May 28th, 1961, marks a genuine milestone in post-war human rights activism born from outrage at political imprisonment. On this day 65 years ago in London Amnesty International was born. It began with an article by British lawyer Peter Benenson who had defended political prisoners in Hungary, South Africa, and Spain and who sought to establish a collective agency for the advancement of human rights.
The article called The Forgotten Prisoners in The Observer, was inspired by the story of two Portuguese students reportedly jailed for raising a toast to liberty.
This appeal, reprinted widely, launched what became Amnesty International. Benenson, with help from figures like Eric Baker, of the Religious Society of Friends and began assembling a coalition of writers, academics, and legal professionals.
The response to that article exceeded anything the authors had expected, with letters and offers of support arriving from across Europe and beyond. What began as a one-year appeal rapidly transformed into a permanent organization with a clear mandate: research the facts, document the abuses, and bring public and political pressure to bear on governments that violated their citizens' basic rights.
Amnesty International Day was formally established to mark the founding moment and keep public attention on the organization's ongoing mission. Unlike internationally codified observances (e.g., UN-declared days), Amnesty International Day functions primarily as: A mobilization mechanism A fundraising opportunity. A symbolic reaffirmation of normative commitments A transnational identity marker It is often linked to public campaigns, reports on human rights violations, and grassroots activism.
The early years of Amnesty were defined by letter-writing campaigns on behalf of individual prisoners, a tactic that proved surprisingly effective at drawing international attention to cases that governments would have preferred to keep quiet.
The group would campaign equally across East, West, and the developing world, independent of any government or ideology. Benenson explicitly warned that falling under the control of “one country, ideology or creed” would mean failure.
By the end of 1961, the organization had formalized its mission to advocate for human rights, focusing on freeing prisoners of conscience, ensuring fair trials for political prisoners, and opposing torture and the death penalty.
From 1961 to 1975 the chairman of AI was Seán MacBride, who was a corecipient of the 1974 Nobel Prize for Peace.
Over the decades, Amnesty grew into a global movement. By the 1970s, it had groups in dozens of countries and was instrumental in campaigns like the 1973 push against torture, leading to the UN’s 1984 Convention Against Torture. In 1977, Amnesty won the Nobel Peace Prize for its "defense of human dignity against torture and oppression." Its work expanded to include issues like women’s rights, refugee rights, and economic, social, and cultural rights, while maintaining a focus on impartiality and independence from governments or corporate interests.
The organisation’s logo idea (the candle surrounded by barbed wire to represent a beacon of hope shining for prisoners of conscience trapped in oppressive conditions) stemmed from a Chinese proverb “It is better to light a light than to curse the darkness.”
Amnesty International remains one of the world’s largest human rights NGOs, with millions of supporters and a record of documenting abuses globally. However, it has faced substantial criticism for drifting from its founding emphasis on impartial, universal defence of basic rights toward more ideological positions.
Critics, including NGO Monitor, Women's Rights Groups across the world, officials, and others, argue it applies disproportionate focus and harsher language towards (for example): Women’s rights and sex-based protections, Amnesty has aligned with expansive gender identity frameworks, treating “trans rights” as integral to women’s rights and rejecting notions of conflict between them (e.g., on single-sex spaces or sports).
Benenson largely withdrew from active leadership but later reconciled with Amnesty and occasionally supported its work; though he publicly disagreed with some later decisions. He continued human rights and other charitable efforts until his death in 2005.
Amnesty itself "professionalised", and grew into the global monster it is today. Today, Amnesty operates in over 150 countries, with millions of supporters. Its methods include research, advocacy, and mobilizing public pressure through campaigns, reports, and urgent actions to address human rights abuses worldwide.
Its impact has been significant, with thousands of individuals freed due to its efforts, underscoring the organization's vital role in the ongoing fight against human rights abuses worldwide.
The organization remains headquartered in London and continues to rely on its original tactic of letter-writing, now amplified by digital campaigns.
AI exposes human rights violations by governments, armed political groups, companies, and other nonstate actors in newsletters, annual reports, and background papers. It relies strongly on the worldwide distribution of “adoption groups,” each of which, staffed by three to eight persons, takes on a limited number of cases of prisoners of conscience and barrages the offending government with letters of protest until the prisoners are released. Other activities include organizing demonstrations and vigils, sponsoring human rights education, and circulating online petitions and alerts.
The research department at AI’s London headquarters is in contact with human rights activists and other interested parties around the world and provides a network of information for all the organization’s publications and activities.
The 2026 edition of Amnesty International’s annual report, The State of the World’s Human Rights, assesses national, regional and global developments across a wide range of human rights themes. It highlights how states have undermined the international rules-based system, hindering the resolution of problems that affect the lives of millions. It also identifies trends regarding armed conflicts, repression of dissent, discrimination, economic and climate injustice, the abrupt halt of humanitarian aid, and the misuse of technology. The report documents human rights concerns during 2025 in 144 countries, connecting global and regional issues and looking to the future.
The organisation called on governments, to reject the politics of appeasement and collectively resist attacks on multilateralism, international law and civil society, before this emerging order takes hold. pressure.
“We are confronting the most challenging moment of our age. Humanity is under attack from transnational anti-rights movements and predatory governments determined to assert their dominance through unlawful wars and brazen economic blackmail,” said Agnès Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International.
“World leaders have been far too submissive in the face of attacks on international law and the multilateral system. Their silence and inaction are inexcusable.” Agnès Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty International “The vast majority of states have been unwilling or unable to consistently denounce predatory acts by the USA, Russia, Israel or China, or to chisel out diplomatic solutions. “World leaders have been far too submissive in the face of attacks on international law and the multilateral system. Their silence and inaction are inexcusable. It is morally bankrupt and will bring nothing but retreat, defeat and the erasure of decades of hard-fought human rights gains. “To appease aggressors is to pour fuel on a fire that will burn us all and scorch the future for generations to come,” said Agnès Callamard.
Predatory attacks are accelerating the destruction of international law The State of the World’s Human Rights, and Amnesty International’s documentation so far this year, detail pervasive crimes under international law and mounting attacks on the international justice system, which are gravely harming the foundations that underpin human rights globally.
Israel has maintained its genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, despite the October 2025 ceasefire agreement, and its system of apartheid over Palestinians, while accelerating the expansion of illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and taking steps toward annexation. Israeli authorities have increasingly allowed or encouraged settlers to attack and terrorize Palestinians with impunity, and prominent officials have praised and glorified violence against Palestinians, including arbitrary arrests and the torture of detainees.
The United States of America has committed over 150 extrajudicial executions by bombing boats in the Caribbean and the Pacific, and carried out an act of aggression against Venezuela in January 2026. Russia has intensified its aerial attacks on critical civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, while Myanmar’s military used motorized paragliders to drop explosive munitions on villages last year, killing dozens of civilians, including children.
In early 2026, the USA and Israel’s unlawful use of force against Iran, in violation of the UN Charter, has triggered retaliatory Iranian strikes on Israel and Gulf Cooperation Council countries, while Israel has escalated its attacks on Lebanon.
From the killing of over 100 children in an unlawful US strike on a school in Iran, to the devastating attacks by all parties on energy infrastructure, the conflict has endangered the lives and health of millions of civilians and threatens to inflict vast, predictable and long-term civilian and environmental harm, impacting access to energy, healthcare, food and water across an already turbulent region and beyond.
In Afghanistan, the Taliban escalated its predatory policies against the female population, with further bans prohibiting them from education, work and freedom of movement, while in Iran, the authorities massacred protesters in January 2026, in what was likely the most lethal such repression for decades. Ramped-up assaults on civil society continue to spread around the world The proliferation of attacks on civil society and social movements deepened in 2025, with sustained efforts to silence and disempower human rights defenders, organizations and dissenters spreading to almost every part of the world. Authorities in Nepal and Tanzania were particularly brazen in their unlawful use of lethal force to repress protests expressing political and socio-economic grievances. The governments of Afghanistan, China, Egypt, India, Kenya, the USA and Venezuela, among others, also violently repressed protests, criminalized dissent through counterterrorism and security laws, or used abusive policing tactics, enforced disappearances or extrajudicial executions.
US authorities launched an unlawful clampdown on migrants, refugees and asylum seekers, committing unnecessary and excessive use of force, racial profiling, arbitrary detention, and practices that amounted to torture and enforced disappearance.
In Latin America, states such as Ecuador, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela adopted or reformed legal frameworks that impose disproportionate controls on civil society organizations directly impacting their ability to operate, access resources, support communities and defend human rights.
In a context dominated by the US president describing climate change as a “scam”, governments did nowhere near enough to address climate displacement, equitably transition away from fossil fuels, or adequately ramp up finance for climate action – even as the UN Environment Programme warned that the world is on track to reach 3°C above pre-industrial levels by 2100. Protesters, civil society and international bodies lead efforts to resist, disrupt and transform Undeterred by adversity, millions aound the world are resisting injustice and authoritarian practices.
Throughout early 2026, demonstrators from Los Angeles to Minneapolis have organized street by street and block by block against violent and highly militarized US immigration enforcement raids.
Mass demonstrations against Israel’s genocide spread around the world last year and humanitarians from over 40 countries launched flotillas to show solidarity with Palestinians. Global activism against the flow of arms to Israel expanded, with dockworkers in France, Greece, Italy, Morocco, Spain and Sweden seeking to disrupt arms shipment routes. Activism and legal pressure also led several states to restrict or ban arms exports to Israel.
Hundreds of mostly young protesters faced off against security forces in Madagascar's capital on September 27, 2025 days after an anti-government demonstration erupted into clashes and looting. Police used rubber bullets and teargas to disperse crowds at Thursday's protest, which was called to condemn persistent water and power cuts in the impoverished nation but descended into violence as stores were looted and buildings and cars set alight.
“From city streets to multilateral forums, 2025 brought powerful displays of resistance and solidarity from protesters, diplomats, political leaders and many others around the world. We must build on their example and courage and forge bold coalitions to reimagine, rebuild and re-centre the global order around human rights, the rule of law and universal values,” said Agnès Callamard. “For the sake of humanity, the time to make history is now.” Agnès Callamard “Let 2026 be the year we assert our agency and demonstrate that history is not merely something imposed upon us; it is ours to make. And for the sake of humanity, the time to make history is now.”
Amnesty International Day is less a fixed holiday than a strategic commemorative practice. It consolidates collective identity, mobilizes normative discourse, and reinforces the symbolic authority of human rights within global civil society. It illustrates how non-governmental organizations use ritualized temporality to sustain moral legitimacy in a fragmented international system.
As we mark this important anniversary, lets celebrate the courage of activists, supporters, staff, volunteers, and communities across the world who continue to defend dignity, freedom, equality, and justice.
Amnesty’s central argument has always been brutally simple: Human rights are not optional. They belong to everyone. At a time when protest rights, refugee rights and civil liberties are still being fought over, iAmnesty’s original message is more relevant than ever.Here’s to many more years of people power and human rights impact.
