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  1. A prisoner of conscience (POC) is anyone imprisoned because of their race, sexual orientation, religion, or political views. The term also refers to those who have been imprisoned or persecuted for the nonviolent expression of their conscientiously held beliefs.

  2. Feb 25, 2021 · The term "prisoner of conscience" is widely attributed to the founder of Amnesty International, Peter Benenson, who used it in 1961 to describe two Portuguese students who had each been...

  3. Prisoners of conscience – someone who has not used or advocated violence or hatred in the circumstances leading to their imprisonment but is imprisoned solely because of who they are (sexual orientation, ethnic, national or social origin, language, birth, colour, sex or economic status) or what they believe (religious, political or other ...

  4. Prisoner of Conscience: a person who is persecuted for the non-violent act of protecting or advancing human rights. We are a UK-based charity providing both financial and practical assistance to prisoners of conscience and human rights defenders.

  5. A prisoner of conscience is a person who has been persecuted through imprisonment, torture, receiving death threats or being forced to leave their country for the nonviolent act of upholding and protecting human rights.*

  6. Prisoners of conscience are persons imprisoned for the peaceful expression of their political, religious, or other conscientiously held beliefs, or for their identity, even though they have neither used nor advocated violence.

  7. Feb 25, 2021 · Amnesty International defines a prisoner of conscience (POC) as a person who has been deprived of their liberty solely because of their conscientiously held beliefs, or for discriminatory reasons relating to their ethnicity, sexuality, gender, or other identity, who has not used violence or advocated violence or hatred.

  8. Oct 25, 2023 · The meaning of PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE is someone who is held in prison because of his or her political or religious beliefs.

  9. Amnesty International calls for the immediate and unconditional release of all prisoners of conscience. Thousands of prisoners of conscience languish in prisons around the world, sometimes for years on end, in horrendous conditions. Many are subjected to torture, and other forms of ill-treatment.

  10. It is this category of prisoners that Amnesty International calls “prisoners of conscience”. The movement proclaimed 1977 “Prisoners of Conscience Year” and collected signatures for an appeal addressed to the General Assembly of the United Nations.

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