About Amnesty International's Work Amnesty International was founded
forty years ago to protect fundamental human rights. Peter Benenson was appalled that Portuguese students were imprisoned without a public trial in April, 1961 for raising their glasses in a toast to democracy at a Lisbon bistro.
Since that time, Amnesty chapters and members around the world work to free prisoners of conscience, gain fair trials for political prisoners, end torture, political killings and "disappearances," and abolish the death
penalty. The prisoner we have adopted is Myo Min Zaw, a student from Burma/Myanmar. An example of another group's work is that of Group 23 in Houston, which has been working since March 2001 on the case of Vision and Mission of Amnesty International Amnesty International's vision is of a
world in which every person enjoys all the human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights standards. In pursuit of this vision, Amnesty International's mission is to
undertake research and action focused on preventing and ending grave abuses of the rights to physical and mental integrity, freedom of conscience and expression, and freedom from discrimination, within the context of its work to
promote all human rights. Amnesty generally works for:
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