might be the case that the state official has maliciously exercised his duties in relation to your arrest or detention. For example, his conduct might be penalized under the sections below:
If you think that the state official who illegally arrested and detained you has committed any criminal offences, you should consider reporting the incident to the nearest police station. Therefore, you should consider reporting the incident to the authorities. This can be done by reporting the incident to the nearest police station.
Depending on the specificities of your case, the police officer will do one of the following:
You can file a complaint directly to the Magistrate. When a cognisable offence is reported directly to a Magistrate, the Magistrate may refer the petition of complaint to the police as an FIR for the police to investigate further. If the Magistrate is of the opinion that the petition does not need to be referred to the police, they can interview the complainant and any witnesses and record what they have to say in writing (Section 200 of the Code of Criminal Procedure). If the Magistrate is of the opinion that there is no substance to the complaint, they may dismiss it. If they believe there is a case to answer, they will take cognisance of the case and proceed.
Where the complaint for a non-cognisable offence is made directly to a Magistrate, the Magistrate will examine the complainant (and any other witnesses present) under oath. If the Magistrate believes an offence has been committed, they will instruct the police to investigate. If not, they may dispose of the case.
Once the police have identified a suspect or suspects and have finished the investigation, they will arrest the suspects or a Court will summons them to appear in Court in minor cases. In non-cognizable cases, the police may arrest an accused without a warrant of arrest. If it is a cognizable offence, they will need to ask a Court to issue a warrant of arrest before arresting the accused.
The case will then go on trial stage. After hearing the prosecution’s case and examining the accused and allowing him to present the case, the court will decide whether the accused should be acquitted for lack evidence or whether he/she should be convicted. The burden of proving the case lies with the prosecutor. To be convicted, the commission of the offence should be proven beyond reasonable doubt.
If you are not satisfied with the outcome of the trial, because, for example, you believe that the accused was unlawfully acquitted, then you can file an appeal. The appeal should be filed before the High Court Division and should be based on the belief that the lower Court made a mistake of fact or an error of law.
You can also ask for ‘revision’ of the decision by a higher court when you think that the correct procedure was not followed. If the higher court finds problems, it will send the case again to the lower court or try the case on its own.
You can ask the Criminal Court for compensation, on the basis of Section 545 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. That section foresees that when a Criminal Court imposes a fine to an accused, then the Court might order that this fine is paid as compensation for any loss or injury caused by the offence to the victim. For such an order, the case should have reached the appeal stage.
Furthermore, under Section 250 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, in cases tried by Magistrates which are proven to be frivolous, the Magistrate may ask the person who instituted the frivolous complaint to pay compensation to the accused. If they do not comply with the Magistrate’s order to pay compensation, then the Penal Code foresees a thirty-day imprisonment.
If you are tortured during detention see [TORTURE].
Warning: Before taking any of the steps listed below, you can strategically assess the risks involved with taking certain actions and make sure that you prioritise your physical and psychological safety and security.
If you are already arrested and detained, you can ask for bail to the Court when you first appear before it or at any other time. If the offence you are charged with is bailable, then the Court is obliged to grant bail, whereas if the offence is non-bailable, it is upon the discretion of the court to grant it or not.
Note that not all offences are bailable. Bail can be asked for less serious offences.
Note that the legal framework foresees also anticipatory bail. If you are likely to be arrested and detained, you have the option to ask for anticipatory bail according to Section 498 of the Criminal Procedure Code. This petition is filed to the High Court Division or to a Court of Sessions.
If you are detained under a law allowing preventive detention, the authority making the order must tell you the grounds for the order as soon as possible and you should be given the opportunity to challenge such an order. The detention order is amenable to judicial scrutiny by the High Division of the country in its writ jurisdiction.
If an administrative authority, a state official or a court, carry out an act, issue a decision or omit to do so, which somehow influence your human rights protection during your arrest and detention, you can consider filing a writ petition. Those petitions can be filed, when you want to ask the court to issue an order directing lower courts or authorities to do something or stop them from doing something. Depending on the specific circumstances of your case, you might choose to file one of the following writs:
Note that in your writ petition, you can also ask for compensation.
After you are arrested and detained, and to address the wrongful proceedings instituted against you, you can file a writ petition before the High Court, using Section 561A of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Section 561A enables the High Court to make the necessary orders to prevent abuse of the process of any Court or otherwise to secure the ends of justice. With this petition, you will ask the High Court to quash the FIR against you or to correct any similar unfairness in your case. You will bear the burden of proof to prove that the FIR has been lodged only for malicious reasons and to trouble you.
To the High Court Division of Supreme Court.
If your arrest and detention were unfair, then you can consider filing a writ petition claiming compensation from the state for the violation (constitutional tort), under Articles 44 and Article 102(1) of the Constitution.
Your rights in relation to arrest and trial procedures are enshrined in Article 33 of the Constitution on ‘safeguards in relation to arrest and detention,’ Article 35 on protections in respect to trial and punishment, Article 31 on the right to protection of the law and Article 27 on equality before the law.
Public law tort can be used as an instrument to get compensation from the government authorities in cases of tortious liability like wrongful confinement by law enforcement agencies, death from the negligence of government authorities, and unlawful arrest.
The Court in the CCB Foundation vs Government of Bangladesh case, held that Article 146 of the Constitution of Bangladesh does not make any distinction between sovereign and non-sovereign act and thus, the claim for compensation against any public authority is not barred by the Constitution.
To the High Court Division of Supreme Court.
Warning: Before taking any of the steps listed below, you can strategically assess the risks involved with taking certain actions and make sure that you prioritise your physical and psychological safety and security.
Hello MP System was developed by the Institute of Informatics and Development. Its aims is to connect citizens of remote villages with their respective Member of Parliament (MP). If you have a complaint for a human rights violation by the state or a state agency, you can use the Hello MP to inform about your situation.
If you are a worker and you have been illegally arrested and detained due to your work on labour issues, you can consider informing the Ministry of Labour and Employment, which is responsible for labour issues.
The Department of Inspection for Factories and Establishments of the Ministry of Labour and Employment has set up a Complaint Helpline, where you can submit work-related complaints free of charge.
If you are a female and you have been illegally arrested and detained, or you have suffered violence during arrest and detention you can approach various responsible agencies.
There is a National Helpline Centre for Violence against Women and Children at the Department of Women Affairs of the Ministry of Women and Child Affairs.
You can approach the Center at 37/3 Eskaton Garden Road, Dhaka-1000
There is also a Helpline Number (109) and an email address 109helpline@gmail.com
Website: www.nhc.gov.bd
You can find further information on state services available online here E-Services - Ministry of Women and Children Affairs- Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh (portal.gov.bd)
There are also various centres that you can contact. Indicatively, the Ain o Salish Kendra (ASK), which provides Legal assistance, emergency shelter and mental healthcare [phone number 01724415677] and the Bandhu Social Welfare Society, which provides Psychosocial support as well as guideline for SRHR and legal aspects [phone number 01714048418 (SRHR); 01771 444666 (legal)]
If you are an indigenous or environmental human rights defender and you have suffered harm due to the acts of a state official, you should consider informing the Ministry of Environment and Forests and the National Environmental Council or the Ministry of Lands, respectively.
Warning: Before taking any of the steps listed below, you can strategically assess the risks involved with taking certain actions and make sure that you prioritise your physical and psychological safety and security.
The National Human Rights Commission of Bangladesh has the mandate under Section 12 of the National Human Rights Commission Act to handle complaints relating to allegation of human rights violations. If a state official or agency violated any of your rights, by illegally arresting you, detaining you or treating you badly during arrest and detention, you may file a complaint to the National Human Rights Commission.
The National Human Rights Commission can inquire into complaints but also initiate inquiries on its own initiative. It focuses on violations committed by a person, the State, a government agency, institution, organisation, or public servant, including violations committed by law enforcement officials. In that regard, it enjoys the power of a civil court.
When investigating a violation, the Commission can appoint mediators or propose arbitration as well as providing legal aid.
If the Commission finds the complaint is true, after concluding the inquiry, it may recommend the government to initiate prosecution or other legal proceedings against the offender. The Commission can also submit a petition before the High Court Division of the Supreme Court on behalf of the victim if certain criteria are met.
The Commission may recommend the government or concerned authority to sanction an amount of temporary grant to the victim or his family, as it considers appropriate.
Section 19(4) stipulates that the Commission shall send the copy of the inquiry report with recommendations to the government or the concerned authority. If the government or the concerned authority does not take action, then they should inform the Commission about it and provide reasons. Equally, they should inform the Commission, if they are willing to take other measures than the ones proposed.
The Commission has a hotline number 16108, e-mail, online through NHRCB website: http://nhrc.org.bd/, by post, in person complaint lodging system at present.
Warning: Before taking any of the steps listed below, you can strategically assess the risks involved with taking certain actions and make sure that you prioritise your physical and psychological safety and security.
Bangladesh has ratified several international human rights treaties. Those treaties provide you with certain rights and the state with certain obligations. For every right that you have, the state has a corresponding obligation to respect and fulfil that right and to protect you against abuse of that right by third parties. This means providing the necessary tools so that you can enjoy that right.
Bangladesh has ratified the following international human rights treaties:
In addition, the UN Guiding Principles for Business and Human Rights apply to all states. The Guiding Principles implement the UN "Protect, Respect and Remedy" Framework, which rests on three pillars:
Therefore, if your rights have been violated by a state agency or official, then the state will be responsible for this violation. If a corporation has committed an abuse against you, then the state will have responsibility for failing to protect you against that abuse. The state might also incur responsibility, if it did not adequately investigate your case or did not provide you with an avenue to seek a remedy.
Depending on the right that has been violated, you might also have different options to engage the international community and seek redress.
If your rights as a woman, a child or a person with disabilities have been violated, the respective legal framework foresees complaints mechanisms, or Committees where you can seek a remedy.
For rights beyond those enshrined in CEDAW and CRPD, there is no process that will result in a concrete remedy for you. However, you may want to consider approaching the international community and making your case internationally. As will be analysed below, this can be useful in improving the human rights situation in your country.
The Special Procedures of the UN Human Rights Council (‘Special Procedures’) are independent human rights experts (‘Rapporteurs’) and ‘Working Groups’ with mandates to report and advise on thematic human rights issues.
With the support of Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), special procedures can:
In cases of business-related human rights abuses, you can draw the attention of your government and raise public awareness by submitting a complaint to the Special Procedures. You can submit a complaint to the Special Procedures if you have suffered an abuse by the state or by a business. Where a business has caused the harm, the state is also responsible for failing to protect you, investigate the harm, and/or provide remedies.
The UN has established various Special Procedures. In cases of attacks against human rights defenders that work on business and human rights issues, the most relevant are:
These are just a few of the Special Procedures. You can find a comprehensive list here: https://spinternet.ohchr.org/ViewAllCountryMandates.aspx?Type=TM&lang=en
In addition, in June 2022, the world’s first Special Rapporteur on environmental defenders was elected under the UNECE Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-Making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters (Aarhus Convention). The function of this new Special Rapporteur is to ‘take measures to protect any person experiencing or at imminent threat of penalization, persecution, or harassment for seeking to exercise their rights under the Aarhus Convention'. You can submit a complaint to the Special Rapporteur even if domestic remedies have not been exhausted and any information submitted will be kept confidential. The new Special Rapporteur has various tools for resolving complaints and protecting environmental defenders quickly including:
Information submitted to the mandate-holders may be sent by a person or a group of persons who claim to be the victim(s) of human rights abuses. Non-governmental organizations (‘NGOs’) can also submit information, provided they have direct and reliable knowledge of the alleged abuse.
Your communication should fulfil the following conditions:
The application for all Special Procedures is the same. Upon receiving the information on your case, the UN will notify the relevant mandate holders. Therefore, you do not have to choose the specific mandate holder for your case, but you must present your case so that all appropriate offices are notified.
Any communication addressed to Special Procedures mandate-holders must clearly indicate what the concern is in the subject heading of the message and be addressed to:
Special Procedures Division c/o OHCHR-UNOG
8-14 Avenue de la Paix 1211 Genève 10, Switzerland
Fax: +4122 917 90 06
Email: urgent-action@ohchr.org (for complaints and individual cases)
For any other information: spdinfo@ohchr.org
You can find the link here [Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights - Submission of information to Special Procedures (ohchr.org)]
It is left to the discretion of the mandate-holder to decide whether to act on a given situation. Usually, the Special Procedure will investigate the case and send a letter to the government regarding the abuse that you reported. The letter will ask for clarifications. Where necessary, the Rapporteurs may request that the concerned authorities take action to prevent or stop the abuse, investigate it, bring to justice those responsible and/or make sure that remedies are available to the victim(s) or their families. In these letters, the Rapporteurs may also inform the state of the applicable human rights provisions. In cases where the state is repeatedly failing to reply, the mandate holder might issue a press release. Upon receiving information on abuses, mandate-holders may carry out visits to countries to investigate the human rights situation on the ground.
! Note that the Special Procedures Rapporteurs do not have the power or authority to enforce their views or recommendations.
To increase exposure and collaboration with the OHCHR, it is recommended that you build relationships with your local OHCHR office. Bangladesh is covered by the OHCHR Headquarters in Geneva.
If possible, it is also recommended to visit the OHCHR in Geneva or network with organisations that work directly with the OHCHR.
It is a confidential procedure that aims to address consistent patterns of gross and reliably attested human rights violations in all UN member states, irrespective of whether they have ratified any particular treaty. It is useful for drawing attention to serious underlying problems and calling on the UN to investigate human rights situations in different countries. However, it is not a procedure that will provide a tangible remedy in a particular case.
The complaint must come from a person or a group of persons alleging a violation of their human rights and fundamental freedoms. In addition, NGOs are permitted to lodge a communication provided they have direct and reliable knowledge of the violations.
Your complaint will be admissible if the following conditions are met:
You should send your complaint to:
Complaint Procedure Unit
Human Rights Council Branch
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
United Nations Office at Geneva
CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland
Or by e-mail to: cp@ohchr.org or to any country or regional office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.
After an initial screening is done, your complaint will be transmitted to the State concerned to obtain their views on the allegations of violations contained therein. You will be informed of the proceedings at the key stages and you might be asked to provide further information if necessary.
The Human Rights Council will examine a report of your case in a confidential manner (unless it decides otherwise) and may decide one of the following: to discontinue considering the situation when further consideration or action is not warranted; to keep the situation under review and request the State concerned to provide further information within a reasonable period of time; to keep the situation under review and appoint an independent and highly qualified expert to monitor the situation and report back to the Council; to discontinue reviewing the matter under the confidential complaint procedure in order to take up public consideration of it; to recommend to OHCHR to provide technical cooperation, capacity building assistance or advisory services to the State concerned.
All material provided by individuals as well as the replies by the Government remains of confidential nature during and after the consideration by the Complaint Procedure.
Some treaties also establish a ‘Committee’ which you can approach when your rights are violated. If an abuse occurs in Bangladesh, the Committees of the following three conventions have the competence to investigate complaints:
Therefore, if your rights as a woman, a child or a person with disabilities have been harmed by the threats, intimidation or harassment that you suffered, then you can file an ‘individual communication’ to the respective Committee.
! Note that your rights can be violated
You might ask for interim or provisional measures before the adoption of a final decision. Those measures can be asked in urgent cases to prevent irreparable harm to the alleged victim, while the case is still pending consideration by the Committee.
“Irreparable harm” refers to harm that, due to its nature, cannot be susceptible to reparation.
If you request interim measures, you must demonstrate that the risk of harm is real and personal and that, should it materialise, the damage would be irreparable. Typical interim measures include, for example, the suspension of the execution of a death sentence or deportation to a country where the person faces a risk of torture or ill-treatment.
! At any stage of the process, you can also request the adoption of protection measures from reprisals and retaliation.
It is recommended that you work collaboratively with NGOs to bring the abuse to the attention of UN bodies. If you require support with your communication, you can find a list of organisations which can provide you with guidance and assistance here.
Necessary information to include in the communication
You can find the form here PUAS-online-form-E.docx (live.com)
The respective committee will receive information from you and the state. Depending on the situation it might ask the state to adopt interim or protective measures to prevent irreparable harm being done to the victim of the alleged violation. Then, it will decide – if applicable – if the state will recognize the violation or find it ill-founded. The committee’s decisions are not legally binding, but the state has a good faith obligation to take it into consideration and implement the recommendations, simply because they have signed the respective treaty.
More information can be found here: OHCHR | Individual Communications
The International Labour Organization (‘ILO’) is a specialised agency of the United Nations, responsible for developing and overseeing international labour standards. It has adopted 189 Conventions. The most important of them are the eight fundamental Conventions, which cover a broad range of topics concerning work, employment, social security, social policy and related human rights. They are legally binding on the states that have ratified them.
Bangladesh has ratified the following fundamental conventions:
You can find the Conventions ratified by Bangladesh here: https://www.ilo.org/dyn/normlex/en/f?p=1000:11200:0::NO:11200:P11200_COUNTRY_ID:103500
Note that the Minimum Age Convention (No. 138) will enter into force for Bangladesh on 22 March 2023.
If any of your rights that are protected by an ILO Convention have been violated by your state, then you should consider approaching the ILO, through the ‘Representations’ procedure.’
The procedure allows employers’ or workers’ organisations to make a representation against any Member State that has failed to respect the convention. You can also resort to that procedure, if a private company is violating your rights, and your state fails to protect you.
Individual victims are not permitted to file complaints before this Committee. Rather, you should inform a national or international organisation of workers (trade union) and they can file the complaint on your behalf. In Bangladesh these include: the Bangladesh Free Trade Union Congress (BFTUC), the Bangladesh Jatyatabadi Sramik Dal (BJSD), the Bangladesh Labour Federation (BLF), the Bangladesh Mukto Sramik Federation (BMSF), the Bangladesh Sanjukta Sramik Federation (BSSF) and the Jatio Sramik League (JSL).
The representation must:
Note that it is not necessary to exhaust all domestic remedies before applying for representation with the ILO. If a case is pending before a national court, this will be taken into consideration by the ad hoc Committee.
All applications should be addressed to the Director General at the following address:
4 Route des Morillons, CH-1211 Genève 22, Switzerland
Or by email to: normes@ilo.org
Achieving justice and remedy for the abuses that you suffered as a human rights defender working on business-related human rights abuses can be a lengthy and difficult process. It may require a combination of patience and strategy, and you may have to call on different resources to achieve your goal. A comprehensive approach may include using legal remedies together with other kinds of complementary strategies such as strategic campaigning, shareholder accountability strategies, grassroots mobilisation, coalition building or gaining media attention.
It can be overwhelming to think about these considerations right after an abuse has taken place. Before thinking about the strategies, you want to use, try to make sure you are both physically and mentally safe and strong.
Remember that you are not alone in this situation and that there are a range of organisations that can help you and provide you with immediate support in case of an emergency or financial, legal and psychological difficulties. See Resource Hub.
The first thing you may want to consider is building a strategic campaign. A strategic campaign aims to exert pressure on the different strategic relationships of a business or state actor. To develop a strategic campaign, you should carefully analyse your situation and decide which actions will have the most positive impact for your case.
For example, you will have to decide whether you want to deal with your case publicly or privately, loudly or quietly, in a manner that takes into account the political and other sensitivities that exist in your country. The purpose of the strategic campaign is for you to get a clear picture of the situation, the direction you want to take your case and the concrete actions you can attempt to take to achieve this result.
This whole process will be demanding on your resources and your mental and physical health so do not hesitate to reach out and ask for help from organisations that are used to dealing with similar cases! There is no shame in doing so and they can provide you with valuable expertise. See Resource Hub.
To build a strategic campaign you and your collaborators can follow these five steps:
1- Identify your objectives and overall goal: You can do this by asking yourself questions such as What do I want to happen? What do I hope to achieve?
Your overall goal will be the long term and general outcome that you want to achieve. To reach this goal you will need to identify smaller steps and specific milestones that need to take place, these will be your objectives.
! When deciding on your objectives, make sure that they are SMART:
2- Take the time to do a policy analysis and identify your audience: You can identify the policies and regulations that need to change, the key actions and stakeholders who can influence decisions and understand the overall political context that will influence your overall goal. You will further need to identify the stakeholders that can help you achieve your objectives. For example, who are the decision makers involved in the issue? What are the power dynamics at play? You should understand why and how each audience you approach can play a role in reaching your goal or can hinder it. Do not forget, when considering actors that could hinder your goal, to be as specific as possible and write down all details you can find on them including their names and functions.
! Note that if some corporate actors can hinder your goal, other business representatives might help you achieve it! Businesses do not all have the same policies and attitudes when it comes to the respect of human rights and the environment. By interacting with business representatives and industry groups you might find valuable allies that can provide you with support in a variety of ways including testifying on your behalf, paying for bail and fines, or speaking up on your behalf.
3- Identify your strengths, weaknesses and your message: It will be helpful for you to reflect on your internal strengths - skills, knowledge, resources, past experience - and weaknesses - missing networks, capacity for lobbying, contacts in the media or funding. Once you have identified these, you can search for opportunities that exist around you and will enable you to tackle your weaknesses and achieve your objectives. You should further consider the threats that could prevent you from achieving your objectives by asking yourself who are your opponents? Is there a negative political climate around your objective? Identifying them early will enable you to minimise the damage and safety risks they can present.
Once you have reflected on your strengths and weaknesses, you will need to identify what your audience needs to hear and present your message in a persuasive and appealing way. At their core, your messages should be the same, however, depending on the audience you will target, you will need to adapt the way they are framed. Most of the time, advocacy messages have two major components: (1) a calling for what is right and (2) a calling for the audience’s self-interest. You can find different methods to develop advocacy messages by using the key words “advocacy message” and “effective” on google.
4- Identify your tactics and activities: Depending on your situation and objectives, you will have to use different strategies and tactics to reach your goal. To choose the appropriate tactics for you to use, you can develop a ‘results chain’. The chain will start with your overall goal and outline the small steps you will need to take to get there. In your chain you can describe the assumptions you are making about the impact of the activities you plan on doing. This will help you reflect on your logic and might show you missing activities. It will further help you understand the kind of resources, be it financial or volunteers, that you will need to put your campaign into action. There are various organisations that you can reach out to for financial support. See Resource Hub.
A few examples of activities include one-to-one meetings with high level representatives, the organisation of workshops and conferences, the drafting of a letter to international civil servants, a mass participation event engaging members of the community, social media posts or petitions.
5- Monitor and Evaluate: Finally, you want to make sure that you are keeping track of the efforts you are putting into your campaign to ensure that they are working. You will also want to organise meetings to monitor the campaign and make sure it is going in the direction you want.
Grassroots mobilisation is about bringing together individuals - in your district, region, or community - to influence a specific outcome. It is one of the key elements in successful campaign strategies. Grassroots mobilisation can be highly effective, as we have seen with the #SaveAru movement, because it uses collective action at a local level to influence outcomes at the national level. When every member of the community is participating in ways that they can, and are equally responsible and invested in the cause, the movement is truly powered by collective leadership. The costs of the movement are further distributed between all members of the community and thereby become more affordable.
To build grassroots mobilisation, you and your collaborators can follow five simple steps:
1- Identify the cause you want to address and make a plan of action;
2- Find supporters and volunteers to join your campaign;
3- Reach out and partner with local organisations and community leaders;
4- Implement your plan of action; and
5- Regularly evaluate your progress.
! Do not forget that, when it comes to mobilising members of a community, listening and understanding is more important than influencing and persuading. Having several short conversations will be more efficient than a one-off long speech to a general audience!
To get started, you should identify the cause you want to address
(1). The problem that you want to tackle most probably has a root cause. For example, it can be the lack of respect for human rights and the environment by a company which operates in proximity to your village and has threatened you; the absence of legislation by the government to protect people defending the environment; or the inefficiency of local government officials to implement a law, among other potential root causes. You need to identify the root cause you want to tackle so that you can clearly define the actions and steps you want to take to resolve the issue. Defining the outcome, you are looking to achieve will also be crucial to give your movement a clear direction.
Once you have identified the cause you want to address, you can start creating awareness about your campaign and get interest from individuals in the community
(2). Communication will play a key role here and you can use different approaches such as door-to-door canvassing, face-to-face conversations, emails, phone calls or social media to reach as many community members as possible. Having a campaign website or a Facebook page can be a useful tool to speed up this process and will make you gain important visibility online! It will further constitute a good opportunity to start building the next step by building a list of potential partner organisations.
Using your website and the networks of members from the community you can approach like-minded local organisations and community leaders. See Resource Hub.
(3). To reach out to them you could offer to give a short presentation about your campaign during their events or simply provide your help during their rallies to get to know like-minded people and talk about your campaign. Usually, civil society organisations have dealt with or assisted defenders in similar contexts in the past. They can share their valuable experience with you, guide you on what to do, explain the law and your rights, guide you on where to find support and identify pro bono lawyers that can help you plead your case or provide support in building an advocacy campaign.
! You should not ignore community leaders! Community leaders can be valuable allies that you can collaborate with to convey important messages of your campaign. If a community leader endorses the changes and propositions you raise, they will be more likely to be accepted and followed by the community and your movement will gain traction. Examples of community leaders that can help you are religious leaders, local political office holders or village figureheads.
Once you have built a solid basis of supporters you can start implementing your plan of action
(4). You can take a variety of actions as part of your plan including rallies, outdoor events, in-house groups, training sessions, organising for a group of volunteers to exchange with the local representative or staging a demonstration. No matter the activity that you choose to conduct, the key to success will be having successful communication. You can keep your supporters up to date on actions conducted through SMS, WhatsApp, and encrypted apps such as Telegram and/or post your announcements for events on your campaign website and Facebook page. Do not forget to communicate with your organisers and volunteer team to make sure everyone has the same information including the date, time, and place of the events.
During your campaign, you can organise regular meetings with your supporters to evaluate the success of your actions
(5). This will enable you to reflect on what went well and what did not and give you avenues for improving your upcoming events. At the end of the campaign, it will also enable you to see if you have reached your objectives.
Reaching out to other organisations and talking about your case will give you the opportunity to build coalitions. A coalition is a temporary alliance of individuals, groups or organisations that want to achieve a common goal. Forming a coalition with other organisations that have similar values, interests, and goals as your own will allow you to combine your resources and thereby have more impact than if you acted alone. It can be of great help to shift the balance of power and increase the impact of each of your organisation's efforts. Actions taken by the coalition can be focused towards bringing attention to your and other human rights defender cases in the media, requesting for a motion filed by lawyers to be considered or request the international community to act.
To successfully build a coalition you need to take a series of steps.
Another complementary strategy for your case may be to gain visibility and attention by getting media coverage. Before deciding if you want to use this strategy, you should ask yourself whether you want your case to be publicly known and talked about or if you would rather go about, it quietly. Gaining media coverage can play a pivotal role in presenting your case, promoting it in public debate and positively shaping public opinion in your favour. However, this may expose you to further retaliation, as companies may use strategic lawsuits against public participation to try to silence you. For example, the company could bring a defamation suit against you, the journalist who interviewed you and/or the organisation that published the article. Importantly, you must be careful that the journalist does not reveal your current location so as not to compromise your safety.
To attract media coverage, your story should be prepared in such a way as to catch the attention of readers. You can do this by highlighting why your organisation exists, how important your work is to society and by providing details about the abuse that you have suffered. If you can, try to link your story to an issue that is currently talked about in the public space as this will be more likely to interest the media. Finally, if you can show how your story affects other people and has an impact on wider society, this will increase the interest of newspapers.
Once your story is ready, you can use social media to promote it by publishing blog posts, Instagram stories, Facebook posts and/or tweets. This will enable you to gain public attention and establish your cause before getting traditional media interested in what you have to say.
If you want the attention of mainstream media, you can collaborate with other national and international organisations to contact reporters. You can reach journalists by email, through their social networks (such as LinkedIn, Facebook or Twitter) or through partner organisations. You will have a better chance of getting your interview request accepted if you choose journalists who are used to covering the same kind of story as yours.
! Be aware that journalists can receive a lot of requests so keep your emails short and to the point!
If you don't get a response to your first contact request, you can follow up by tweeting the reporter or trying to contact them by phone. Don't get discouraged as getting media attention can be a long process during which you may end up sending your story to twenty journalists before one responds.
When a journalist becomes interested in your story, they will most likely want to talk to you in person. To make sure you are well prepared for the interview, keep in mind three key points you want to make and practice answering questions with a colleague.
Once the interview is over, do not forget to thank the journalist for his or her time. Following the publication of the article, you can forward it to regional or national newspapers thereby gaining exposure and/or circulate it among your partner organisations.
Although business-related human rights abuses find corporate actors at the heart of the human rights abuses, you should not forget that businesses and industry groups do not all have the same policies, attitudes, and views when it comes to the respect for human rights and the environment.
You might want to look for allies in the private sector by reaching out to business representatives and industry groups and explain the issues you are facing. Private actors might become valuable allies who can provide you with support in a variety of ways including by testifying on your behalf, paying for bail and fines, or speaking up on your behalf.
Equally important is to make your case known at international level.
National and international non-governmental organisations are allies in your strategic campaign and have a fundamental role to play in channelling information to relevant institutions abroad. One of their main tasks is to submit the so-called shadow reports to international bodies or during the Universal Periodic Review Process. Those reports analyse how and if the government is realising human rights at the national level and provide the necessary background information to international organisations. In turn, if the shadow reports reveal information on serious and systematic violations of the rights protected by the conventions in the country concerned, international institutions can initiate inquiries or visits to the territory of a State Party. By making your case known to NGOs and INGOs, it can be included in their shadow report. Although this will not give you a tangible remedy, you will have added your brick to the wall of human rights in your country.
You can also bring international attention to your case through the various organisations worldwide that work to protect human rights defenders - including Frontline Defenders, Protect Defenders and Peace Brigades International. You can register your case with one of them, and they will identify the best ways to support you internationally. Be aware that they may publish something on their website or link you with other victims or experts worldwide. If your case is widely known, the offenders might hesitate to retaliate against you in the future. There are also many organisations that work on business and human rights issues that can share legal resources with you, both domestically and internationally. Most importantly, both kinds of organisations can direct you on where to find funding and donors to continue your legal case and to propose other resources necessary for your work as a human rights defender.
You can also contact political figures to draw attention to your case. For example, you can ask a foreign diplomat - by contacting the foreign ministry of the country in question or the embassy - to listen to your story, to come to your trial or simply to have a photo taken with you. This will show your abuser that your case is being taken seriously at the international level and may make them think carefully about retaliatory actions in the future.
If you are uncomfortable with contacting diplomats of foreign countries, you can contact international civil servants instead. International civil servants are not linked to a specific country but rather to an organisation. To contact them, you can look up the offices of OHCHR, UNDP or the ILO in your country. These organisations often organise informal events such as consultations and webinars during which you can have the opportunity to raise your concerns and build a support network.