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  • Statement #2 – December 28, 2022

    Statement #2 – December 28, 2022

    Dear Madam, Dear Sir, Dear friends and comrades,

    How can we not be outraged by the decision of the Taliban government on 20 December to close the doors of all public and private universities to female students? This after having closed the doors of schools to young girls, and those of public services to the women who worked there, then having forbidden women access to parks and public baths. This after having repressed and murdered those – women and men – who oppose these retrograde measures, including by taking to the streets.

    How can we not share the indignation of the Spontaneous Afghan Women’s Movement at the silence and complicity of the « international community » which, as they write, sheds « crocodile tears » over the fate of the women and girls of Afghanistan.

    We are proud to circulate in this second communiqué the information received from Afghanistan since 20 December, and in particular the story and photos of the student demonstrations that took place not only in Kabul but also in many provincial universities.

    The existence and the activity of our International Committee, set up on 29 October, are more than ever justified so that the struggle of the spontaneous Afghan women’s movement is relayed as widely as possible. And so that, wherever possible, we call on the authorities in our countries – particularly in the major powers – to grant unconditional asylum to the most threa- tened women and activists.

    Spread the word about the International Committee For the Defence of Afghan Women!

    Rubina JAMIL
    General Secretary of the All Pakistan Trade Union Federation (Pakistan) 

    Christel KEISER
    National Secretary of the Independent and Democratic Workers’ Party (France)


    On 29 October, women workers and activists from nineteen countries, meeting in the International Conference of Women Workers, informed by the spontaneous Afghan Women’s Movement, decided to set up the International Committee for the Defence of Afghan Women and called for people to join.

    Since then, several thousands have joined in France, Romania, Benin, Italy, Pakistan, Great Britain, Germany, United States and Mexico. You too can join the International Committee for the Defence of Afghan Women and spread the word.

    Join the International Committee


    Demonstrations in Kabul, Parwan...

    Demonstrations in Kabul, Parwan…

    The Taliban banned girls from studying in universities 

    According to the decree dated December 20, 2022 of the Taliban government in Afghanistan, the gates of all public and private universities were closed to Afghan girls. On Wednesday, when some girls were in the last week of their annual exams and some wanted to attend their classes, the religious police of the Taliban did not allow them to enter the university and attend their classes. 

    While the fierce struggle and widespread protests were going on to reopen the gates of girls’ schools from the sixth to the twelfth grades, the misogynistic administration of the Taliban in Kabul not only ignored the legal demand of Afghan women and girls, but now, with their new order, they deprived them of higher education as well. 

    Mojdeh Azim, a fourth-year student at Herat University, says, « I have never been so upset as when I heard that we no longer have the right to go to university. » Likewise, Sabra, a student at Kabul University, questions why the whole world issilent in front of »Taliban oppression » and does not show any reaction? « This is not acceptable for a girl who has arrived here after sixteen years with money from embroidering and weaving carpets and wanted to become a doctor. I studied with all my heart for four years. There was only one year left for me to finish university. » Sakineh Sama, one of the third year femal university student in Kabul, wrote in her Facebook page that she is no longer allowed to enter the university because she was born a girl. She has added: « Being a girl is a heavy crime, and tonight I want to curse my creator for making me to be so miserable and humiliated. » 

    In response to this inhumane and discriminatory decision of the Taliban government, female and male students protested in different provinces including Nangarhar, Kabul and Takhar and chanted « Education for all or for no one! » Higher Education, Work and Freedom! », « Compatriots, join us! », « Neutral is dishonorable! ». In Kabul and Takhar province, the Taliban violently suppressed the women’s demonstrations, beat the protesters, took their mobile phones, shot in the air, and detained at least ten protesting women and several journalists. In Nangarhar Medical University, male students in solidarity with female students walked out of their classes and left their exam papers blank. 

    During the last three days, more than 60 university professors in Kunduz; Kabul; Kandahar; Takhar; Bamiyan; Nimroz, Herat, Balkh, Nangarhar, and other provinces have resigned from their duties in protest against the anti-women decision of the Taliban and consider serving in such an anti-science and anti-woman regime as an insult to their human dignity. Obaidullah Wardak was the first professor who resigned from his position at Kabul University due to systematic discrimination against women. He, who has been teaching at the Faculty of Mathematics of Kabul University for 10 years, says: « Before, there were many problems in the field of higher education; But with this latest decision of the Taliban, unfortunately I could not continue my duty in this way and with this system ». Abdul Reza Motmaen, a professor at Paktia University’s Faculty of Agriculture, who shared his resignation letter on his Facebook, said that “working in such an environment is treason”. Amir Arslan Khorasanpour, a professor at the Faculty of Journalism at the Fanous Institute of Higher Education in Kabul, says: « This is a decision that paralyzes half of society. I was completely disappointed with this behavior of the Taliban”. 

    Before this decision, the Taliban had imposed brutal and inhuman punishments on female students. For example, full observance of hijab, having a Mahram man when traveling, separating girls’ classes from boys’ classes, teaching female professors for girls, specifying separate class days in the week for girls and boys, etc. 

    …Demonstration in Nimroz. 

    Meanwhile, Zalmay Khalilzad, the former US representative for Afghanistan and one of the signatories of the February 2020 Doha agreement between the US and the Taliban, called the Taliban’s recent move to ban girls’ higher education « shocking and incomprehensible » in a statement. In fact, Khalilzad is shedding crocodile tears to deceive the people of the world and Afghanistan, and with this ridiculous expression of sympathy, he still wants to justify the agreement handing over the power of Afghanistan to this misogynistic and anti-science group. But for Afghan women, this action of the Taliban was not something new and unpredictable. Now, it should be clear to the governments that support the Taliban, who give them forty million dollars a week in aid, that there has been no improvement in the way the Taliban think about women, civil rights and civil liberties. Since returning to power in August 2021, the Taliban have turned Afghanistan into a hellish model for women. The Taliban have no plan to reduce poverty, create employment and provide social welfare except for the implementation of Sharia laws, elimination and enslavement of women, suppression of the voice of justice and promotion of violence and terrorism. 

    The Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women, by condemning this decision and action of the Taliban against women, promises the women and girls of Afghanistan that they will not submit to any pressure and coercion of the Taliban, but will continue their protests and struggle throughout Afghanistan. We ask the women’s movements and women’s rights activists around the world to stand by the women of Afghanistan in this catastrophic and unbearable situation and support the fight for justice and equality for women in Afghanistan. 

    Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women,
    December 22, 2022, Kabul, Afghanistan 

    Afghan women’s protests continue and became nationwide 

    Following the Taliban’s ban on the education of women and girls in universities and schools, women and girls, students and young people showed their anger and opposition in various ways and started protesting all over the country on Sunday, Dec 25, 2022. The general slogan of all the protests was « all or no one (« Education for All or for No one) », which shows the awakening and solidarity of the Afghan youth protest movement against the Taliban. At the same time as the street protests, male students of at least 10 universities in different provinces have gone on strike and refused to go to classes. 

    In the provinces of Parwan and Kapisa, protesting women carried the following slogans: « Education for All or for No one », « Justice, justice, we are tired of ignorance », « Rise up, fellow countrymen, let’s take back women’s rights », « We women are awake, we hate discrimination », « Afghanistan has been destroyed, by order of the Taliban » 

    In Nimroz province, protestors against the ban on women’s higher education said that this decision has neither a Sharia nor a rational justification. They chanted « the right to education for all ». 

    Protesting women in Herat province were chanting: « Don’t be afraid, don’t be afraid, we are all together ». They condemned the misogynist action of the Taliban by marching in the streets of Herat city. But the Taliban used guns and prinklers to supress the protestors. In a published video, it can be seen that one of the Taliban men tries to convince the protesting girls to abandon the demonstration and go to their homes,But a protesting woman bravely replies that the women have been at home for a year and the problem has not been solved, now they will not return home. 

    In another protest action, some women and girls of Herat province chanted « Education is our right » from the roof of their houses at night. 

    In Kabul province, in addition to the valorously protests and slogans of “Education, Work and Freedom”, some girls inside the city distributed pens and papers to passers-by as gifts with the words: « Don’t forget your education. » 

    In another protest action on Sunday in Kabul Province, a number of others are seen in a video burning pictures of Taliban leaders and carrying the slogan « right, justice, freedom » in protest against girls’ exclusion from education. 

    The refusal of male students 

    Demonstration in Nangarhar. 

    Likewise, on Sunday, male students of the fourth grade of Kabul University’s Faculty of Economics wrote in their letter of protest that  » fighting against discriminatory decisions is their responsibility. » They announced their commitment thatt « they will not attend their classes until the universities’ gates are opened for their sisters. » In this protest letter, concern was expressed that the Taliban’s decision 

    will lead to a major educational crisis in Afghanistan and will destroy the future of several generations.. Moreover, in their letter of protest, students of the fourth grade of the Faculty of Urban Planning Engineering of Kabul University have boycotted attending their classe suntil girls return to universities and they called the Taliban’s decision to ban girls’ education « unfair and illegitimate ». 

    The medical students of Herat University and the students of Ghalib Private University’s Faculty of Economics announced in solidarity with the female students that they will not attend their classes. 

    Similarly, in Balkh Province, the male students of the Faculty of Computer Science declared that they will not attend classes until the universities reopen to girls. 

    In the continuation of the protests, the students of the Faculty of Geology and Mines of Kabul Polytechnic University also joined the protestors, and in their statement they called the ban on women’s education « gender apartheid ». 

    A group of male students of « Afghan Pamir Institute of Higher Education » in Kabul protested against the prohibition of women’s higher education and left the exam hall and did not participate in the exam. 

    However, in Kandahar province on Saturday, when the students of Mirwais Nikah University, who were planning to boycott the exam and leave the university in protest against the prohibition of women’s higher education, the Taliban prevented the students from doing so and beat them. 

    During the protests of women and youth in the provinces of Nangarhar, Kabul, Takhar, Herat, Kandahar, Balkh, Parwan and Kapisa, dozens of protesters have been beaten and injured, and dozens more have been arrested by the Taliban and taken to an unknown place. 

    Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women,
    December 25, 2022, Kabul, Afghanistan 

  • Statement #1 – November 26, 2022

    Statement #1 – November 26, 2022

    Dear friends and comrades,

    A month ago, on the occasion of the International Conference of Working Women, which brought together women and political and trade union activists from 18 countries (Algeria, Belgium, Benin, Chile, Colombia, France, Germany, Haiti, Hungary, Italy, Mexico, Morocco, Pakistan, the Philippines, Romania, Spain, Turkey and the United States), and responding positively to the call of the Spontaneous Afghan Women’s Movement, we set up the International Committee in Defence of Afghan Women. 

    The aim of this international committee, as requested by our sisters in Afghanistan, is to support these women and girls who, at the risk of their lives, are demonstrating for the reopening of schools closed to them by the Taliban regime, for the right to work, and for the respect of their most basic rights. It is about fighting against the ferocious repression of which they are victims: assassinations, torture, arrests and disappearances – all this in the complicit silence of the governments of the major powers. They demand « Bread, work, and freedom ». Hundreds of you have already joined our committee around the world, from South Africa to Great Britain, from Turkey to France: women workers, teachers, lawyers, trade unionists, writers, artists, activists, etc. 

    In this first communiqué, we publish two exceptional documents that have arrived from Kabul: two communiqués from the Spontaneous Afghan Women’s Movement of 11 and 18 November, and photos of the meetings they have held in Kabul in recent days. 

    Join us, make the cause of Afghan women known, it is the cause of women and workers all over the world. 

    Rubina JAMIL
    General Secretary of the All Pakistan Trade Union Federation (Pakistan) 

    Christel KEISER
    National Secretary of the Independent and Democratic Workers’ Party (France)


     Statement of the Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women 

     (November 18, 2022- Kabul, Afghanistan) 

    « The women and girls of Afghanistan want bread, work, freedom, school, and education! » 

    Report on Afghan women’s protest meeting condemning arbitrary arrests and kidnapping of female activists. 

    On November 18, hundreds of women in the provinces of Kabul, Herat, Laghman, and Balkh planned to protest against the arrest and kidnapping of women by the police and intelligence of the Taliban, but the Taliban did not allow them. They were forced to express their objections through the meetings inside a house and convey their voice of oppression to the people of Afghanistan and the world. 

    Here, we share with you a summary of Ms. Z.Ozra’s speech, the representative of the Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women at a meeting held in Kabul: 


    “Dear friends and sisters, 

    The sisters gathered here wanted to launch a demonstration today in District 12 of Kabul, where other sisters, mainly teachers, feminists, women’s rights activists and mothers of students, were also expected to participate. Unfortunately, the Taliban once again treated women brutally. They suppressed our demonstration and did not allow it. In the same way, some sisters who demonstrated in the cities of Jalalabad, Herat, Mehtarlam Baba and Balkh were beaten and threatened with weapons, and some were imprisoned. 

    But I would like to emphasize and tell the Taliban that they cannot silence our voices. The women and girls of Afghanistan want bread, work, freedom, school, and education. We do not want to be treated as animals, we cannot tolerate gender-based violence and sexual apartheid against women. We are determined to continue our protests and struggle in any form. We are not afraid of Taliban threats, prison and death. 

    We expect human rights organizations, women’s rights defender, and feminist activists to support the oppressed women of Afghanistan against the misgynistic Taliban regime and not leave us alone in this tough struggle. 

    • BREAD! WORK! FREEDOM!
    • Free all the imprisoned women!
    • All girls’ schools must be opened immediately! 
    • End the violence against women!”

     


    End the suppression and detention of protesting women! 

    Free Zarifa Yaqoubi, Farhat Popalzai and all arrested activists!

    Following the series of threats, arrests, torture and killing of protesting women in Kabul and other provinces of Afghanistan, on November 8, 2022 Ms. Farhat Popalzai, one of the active members of the Afghan women’s protesting movement, was arrested by the Taliban intelligence in Kabul, and so far there is no news about her fate. 

    According to the report of BBC Dari, quoted by Maryam Naibi a colleague of Farhat Popalzai, her phone has been switched off since 2 o’clock on Tuesday, and the contact with Ms. Farhat has been cut off. The Taliban security forces and the Kabul police, as always, deny the arrest of Mrs. Popalzai, but the fact is that the intelligence services of the Taliban, hide arbitrary arrests and prevent national and international protests against their brutal treatment against women; they cannot tolerate the political, civil and peaceful struggles of Afghan women. 

    Meanwhile, human rights organizations report the arrests of Ms. Ozra, Ms. Parwana, Ms. Farzia, Ms. Safia, Ms. Roheena, Ms. Asia, Ms. Zarmineh, Ms. Mahtab, Ms. Laila, Ms. Bibi Shaima, Ms. Parvin, Ms. Brishna, Ms. Tarana, Ms. Bibi Lima, Ms. Marzia, and Ms. Shagofa in the provinces of Kabul, Herat, Laghman, and Takhar. According to their families, the mentioned activists, feminists and teachers were arrested by the Taliban and taken to unknown places in October and November on charges of participating in women’s demonstrations and street protests. 

    Zabihullah Mujahid, the spokesperson of the Taliban, considers the struggle and resistance of the protesting women to be the plan of foreign countries in order to discredit the Taliban government and warns that they will not allow any movement that contradicts the Islamic laws. 

    It should be remembered that on November 3rd Ms. Zarifa Yaqoubi and four of her colleagues were arrested during the press conference in west of Kabul city, their families still do not know about their condition. The United Nations delegation in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and human rights organizations and women’s rights defenders inside and outside Afghanistan demanded the immediate release of Ms. Yaqoubi and all imprisoned women. 

    In addition to the official prisons, the Taliban have many private prisons where they torture and keep opponents and women protesters without contact with their families, human rights organizations, or access to a defense lawyer. 

    The Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women by condemning the arrest of protesting women and inhumane treatment with them, calls on all women’s rights organizations and individuals to put pressure on the misogynist Taliban regime to stop the arrests and torture of protesting women and for the immediate release of Ms. Zarifa Yaqoubi and her colleagues, Ms. Popelzi and dozens of other protesting women in the terrible prisons of the Taliban, they are expected to declare their solidarity and stand by the women of Afghanistan. 

    The Taliban must know that by suppressing and imprisoning, torturing and killing women, they cannot silence the freedom and equality voice of Afghan women. The “Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women”, as an independent women’s movement in Afghanistan, in coordination with other Afghan women’s groups, continues to struggle for freedom, civil rights and the right to life of Afghan women. 

    Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women
    November 11, 2022, Kabul, Afghanistan.

  • We, the delegates to the International Working Women’s Conference, held on 29 October 2022…

    We, the delegates to the International Working Women’s Conference, held on 29 October 2022, having received the message of the Spontaneous Afghan Women’s Movement addressed to our conference, decide to form an International Committee for the Defence of Afghan Women who are demonstrating against the regime.

    The message describes the persecution of Afghan women by the Taliban regime as well as the protests against the regime by women targeted by these attacks.

    We hereby decide to make the message of our Afghan sisters widely known in our respective countries,
    in particular, the six demands that appear in the conclusion of this text (see below).
    In order to implement the demands they have put before us, we call on all women and men committed to the defence of democratic and women’s rights to join the international committee in order to organise the campaign.

    Adopted unanimously by the conference.

  • Message of the “Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women”to the International Conference of Working Women (October 28, 2022, Kabul)

    Today, Afghan women live under the most misogynistic regime, where they are deprived of all their human and civil rights. For this reason, Afghan women activists formed their own protest movement after the Taliban rule in August 2021, which has been organizing women’s protests in the cities of Kabul, Jalalabad, Herat, Mazar-e-Sharif and Bamiyan with the slogans (bread, work, freedom).

    When women protest and demonstrate against the violation of their rights, the Taliban police brutally suppress them, beat them and threaten them with prison and death. […]

    Taliban intelligence identifies women activists and participants in demonstrations, arrests them during demonstrations, at the end of protests or later from their homes and imprisons and tortures them in their official or private prisons. (The new report of the United Nations September 2022: confirms the existence of private Taliban prisons and the torture of prisoners) […]

    It is not known how many women protestors and freedom fighters are imprisoned in the official and private prisons of the Taliban and in what condition they are. Because domestic and foreign human rights organizations and the families of prisoners do not have access to them. […] Some women who were released from Taliban prisons spoke of torture, sexual assault, threats to kill family members, lack of access to a lawyer, and lack of communication with family members.

    In addition to dozens of women fighters and protesters who are in terrible Taliban prisons, or tens of others who have

    been killed by people affiliated with the Taliban […]. There are currently hundreds of other fighting women as socialist, secular, feminist, civil society activists, women’s rights defenders, journalists, teachers, university and high school students, and housewives under the prosecution of the Taliban and they are forced to live in hiding […]. The lives of wanted pro- testing women are in serious danger.

    Therefore, the demand of the « Spontaneous Movement of Afghan Women » from women fighters and progressive forces in France, Germany, America, and other countries of the world is as follows:

    • Forming an International Committee for the Defense of Afghan Women Protesters.
    • Requesting support from major international organizations defending women’s rights and human rights in order to identify women imprisoned in official and private Taliban prisons.
    • Launching an international campaign for the release of protesting women from Taliban prisons.
    • Lobbying for the protection of wanted and endangered women in Afghanistan.
    • Creating international women’s solidarity with women fighters in Afghanistan.
    • Collecting financial aid for the families of imprisoned and wanted women.
  • The International Committee to Defend Afghan Women was formed by…

    ALGERIA: HAFSI Nadia.

    BELGIUM; AIME Emilie,teacher; DARMONT Eléonore, student; K. Olga, social worker.

    BENIN: GNONLONFOUN Liliane, trade unionist.

    CHILE: LAPERTE Marcela, Independent Movement for the Rights of the People (MIDP) ;

    FRANCE: KEISER Christel, POID national secretary; BAHLOUL Maïa, student, FJR (Federation of Young Revolutionaries); TIZZI Djemilla, trade unionist and POID member; MAS Nicole, member of the POID national bureau; ADOUE Camille, student, FJR member; LISCOËT Catherine, retired, member of the POID national bureau; DUPUY Martine, national secretary of the POID; MICHAUD Isabelle, CGT trade unionist; TEMPEREAU Lucile, young worker and POID member; SAUVAGE Jeanne, professor and researcher; FAURY Stéphanie, CGT-union officer at the Nemours hospital, South 77 Hospital Centre; ROUDIL Isabelle, trade union officer in social work; CORBEX Pascal, trade union officer in social work; FAUCHEUX Patrice, trade unionist; ANANOU Sarah ; ANDERSON Amy; THRONE Stella.

    GERMANY: ALBERT Lara, member of Die Linke, IG Metall trade unionist; SCHADE Vera, member of Die Linke.

    HAÏTI: THELOT Myrlène, Haïti Liberté.

    HUNGARY: SOMI Judit, working-class activist.

    ITALY: GRILLI Monica, teacher, delegate and trade union leader; PANTELLA Agata, teache.

    MOROCCO: LAMINE Sakina.

    MEXICO: DIAZ CRUZ Maria de Lourdes, Moviemento Nacional por la transformacion Petrolera; ORTEGA Marisela, Political Institute of political education of MORENA; PLUMEDA Liliana Aguilar, Internationalist Communist League; SUAREZ Lidia, Professor National Teachers University.

    PAKISTAN: JAMIL Rubina, All Pakistan Trade Union Federation.

    PHILIPPINES: MIRANDA Judy Ann, Workers’ Party (PM).

    ROMANIA: CRETAN Marioara, League of Romanian Workers.

    SPANISH STATE: MARTIN Reme, retired, working- class activist.

    UNITED STATES: BACCHUS Natalia, assistant to the President, Baltimore Teachers Union (Maryland)*; BROWN Diamonte,President, Baltimore Teachers Union (AFT, AFL-CIO) (Maryland)*; KHONSARI Niloufar, lawyer and immgrant workers’ rights activist; KNOX Lisa, lawyer and immgrant workers’ rights activist; ROJAS Désirée, President of the Sacramento Chapter of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (AFL-CIO)*; SHONE Mya, Socialist Organizer.

    *Personal capacity.

  • The International Committee to Defend Afghan Women was formed by:

    CIDFA

    ALGERIA: HAFSI Nadia.

    BELGIUM; AIME Emilie,teacher; DARMONT Eléonore, student; K. Olga, social worker.

    BENIN: GNONLONFOUN Liliane, trade unionist.

    CHILE: LAPERTE Marcela, Independent Movement for the Rights of the People (MIDP) ;

    FRANCE: KEISER Christel, POID national secretary; BAHLOUL Maïa, student, FJR (Federation of Young Revolutionaries); TIZZI Djemilla, trade unionist and POID member; MAS Nicole, member of the POID national bureau; ADOUE Camille, student, FJR member; LISCOËT Catherine, retired, member of the POID national bureau; DUPUY Martine, national secretary of the POID; MICHAUD Isabelle, CGT trade unionist; TEMPEREAU Lucile, young worker and POID member; SAUVAGE Jeanne, professor and researcher; FAURY Stéphanie, CGT-union officer at the Nemours hospital, South 77 Hospital Centre; ROUDIL Isabelle, trade union officer in social work; CORBEX Pascal, trade union officer in social work; FAUCHEUX Patrice, trade unionist; ANANOU Sarah ; ANDERSON Amy; THRONE Stella.

    GERMANY: ALBERT Lara, member of Die Linke, IG Metall trade unionist; SCHADE Vera, member of Die Linke.

    HAÏTI: THELOT Myrlène, Haïti Liberté.

    HUNGARY: SOMI Judit, working-class activist.

    ITALY: GRILLI Monica, teacher, delegate and trade union leader; PANTELLA Agata, teache.

    MOROCCO: LAMINE Sakina.

    MEXICO: DIAZ CRUZ Maria de Lourdes, Moviemento Nacional por la transformacion Petrolera; ORTEGA Marisela, Political Institute of political education of MORENA; PLUMEDA Liliana Aguilar, Internationalist Communist League; SUAREZ Lidia, Professor National Teachers University.

    PAKISTAN: JAMIL Rubina, All Pakistan Trade Union Federation.

    PHILIPPINES: MIRANDA Judy Ann, Workers’ Party (PM).

    ROMANIA: CRETAN Marioara, League of Romanian Workers.

    SPANISH STATE: MARTIN Reme, retired, working- class activist.

    UNITED STATES: BACCHUS Natalia, assistant to the President, Baltimore Teachers Union (Maryland)*; BROWN Diamonte,President, Baltimore Teachers Union (AFT, AFL-CIO) (Maryland)*; KHONSARI Niloufar, lawyer and immgrant workers’ rights activist; KNOX Lisa, lawyer and immgrant workers’ rights activist; ROJAS Désirée, President of the Sacramento Chapter of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (AFL-CIO)*; SHONE Mya, Socialist Organizer.

    *Personal capacity.

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