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Amnesty International Jersey Group

Our Jersey members seek to protect overseas prisoners at risk of torture or other wrongful prosecution. We meet to campaign for those prisoners, usually on the third Wednesday of the last month in each quarter.


We send letters and Jersey postcards with Jersey stamps to them and to their ministers, embassies and governors. We know from feedback that this works. Please join our Group to help protect those prisoners.


Our next regular meeting will be our AGM on Wednesday 18th March 2026 in the Capelain Room, Town Hall, St Helier at 5.30pm


Future meetings (provisionally all St.Helier Town Hall)

Wednesday June 17th 2026

Wednesday September 16th 2026

Wednesday December 16th 2026

Wednesday March 17th 2027 (AGM) 

Wednesday June 16th 2027


 
At the start of our AGM on Wednesday 18th March we will be writing postcards to Umar Khalid and sending a letter in his support to India's High Commissioner in London

Umar Khalid is a former student leader and researcher from New Delhi, born in 1987. He studied at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), where he became known for his involvement in student politics and campaigns promoting equality, minority rights, and democratic freedoms. In 2017 he helped found a civil society group called United Against Hate, formed in response to rising communal violence and discrimination.

Khalid was arrested on 13 September 2020 in connection with protests against India’s Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). The CAA was widely criticised by activists and legal scholars who argued that it discriminated on religious grounds by excluding Muslims from certain fast-track citizenship provisions. Protests took place across India in late 2019 and early 2020; while most demonstrations were peaceful, violence did occur in parts of Delhi in February 2020.

Authorities allege that Khalid conspired to incite violence linked to those events. He has been charged under several laws, most significantly the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), India’s principal anti-terror legislation. The UAPA has been criticised by human rights organisations because it makes bail extremely difficult to obtain and allows lengthy pre-trial detention.

Khalid has been held in Tihar Jail, New Delhi, since his arrest. Despite spending years in custody, his trial has not begun. Multiple bail applications have been denied, including at higher court levels. He remains imprisoned without a judicial determination of guilt.

Human rights groups, including Amnesty International and other international organisations, argue that his prolonged detention violates the right to a fair and timely trial under international human rights law. They consider his case emblematic of broader concerns about the use of anti-terror legislation to detain activists and critics of government policy.

At our coffee morning at the Radisson hotel on February 18th 2026 we wrote postcards in support of Chow Hang-tung who is a Hong Kong barrister, human rights defender and pro-democracy activist detained under Hong Kong’s National Security Law. Born in 1985, she studied at the University of Cambridge before returning home to retrain as a lawyer, determined to defend civil liberties and the rule of law.

She is best known for her leadership role in the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements of China, which for more than three decades organised Hong Kong’s annual candlelight vigil marking the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Attended by tens of thousands, the vigil became a powerful symbol of freedom of expression and the right to remember historical truths.

After senior Alliance leaders were arrested in 2021, Chow emerged as one of its most prominent representatives. In September that year, she was arrested and later charged with “inciting subversion” under the National Security Law — an offence carrying potentially lengthy prison terms. The charges stem from peaceful activities, including advocating remembrance of Tiananmen and calling for democratic reform.

She has also been convicted in relation to allegedly unlawful assemblies, including pandemic-era vigil bans. Chow has faced prolonged pre-trial detention and repeated denial of bail, raising serious due process concerns.

Despite imprisonment, Chow’s courage has made her a symbol of Hong Kong’s shrinking civic space and the struggle to uphold fundamental rights. 

Chairman Michael du Pré writes:-


I laid a wreath on behalf of all Amnesty International Jersey members at the Holocaust Remembrance Day commemoration on Tuesday, 27th  January 2026


I did so in the belief that remembrance is not only about honouring the victims of the Holocaust, but also about reaffirming the values that must guide us today. The Holocaust stands as the most extreme consequence of what can happen when human rights are stripped away, when discrimination is normalised, and when silence allows injustice to grow unchecked.


For Amnesty, remembering the Holocaust is therefore not an abstract or historical act. It is directly connected to our work: defending human dignity, challenging persecution, and standing up for those whose voices are ignored or suppressed.


Laying the wreath is a way of expressing our collective commitment to those principles, and of standing in solidarity with all victims of genocide, persecution, and crimes against humanity — past and present.


The note attached to the wreath read:


'In remembrance of the victims of the Holocaust, and in commitment to the defence of human dignity, justice, and human rights for all'.

Cases we supported in 2025

Desk at Jersey Library 20th November 2025

Member Tom Bunting (left) and chairman Michael du Pré at our small afternoon/evening event at the Jersey Library. Our chairman is keen to attract youth to Amnesty International and schoolchildren go to the second floor of the Library to do their homework. So we set ourselves up at a desk with our postcards and a large new poster at the bottom of the main staircase. Sad to say, the nation's youth could not be diverted from its devotion to homework, though some of our members (like Tom) turned up to send postcards to Zhang Yadi (Tara) see below

 

At our meeting of December 17th we supported Chinese student Zhang Yadi (Tara) and United Arab Emirates Human Rights campaigner Ahmed Mansoor


Zhang Yadi, known online as Tara, is a 22-year-old Chinese student detained for peacefully promoting dialogue between Chinese and Tibetan communities.

After moving to France in 2022 to study at the École Supérieure de Commerce de Paris, Zhang joined Chinese Youth Stand for Tibet, a digital platform formed after China’s White Paper protests. Fluent in Chinese, Tibetan, English and French, she wrote widely about Tibetan culture, reconciliation and mutual respect. She said: “Supporting Tibetans is not just about speaking out for them, but also about fighting for a path to freedom for ourselves.”

Awarded a scholarship to study Anthropology at School of Oriental and African Studies in 2025, Zhang returned to China in July 2024 to visit family. She was arrested in Shangri-La, Yunnan, and later transferred to Changsha, Hunan, accused of “inciting others to split the country.” She is reportedly held incommunicado by the State Security Bureau.


 

Ahmed Mansoor - Amnesty International Jersey Group last took up his case in May 2019. We did so again on December 17th because he is still in prison.


Human rights defender, blogger and poet Ahmed Mansoor remains imprisoned in the United Arab Emirates after the Federal Supreme Court upheld his conviction and 10-year sentence on 31 December. Amnesty International considers him a prisoner of conscience.

Ahmed was arrested on 20 March 2017 and later convicted of publishing “false information” that allegedly harmed the UAE’s “social harmony and unity.” His trial was conducted in near-total secrecy. He was sentenced to ten years in prison and fined the equivalent of US$270,000.

He is held at al Wathba prison, where he has reportedly been subjected to prolonged solitary confinement. At the time of his arrest, Ahmed was the last independent voice openly speaking out against human rights violations from inside the country.

 

From our meeting of 17th September 2025 - Two cases. Iran and Israel.


Reza Khandan is a human rights defender and the husband of prominent woman human rights defender Nasrin Sotoudeh. He campaigns against compulsory veiling laws and the death penalty in Iran. In 2019, he received a six-year prison sentence on trumped-up charges of “gathering and collusion with the intention of acting against national security” and “propaganda activities against the state,” mainly for producing and distributing “no-to-obligatory-hijab” badges.

On 13 December 2024, he was arrested at his home and taken to a Tehran police station. The next day, he was transferred to Evin Court and then Evin Prison, where he remains detained. Nasrin Sotoudeh was barred from visiting him because she refused to wear the compulsory hijab. Reza Khandan was informed that a reduced sentence of three years and six months issued by the Court of Appeals in 2019 would now be enforced.


On 17th September 2025, the Amnesty International Jersey Group wrote to Brigadier General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, Military Advocate General of the Israel Defence Forces, calling for the release of Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, a respected paediatrician and director of Kamal Adwan Hospital.

Dr Abu Safiya was detained on 27 December 2024 during a raid on the hospital that forced its closure. Staff, patients and visitors were taken away, and his whereabouts remain unknown, raising grave concerns for his safety.

A leading health professional in Gaza, Dr Abu Safiya had been a vital source of information on the humanitarian crisis in the north. Despite the killing of his son in October 2024, he continued caring for children and speaking out.

The Jersey Group urged Israeli authorities to disclose his whereabouts, protect him from torture or ill-treatment, allow access to legal and medical care, and secure his immediate release, stressing that protecting doctors and hospitals is a core obligation under international law.


 

AGM of 2nd July 2025 - Case of Manahel al-Otaibi, Saudi Arabia


Manahel al-Otaibi is a Saudi woman detained for peacefully expressing support for women’s rights online, including the #EndMaleGuardianship campaign. She was first charged by a criminal court in Riyadh under the Anti-Cybercrime Law for posts allegedly undermining religious principles and social values. In January 2023, the case was transferred to the Specialized Criminal Court, which is known for using vague laws to criminalise peaceful expression. Amnesty International has documented serious due-process violations in SCC proceedings.

Manahel has been subjected to repeated enforced disappearances, including from November 2023 to April 2024 and again from December 2024 to March 2025. She reported prolonged solitary confinement in al-Malaz Prison, beatings that broke her leg, forced labour, and denial of medical care.


Amnesty International Jersey Group, Constitution

(With amendments proposed at Constitution Sub-Committee Meeting 1/5/13)


1. NAME

The name of the organisation shall be “Amnesty International Jersey Group” (hereinafter “the Group”).


2. AIMS

The aims, objectives and methods of the Group shall be those of the UK Section of Amnesty International (“the AIUK Section”) and in particular to promote the mailing of campaign letters from Jersey.


3. POWERS

For the purpose of carrying out the objects, the Group shall have the following powers:

(a) To accept subscriptions and donations;
(b) To raise funds on behalf of the AIUK Section;
(c) To take such lawful steps by appeals, public meetings or otherwise as may, from time to time, be deemed expedient for the purpose of procuring contributions to the funds of the Group in the form of donations, subscriptions or otherwise;
(d) To print and publish, or procure to be printed and published, or to circulate or procure to be circulated (whether gratuitously or not) any newspapers, periodicals, magazines, books, pamphlets or other documents that may be deemed necessary or desirable for the promotion of the objects of the Group or any of them;
(e) To deposit the moneys of the Group not immediately required for its purposes in or upon such interest-bearing accounts as may be thought fit;
(f) To establish and support, or aid in the establishment and support, or become a member of or co-operate with any charitable association or institution, whether incorporated or not and whether in Jersey or elsewhere, and to subscribe or guarantee money for charitable purposes in any way connected with the purposes of the Group or calculated to further its objects;
(g) To employ or contract such persons or companies as may be necessary in the carrying out and general implementation of these rules and to provide for, arrange and implement the training of such persons;
(h) To do all such things as are incidental to the attainment of the above objects or any of them.


4. MEMBERSHIP

(a) Members are those who have agreed to have their name and preferred contact details held on the Group’s membership database, having completed and lodged the Group’s approved form of membership with the member specifically appointed at the Annual General Meeting as the Membership Co-ordinator.
(b) If a group subscription is fixed in accordance with Clause 5 below, only members who have paid their subscription shall be entitled to vote at any meeting of the Group (“Voting Members”). If a subscription is not fixed, then the term Voting Members shall include all Members of the Group.
(c) Membership of the Group shall terminate either on the resignation of the member from the Group, or withdrawal of membership by the Group under Clause 9 below.


5. GROUP SUBSCRIPTIONS

(a) The Group shall fix the amount of any subscription payable by members, which shall be due on such date in each year as the Group at its Annual General Meeting shall determine.
(b) The Group may only remit part of a member’s Group subscription by reference to the fact that he or she is a student or a member of any other class which in the opinion of the Group merits remission.


6. MEETINGS

(a) The Group may hold Group Meetings, Annual General Meetings (AGMs) and Extraordinary General Meetings (EGMs).
(b) The activities of the Group shall be determined by Group Meetings, which shall be held monthly, whenever possible, and which shall be open to all members.
(c) Five Voting Members shall constitute a quorum at a Group Meeting and ten Voting Members at an AGM or EGM.
(d) For a meeting to be valid, at least two of the members holding the office of Chair, Vice-Chair, Secretary or Treasurer shall be present.
(e) The Chair or, failing the Chair, the Vice-Chair shall preside, if present, at all meetings, and failing this the meeting shall elect its own Chair.
(f) Minutes of each meeting shall be kept by the Secretary (or by another member deputising for the Secretary).
(g) An AGM shall be held within two months of the end of the financial year and at least twenty-one days’ notice shall be given to all members by their preferred contact method in accordance with each member’s approved form of membership. The main purpose of the AGM shall be to elect officers and to receive reports from the Chair and the Treasurer.
(h) A Group Meeting or an AGM may decide to call an EGM for the purpose of conducting certain items of business of which it considers all members of the Group should be notified. At least four Voting Members may also, by written notice setting out with sufficient particularity the issue they wish to be considered and sent to the Vice-Chair at the official Jersey Amnesty Group address, requisition an EGM. The Secretary shall, within fourteen days, give notice to all members of the meeting and the matter to be discussed. Not less than ten days’ prior notice by their preferred contact method shall be given of any EGM to all members of the Group.
(i) Subject to Clauses 9 and 11 below, voting at all meetings shall be by simple majority of Voting Members personally present.


7. SUB GROUPS

(a) Sub Groups may be formed and dissolved by a Group Meeting. Their remit, composition (to include co-opted non-members), and quorum shall be determined by the Group Meeting and they shall be accountable to the Group.
(b) Each Sub Group shall report on its plans and activities to at least each alternate Group Meeting.
(c) All moneys received by Sub Groups shall be paid into the Group’s bank account as soon as practicable.


8. OFFICERS

(a) The Group’s Officers shall be a Chair, Vice-Chair, Secretary and Treasurer (“the Officers”) who shall be elected from the Voting Members annually at the AGM. Should a vacancy occur during the course of the year, an EGM has the power to appoint a replacement to hold office until the next AGM. Nominations for candidates for the Officers shall be received by the Chair and by the Secretary either in writing or by email not less than four days before the relevant AGM or EGM, and shall name the candidate, proposer and seconder, all of whom shall be Voting Members.
(b) The election of members to hold specific responsibilities shall also be held annually at the AGM. Where a vacancy occurs during the course of the year, a Group Meeting has the power to appoint a replacement until the next AGM.


9. WITHDRAWAL OF MEMBERSHIP

(a) A Group Meeting, by a majority of two-thirds of Voting Members present, may resolve to suspend membership of the Group from any Member, such resolution to have immediate effect. A duly convened EGM shall be held as soon as convenient following such suspension, at which a resolution to withdraw membership of the suspended Member from the Group shall be put. Such resolution must be passed by a simple majority of Voting Members present. Upon such resolution being put, the suspension shall be automatically cancelled, and the membership in question either withdrawn or reinstated.
(b) During the suspension of an Officer or Member holding specific responsibility under Clause 9(a) above, their duties and functions shall be undertaken by the Chair or, failing the Chair, by the Vice-Chair.


10. GROUP FUNDS

(a) The funds of the Group shall only be used for promoting the Group’s objects.
(b) The financial year shall end on 31st December in each year or on such date as the AGM shall determine.
(c) The Treasurer shall keep proper books of account of all income and expenditure and shall present the accounts to the AGM for approval. All accounts can be inspected by a member on request.
(d) The bank account(s) shall be in the name of the Group and withdrawals shall be made in the name of the Group on the signature of any two of the Officers, or any one Officer and a Voting Member specifically authorised by a Group Meeting for the purpose.
(e) Claims for reimbursement of expenses must be submitted to the Treasurer in writing.
(f) The Treasurer’s accounts shall be audited by such person(s) who shall be appointed at the AGM. The auditor may not be an Officer nor a member appointed to hold other specific responsibility in the Group.


11. AMENDMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION

A proposal to amend this Constitution must be submitted in writing by at least two Voting Members of the Group, and the Secretary shall give not less than ten days’ notice to all members by their preferred contact method before the AGM or EGM which shall consider the proposal.
Amendments require a two-thirds majority of the members personally present and voting.


12. DISSOLUTION

The Group may be dissolved by the procedure provided in Clause 11 above for the amendment of the Constitution, or in the event that at three successive Meetings (each being an AGM or EGM called under the procedure above) no quorum is formed.
Whereupon, subject to the provisions of the Trust (Jersey) Law 1984 as amended, all remaining funds shall be transferred to the AIUK Section.

Contact us

Letters to the website are welcome. Just send an Email to JulianHJRogers@Gmail.com (tel 607910). To Email a membership application fill in the form below with your name, phone and Email. Click on the small box (bottom left), fill in the Captcha box and key the submit bar. If you find the captcha difficult to interpret key the small broken circle icon to its right to get a different captcha.

Privacy Notice: By attending our meetings or contributing forms, letters, comments, or reports to Amnesty International Jersey Group, you are understood to have given your consent to being named in our published minutes or related content including this website. If you would prefer not to be so named you may withdraw your consent at any time by contacting our chairman Michael du Pré (mgkdup@gmail.com, tel 853356). We will respect your wishes and remove your name or adjust your data upon request. We collect and process your personal data in order to maintain membership records, and where a subscription is paid, to ensure your voting rights. We retain such data for two years after membership ends. We do not share your data with any other person or organization. If you have concerns about our handling of your data  you have the right to complain to the Jersey Office of the Information Commissioner, 2nd Floor, 5 Castle Street, St.Helier JE2 3BT  Tel 01534 716530