Special Features

Bill Browder’s Red Notice Hits the UK Sunday Time’s Best Seller List

February 20, 2015 – ‘Red Notice,’ a non-fiction thriller by justice campaigner Bill Browder, hit ‘The Sunday Times’ best-seller list in the first week since the book’s launch.

‘Red Notice’ is an unputdownable account of the rise and fall in fortune of a Westerner, once the largest international investor in Russia, and a look under the hood of the massive corruption of Vladimir Putin’s regime. The book is told through the story of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who was tortured and killed in Russian police custody after testifying about a $230 million government corruption scam.

The Sunday Times list reflects weekly book sales in the UK. ‘Red Notice’ has gained the No 9 position on this week’s Sunday Times list, which will be published on Sunday, February 22nd. It means that the book has become an instant best-seller in Britain.

“The reason I wrote the book is so that people could see for themselves what has happened to me and to Sergei Magnitsky when we tried to expose Russian government corruption. I wrote it in a style that both those interested in Russia and those who are not would find it easily accessible and interesting. It exceeds my best hopes to get such amazing feedback from my readers,” said Bill Browder.

This success in the UK follows ‘Red Notice’ becoming a best-seller in the US, where it has now been on ‘The New York Times’ best-seller list for the second week since its launch.

‘Red Notice’ has received rave reviews from celebrities and ordinary readers alike.

Playwright Tom Stoppard said: “The story of Sergei Magnitsky’s life and death is?a shocking true-life thriller, and Bill Browder was the man to write it.”

Reviewers on amazon.co.uk said:

It reads like a legal and political thriller, a historical novel and true crime story all in one and I would recommend to everyone who is old enough to read to buy or download to their kindle and can guarantee you will be hooked before you reach the 3rd chapter.”

“It is the clearest, most fact-dense, heart-breaking and heartfelt account of grotesque, systematic and unrelenting criminality, at the highest levels of the government of a country, Russia, whose leaders brazenly demand the world’s respect while continuing to break the world’s laws.”

The book has also received glowing reviews in the global media:

“An unburdening, a witness statement and a thriller all that the same time … Electrifying … One heck of a read.” – The Times

“[Browder’s] freewheeling, snappy book describes the meteoric rise, and disastrous fall, of a buccaneer capitalist who crossed the wrong people and paid a steep price. . . The high stakes make for a zesty tale” – New York Times

“A sizzling accountof Mr Browder’s rise, fall and metamorphosis from bombastic financier to renowned human-rights activist … Readsmore like a financial thriller than a real-life story” – The Economist

“A tale that makes the dirty dealings of House of Cards look like Snow White.” – Toronto Star

‘Red Notice’ was published by Random House and released in the UK on 5 February 2015.

Upcoming Conversation: Reconciliation Post-Conflict: Approaches, Practices and Realities

Newsletter |F ebruary 2015
Upcoming Conversation:

Reconciliation Post-Conflict: Approaches, Practices and Realities

Join New Tactics in Human Rights for an online conversation on Reconciliation Post-Conflict: Approaches, Practices and Realities — February 23-27, 2015.

Daily headlines around the globe portray the numerous conflicts that arise as a result of heated points of contention. Seemingly disparate ideologies, unequal distribution of resources, political, ethnic, cultural and religious differences can all be contributing factors in the emergence of conflict between groups. In the aftermath of conflict, what role can reconciliation play as a path forward; toward healing, peaceful relations, improved communication and functioning societies?

Where does the process of reconciliation begin, with whom and when? These questions and more will be discussed in New Tactics in Human Rights Conversation – Reconciliation Post-Conflict: Approaches, Practices and Realities. This online conversation will seek to identify the role of reconciliation in post-conflict environments. Practitioners will share experiences, lessons learned, approaches and challenges with the reconciliation process from the perspective of reconciliation efforts around the globe.

New Tactics is looking for practitioners with experience in this area to be Conversation Leaders. Would you or someone in your network be perfect to take part as a Conversation Leader? Contact Brent Jensen at newtactics@cvt.org

The Latest From New Tactics

Featured Tactic: Utilizing SMS to facilitate communication between detainees and human rights groups to provide medical help and legal assistance Link >
Blog: Intersectionality: A Tool for Realizing Human Rights — Yolande Tomlinson Link >

Highlights of Visit from UN High Commissioner for Human Rights

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Dear friend,

“Human rights are the only meaningful rampart against barbarity.”

With these words, the new United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, called for a renewed focus on protecting human rights during a speech he gave last week at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. “Essentially, if I may boil down a massive topic into one sentence, states must be willing to protect the human rights of their people, and people must be able to hold the state responsible.”

Watch a short video about the High Commissioner’s visit to the Museum.

Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein

WATCH THE VIDEO

Zeid delivered the speech at the Museum during his first official visit to the United States as High Commissioner—a role he assumed in September 2014—and at a time of expanding violence and extremism. He urged the international community not to give in to the “dark allure of hatred” but rather to “strengthen our ethics, our clarity and openness of thought, and our moral courage.”

The High Commissioner’s emphasis on education, on early warning to prevent crises from escalating, and on learning from the past to improve the future aligns with many aspects of our work at the Center for the Prevention of Genocide.

We were honored to host him for this major policy address, which serves as a call to action—when the world desperately needs to hear it—to prevent genocide and promote human dignity.

Sincerely,

Cameron Hudson
Director, Center for the Prevention of Genocide

Bill Browder’s Red Notice Hits New York Times Best-Seller List in First Week

Press Release

For Immediate Distribution

Bill Browder’s Red Notice Hits New York Times Best-Seller List in First Week

12 February 2015 – Bill Browder’s new book: ‘Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice’ has become an instant best-seller, according to the list published weekly by the New York Times.

‘Red Notice’ features at number 11 on the New York Times bestseller list in the first week of sales since its release on February 3rd in the US. The New York Times rankings reflect sales reported by vendors offering a wide range of general interest titles, including independent book retailers; national, regional and local chains; online and multimedia entertainment retailers; supermarkets, university, gift and discount department stores; and newsstands.

‘Red Notice’ is a story about how Bill Browder went from being the largest portfolio investor in Russia to one of the most outspoken human rights activists in the West calling out the kleptocratic nature of the Putin’s regime.

“Everyone in the west needs to know this story,” said William Browder.

‘Red Notice’ has received over 30 5-star reviews on amazon which include the following feedback from readers:

  • “Once I started reading, I could not put it down. An eye opener.”

  • “I’ve lost a lot of sleep this week staying up late reading this story, which I only heard of quite by chance when I saw Bill Browder on The Daily Show.”
  • “I ordered the book for the Kindle on my Surface. That was last friday. It’s Tuesday and I’m done with the book. WOW.”
  • “A well written, heart felt true story of finance, personal growth, courage, and danger that is so shocking that it expunges any drops of political naivety that the reader might still cling to about life in Russia if Putin is challenged.”
  • “Delivered in an easy conversational style, this book makes you feel as though it is being told by friend. Mr. Browder’s analogy of Russian business being like a prison culture seems apt.”

To learn more, visit the ‘Red Notice’ website: http://billbrowder.com

For more information, please contact:

Magnitsky Justice Campaign

ICTJ: Boko Haram and the Lessons of the LRA

By ICTJ President David Tolbert

On January 10, a particularly atrocious terrorist attack was mounted in a bustling market in the northern Nigerian town of Maiduguri: a ten-year-old girl detonated an explosive device hidden beneath her dress, killing 16 people and injuring dozens of others. The child bomber – who, witnesses claim, was unaware that she was carrying explosives at all – was sent by the militant Islamist group Boko Haram.

The next day, a similar attack was carried out in the Nigerian town of Potiskum by two ten-year-old girls with explosives strapped to their bodies. These attacks came just days after reports started trickling in of what may be Boko Haram’s deadliest terrorist attack yet: the massacre of up to 2,000 people in the town of Baga.

These were not isolated attacks. In fact, Boko Haram’s campaign of terror began long ago. The group gained global attention last year, when it abducted 276 girls from a school in Chibok; but the girls remain unrecovered, and now the “Bring Back Our Girls” campaign is all but forgotten. Estimates of the number of people Boko Haram has killed since 2009 range from 4,000 (according to international human-rights groups) to 13,000 (according to the Nigerian government).

The danger that Boko Haram poses cannot be overestimated. The group increasingly resembles the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), which wreaked havoc in northern Uganda and South Sudan for decades. Like the LRA, Boko Haram represents a serious threat to regional stability. It already controls large parts of Borno province, which borders Niger, Chad, and Cameroon, and its offensive has now spilled into Cameroon, where it recently attacked a military base.

There are other parallels between the two groups, including the targeting of children. The LRA has abducted boys and girls as young as seven to be used as soldiers and sex slaves. The LRA’s recipe for child recruitment has many ingredients, but central to their twisted method is forcing children to kill members of their own family and community in gruesome ways, making it less likely they will ever be able to return home again.

Despite clear evidence of massive human rights violations, the Ugandan government and the international community were slow to respond to the LRA threat.

LRA Leader Joseph Kony and his three top commanders have been wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for war crimes and crimes against humanity since 2005. But it was only after the controversial internet campaign called “Kony 2012” made him the world’s most-wanted fugitive, raising the political stakes for Uganda and the region, that the United States sent some 200 troops to help an African Union force hunt down Kony. Three years later, he is still on the run.

And yet, the international community’s response to Boko Haram’s atrocities seems to be as slow and erratic as it was to the LRA. Absorbed in the attack against Charlie Hebdo journalists in Paris, it took days for the international community to even condemn the mass killing in Baga. Nigerian president Goodluck Johnathan sent condolences to Paris days before he publically reacted to the massacre of his own citizens. It seems no lessons were learned from the experience with the LRA.

A failure to act is both wrong and dangerous. One can rightly be concerned that political factors can get in the way of strong action to prevent further killings and to ensure accountability for the abuses committed thus far by Boko Haram. Indeed, Nigeria is an important source of oil and raw materials, with growing economic importance to the West, as well as to China, India, and other major emerging countries. Competing for lucrative contracts, global powers have in the past seemed inclined not to offend the Nigerian government by drawing attention to its inability to protect its citizens or to ensure accountability for atrocities.

But ignoring Boko Haram will only enable it to commit more atrocities. The failure to act in this case maybe another example of the international community averting its gaze from African suffering, as it has so often done in the past, most notably in Rwanda in 1994.

The ICC Prosecutor took an important step on 20 January by warning Nigeria’s government of its obligation to prosecute Boko Haram leaders for crimes that “deeply shock the conscience of the world”. While these are welcome words, the ICC should also issue a definitive timeline for Nigerian authorities to demonstrate convincingly their commitment and, perhaps more relevant, their capacity to investigate Boko Haram’s atrocities effectively. An ICC mission to the places affected by the group’s attacks would be needed to determine whether progress has been made; if Nigeria does not make sufficient progress, the ICC prosecutor should issue a proprio motu decision to open an independent investigation.

A clear course of action is required if perpetrators of Boko Haram’s atrocities are to be brought to justice sooner than it took to see Dominic Ongwen, one of the LRA’s top commanders, give himself up nine years after the ICC indicted him.

Boko Haram cannot be allowed to continue its campaign of terror, violence, and death in Nigeria and beyond. The Nigerian government and the international community must demonstrate that lessons have been learned from the case of the LRA, and act now to protect lives and ensure accountability of perpetrators.

A version of this op-ed appeared on Project Syndicate on January 31, 2015, here