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PGA’s vision is to contribute to the creation of a Rules-Based International Order for a more equitable, safe, sustainable and democratic world.

Parliamentary Rapid Response Team (PARRT)

Parliamentary Rapid Response Team (PARRT)

Increasing consensus holds that democracy is in decline globally. Elements of backsliding include:

  • progressive erosion of such principles as separation of powers, checks and balances, judicial independence; and equality before the law;
  • rising generation and dissemination of disinformation;
  • incremental dismantling of protections for press freedoms and weaponization of the media;
  • and repression of vulnerable populations and minorities.

As human rights abuses amass, democratic practices are abandoned, and justice retreats, parliamentarians are on the frontlines. Members of parliament (MPs) have the mandate and responsibility to stand against these dangerous trends. As representatives of the democratic branch closest to citizens, legislators can resist attacks on democracy, shape national agendas, resist executive incursions, and work with civil society to preserve civic and political space. However, parliamentarians themselves are increasingly at risk in contexts of democratic backsliding. A recent surge of assaults on democracy and civic space often entails attacks on MPs’ physical integrity and psychological wellbeing. False accusations against Parliamentarians may lead to their abusive prosecution and deprivation of liberty, which in turn impedes Lawmakers to exercise their constitutional prerogatives and use their powers to protect the human rights of their people and communities.

The COVID-19 pandemic epitomizes many of these dangerous trends and embodies the need for the kind of collective action that has animated PGA across our more than 40-year history. This crisis starkly offers an opportunity to repressive regimes to intensify abuses. In several respects, the pandemic is both a crucible and litmus test for our democracies.

The Parliamentary Rapid Response Team (PARRT) is a unique cohort of democracy champions to respond nimbly, intervening when parliamentarians and human rights defenders are at risk.

As the largest global network of individual legislators, Parliamentarians for Global Action (PGA) is uniquely aware of the power of solidarity among members of parliament. The approximately 1,300 Member-Parliamentarians from 136 countries worldwide that comprise PGA recognize the urgent menace of closing political space globally and stand poised to take action.

Navigate through PARRT’s actions

  •  Urgent Action Alert
  •  Statement
  •  Call to Action
 

From 2022 to present, these are the PARRT Members:

Hon. Mariam Solaimankhil, Afghanistan

Hon. Mariam Solaimankhil is a Member of the Afghan Parliament representing the nomadic Kuchi tribe. Hon. Solaimankhil currently serves on the Board of Directors of several humanitarian and human rights organizations, including the Afghan Peace Watch. As one of three female MPs for the Kuchis, she has championed human rights, women’s rights, and the protection of children in her role as an elected official and pushed landmark legislation protecting children against early marriage in Afghanistan. Hon. Solaimankhil also served as Head of the Secretariat for the Defense Commission in Parliament and has previously worked in the Office of the President as the Director for International Relations and as a Senior Advisor to the Minister of Mines, Petroleum, and Industry. She holds a BS in Communications and Media Studies from California State University and is a Global Friends of Afghanistan Fellow.


Anita Vandenbeld

Anita Vandenbeld was first elected as the Member of Parliament for Ottawa West—Nepean in 2015. Ms. Vandenbeld is an international expert on democracy and human rights. She has worked in over 20 countries on inclusive governance and women’s leadership, including with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) Democratic Governance Group in New York. Ms. Vandenbeld was also a senior advisor with the UNDP in Bangladesh, and with the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Mission in Kosovo. In 2008, she was awarded the Canadian Peacekeeping Service Medal in recognition of her work in Kosovo. In addition, Ms. Vandenbeld served as resident director for the National Democratic Institute in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, worked with OSCE in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and worked with the Canadian Parliamentary Centre on post-conflict democratic development in the Balkans. She is the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Development.

Hon. Emilie Béatrice Epaye, Central African Republic

Dep. Émilie Béatrice Epaye is a Central African politician and educator. She has been the Minister of Commerce and Industry in 2005 and from 2008-2011, and serves in the National Assembly since 2005. In 2000, she became the director of La Fondation la Voix du Coeur (The Voice of the Heart Foundation), a safe haven for children and teens who have experienced abandonment and violence at home and on the streets. In 2015, she won the U.S. State Department’s International Women of Courage Award. From 2003 to 2005, Dep. Epaye was a member of the Inter-Parliamentary Commission of the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC). She chaired the African Intellectual Property Organization (OAPI) at the beginning of 2008 and, as a member of the Board of Directors, she drove the first African Conference on Intellectual Property in Dakar. She also served on the Council of Ministers of the Economic Union of Central Africa (CAEU). Dep. Epaye advocates for better governance, economic development, civil society freedoms, respect for human rights, and promotes national reconciliation.

Hanna Neumann

Dr. Neumann holds a B.A in Media Studies from the TU Ilmenau Institute. She is a German politician of the Alliance 90/The Greens and was the Chief of Staff to Omid Nouripour from 2014 to 2016 in the German Bundestag (Parliament). Dr. Neumann has been a Member of the European Parliament (EP) since the elections of 2019. She is the Vice-President of the Subcommittee on Human Rights and serves on the Subcommittee on Security and Defence. In addition to her committee assignments, she chairs the Parliament’s delegation for relations with the Arab Peninsula and is a member of the European Parliament Intergroup on LGBTI.

Rozaina Adam

Hon. Adam is a Member of Parliament in Maldives since August 2008, who represents the Addu Meedhoo constituency. She is the chair of the Independent Institutions Committee of the parliament, and a member of the Human Rights and Gender committee. Hon. Rozaina Adam was appointed as the deputy leader of Maldivian Democratic Party (MDP) parliamentary group on 2 June 2014 and filled this post until 2 July 2019. She represented the Thulusdhoo constituency in 17th People’s Majlis. Before joining the Maldivian Democratic Party, MDP, she was in Dhivehi Rayyithunge Party, DRP. She is a champion in working for children's and women's rights/development issues in the Maldives. She is also WPL's (Women Political Leaders) ambassador for the Maldives.

Hon. Adam is an executive board member of PGA. She is the chair of PGA’s Parliamentary Rapid Response Team (PAART) and Convenor of the Democratic Renewal and Human Rights Campaign.

Sen. Emilio Icaza

Sen. Alvarez Icaza is an independent Senator in the National Congress of Mexico representing Mexico City and coordinating the Plural Group. He is a member of the citizen's initiative AHORA and a founding member of the National Civic Front. Sen. Alvarez Icaza previously served as the Executive Secretary of the Inter-American Commission for Human Rights in Washington, D.C. and as Mexico City's Ombudsman/President of the Human Rights Commission of the country's capital.

Margareta Cederfelt

Ms. Cederfelt previously served as Vice-President of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, and for two terms as Rapporteur of the General Committee on Political Affairs and Security. She has been a member of the Swedish Parliament since 1999 and has been on Sweden’s Delegation to the OSCE PA since 2010. In March 2019, OSCE PA President George Tsereteli tasked her with overseeing issues relevant to the case of the murder of the Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov. From February 2020 to July 2021, she also served as Acting Chair of the Ad Hoc Committee on Migration. With extensive experience in election observation, she has actively worked to defend democratic values, the rule of law, peace, and security in the OSCE region. In the Swedish Parliament, she serves on the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Committee on European Affairs. She is the current OSCE PA President and former PGA President.

Raymonde Lawson

Hon. Lawson is a lawyer and a notary of Togo. She founded her notary office in 2000, in Lomé, after working as a notary in Paris, France. Aside from her successful legal and notarial careers, Hon. Lawson has been politically active since November 2012, when she presided the Women Convention for the Unity of the Republic (Convention des Femmes pour l’Union pour la République - UNIR). Hon. Lawson is currently a National Delegate of the Movement for Women, and she was elected a Member of the National Assembly of Togo in 2019. Hon. Lawson currently serves as the Vice-Chairperson of the parliamentary Committee on Human Rights and is also a member of the African Parliamentary Union (APU).

Former PARRT Members from 2021-2022


Former PARRT Members from 2020-2021

PGA is grateful to former PARRT Members and former members of Parliament for their guidance and invaluable contributions to advancing the Parliamentary Rapid Response Team’s and the Democratic Renewal and Human Rights Campaign overall goals and objectives.