Amnesty International

Again, hitting one of my pet causes, Stop Violence Against Women… this was sent to me by my friends at the much maligned-by-conservatives, but much appreciated-by-me MoveOn.org

Jamie Leigh Jones was a 20-year-old woman working in Iraq for a subsidiary of Halliburton when she was drugged and brutally gang-raped by several co-workers.

The next day, Halliburton told her that if she left Iraq to get medical treatment, she could lose her job.

Jamie’s story gets even more horrific: For the last two years, she’s been asking the US government to hold the perpetrators accountable. But the men who raped her may never be brought to justice because Halliburton and other contractors in Iraq aren’t subject to US or Iraqi laws. They can’t be tried for a crime in any court.

As horrific as that sounds (and to sign the MoveOn.org petition, click HERE), there’s more to the story…

Jamie’s attackers aren’t the only ones exploiting a legal loophole to get away with their violent crimes. Another female employee of Halliburton says she was raped by her co-workers in Iraq. Employees of Blackwater, another private contracting firm in Iraq, were accused of killing innocent Iraqi civilians, and that incident turned into an international scandal. Worst of all, they may never be punished.

Private contractors in Iraq are making massive amounts of money, operating above the law and are accountable to no one. This has to stop.

Ironically, that last quote could also be applied to our Vice-Occupier-in-Chief.

The Jamie Leigh Foundation has been set up to help United States citizens and legal residents who are victims of sexual harassment, rape and sexual abuse while working abroad for federal contractors, corporations, or government entities. It’s sad that such a foundation should have to exist. The crimes that have forced its existence are despicable and those guilty of the crimes, and those responsible for their protection should be brought to justice and punished to the fullest extent of the law.