ዶ/ር ኣብርሃም በላይ የትግራይ ክልል ግዜያዊ ኣስተዳዳሪ ሆነው ዛሬ ተሹመዋል::
መልካም የስራ ዕድል


VICE World News has spoken to seven current and former Amnesty International Canada employees who alleged their workplace was rife with racist microaggressions and tokenization, and had a culture of white savourism. They said there wasn’t adequate recourse for BIPOC staff dealing with microaggressions and not enough accountability from Stoyles and others in management, including Wendy Miyagawa, the head of human resources, who was recently on leave.cannot provide comments on employee personal information. It is correct that Jayne Stoyles has recently left the organization.
the statement said, adding the board is takingWe need to dismantle the systemic and structural elements of racism that are embedded deeply within our organization in order to credibly lead this work externally,
In a statement to VICE World News, Stoyles said every organization and individual should be working to uncover systemic racism and unlearn biases.concrete steps forward to build an anti-racist organization.
she said.Amnesty International Canada was doing that work under my leadership, and I have no doubt that it will continue. When an organization is making space for this, there can easily be a mix of the real and the perceived coming up, and things that require more information and context to understand,
Amnesty International is one of the most recognized human rights organizations in the world. According to its website, its mission, spread across more than 150 countries, is toI hope the work Amnesty is doing can be a positive example of what all workplaces should be doing.
An employee told VICE World News Amnesty’s Canadian branch employs around 40 or 50 people, who work out of offices in Ottawa, Toronto, and Vancouver. It reported more than $14 million in fundraising revenue https://go.skimresources.com/?id=100767 ... %20%5B0%5D at the end of 2019, with local campaigns focusing on Indigenous rights, crisis response, women’s rights, and refugees and migrants, among other issues.conduct research and generate action to prevent and end grave abuses of human rights and to demand justice for those whose rights have been violated.
andpeople don’t talk to each other
The former employee said Oliver also asked her,there are some people here who feel that white people should not be working in human rights.
Oliver told VICE World News she doesn’t believe she said made the comment about racism towards white people, but she did engage in a conversationDo you think people of colour can be racist against white people?
She said in light of her learning about oppression and racism over the past 18 months, she would not have had that conversation today.about individuals not wanting to be judged solely on the basis of their race, although it's different for white people like me because there isn't the systemic racism reinforcing inequitable levels of power and privilege.
Oliver added.We were not having constructive conversations about race within our staff group as a whole and my words reflected comments that had been made in various meetings I had been in at that time,
different learning journeys.
said the former employee, who quit after five months at the organization.I got out as soon as I could,
According to an all-staff email exchange from February obtained by VICE World News, one of the most recent rounds of discussions about racism within Amnesty International Canada stemmed from frustration from some staff members about the organization’s failure to recognize Black History Month, aside from mandating diversity training carried out by a group some employees identified as “harmful.”You just know when an environment isn’t healthy.
and had previously lodged complaints about CCDI’s training with supervisors and Miyagawa.basic to the point of uselessness
wrote one employee in the email exchange.It is disappointing that the organization seems not to have thought to address (Black History Month) or intentionally use it as an opportunity to talk about anti-Black racism, despite saying that there is no higher priority than anti-oppression,
Miyagawa told VICE World News a number of the allegations made about her are false, though she did not specify which ones. She said shedeflecting and delaying any action on the issues.
engaged third-party counselling services for colleagues experiencing harms, and took all informal concerns seriously.
she said.I had been raising my concerns regarding the lack of diversity, equity, and inclusion since I joined Amnesty Canada in 2013. I have been working tirelessly in the background identifying, reporting, and trying to eliminate systemic barriers,
In email responses to staff, Stoyles acknowledged the lack of internal recognition around Black History Month had been a “lost opportunity” and apologized for the CCDI webinar on Black Lives Matter hosted by a white facilitator.Much of this work, which goes beyond my job description, was only possible with the support of Jayne Stoyles.
she wrote on February 9.It was highly inappropriate and should not have been promoted to our staff, nor should it have been left to racialized staff to raise this. I’m deeply sorry that that happened,
She also said the overall plan for 2020 wasWe need to be able to talk about the approaches and issues at depth, really hear from each other as to what is and isn’t working and why, and create the path forward together.
Ketty Nivyabandi, secretary general of Amnesty International Canada’s English branch, set up a town hall to discuss the issues in the thread, which several employees expressed appreciation for in the email chain.to get everyone to the same baseline of conceptual understanding and work hard on individual self-awareness, while also addressing situations through disciplinary processes as needed.
she said.From that lens, I think Amnesty may want to look at ‘Are all of these topics actually for all of my employees or not?’
one former employee said, noting a now defunct-rule that stated Amnesty branches would appear to be biased if they campaigned about human rights issues in their own country.There is also Canadian-exceptionalism type thinking at Amnesty Canada within their white supremacy work culture. That we simply do not have human rights abuses in Canada that match human rights abuses elsewhere,
In a statement to VICE World News, Neve said his hesitation about launching a new program focused on anti-Black racism in policing was tied to limited resources within the branch and had nothing to do with worries about appearing biased. But he said advocacy work tied to the commission report was included in Amnesty’s 2019 agenda.I certainly leave knowing there is more I should have done or done differently to address the realities of oppression and racism that run deep in our Branch and movement.
he said.I appreciate and respect the staff who raised the concern and initiated this important work, and absolutely acknowledge it should not be on the shoulders of racialized staff to do so,
An October 2018 email from another departing employee echoed concerns about Amnesty’s hiring practices.Why are the permanent staff at Canada’s largest human rights organization almost entirely made up of older white people? Yet our field workers and youth leaders are largely made up of people of colour. Does Amnesty Canada believe that the labour of people of colour does not deserve compensation?
the email said.I have watched individuals jump into management positions and hiring panels, having had numerous complaints against them as a result of making discriminatory remarks, none of which have been addressed,
A 2019 internal report on Amnesty International Canada employee experiences notes that 62.5 percent of participants hadWhen messages like these are sent, it is important to remember that they are very likely to have the effect of launching a stream of gossip and speculation that contributes to a negative environment and—most importantly—that makes some colleagues feel unfairly targeted, disrespected, and undervalued.
The report, which surveyed 40 employees, also found 41 percent of participants felt that cliquish behaviourexperienced discrimination/oppression/microaggressions in the last 12 months.
Of that group,contributes to issues of oppression/discrimination.
the report said.the majority felt that newer staff are often met by aggression and defensiveness from older (white) staff,