ASEAN to create toothless human rights body

Posted by Sinapan Samydorai under ASEAN Watch on 22 November 2007

Its shameful and disgraceful ASEAN plans to create a toothless body with no power to prevent and stop any gross human rights violations of the people. Its an instrument to further prolong the suffering of the victims of human rights violations with no remedies in sight!

Leaked: ASEAN to create toothless human rights body

Its shameful and disgraceful ASEAN plans to create a toothless body with no power to prevent and stop any human rights violations of the people. Its an instrument to further prolong the suffering of the victims of human rights violations with no remedies in sight!

Its an instrument to shield ASEAN member countries from any criticism of their human rights violations.

Such a body cannot be accepted by any civil society organization and the people.

Such a recommendation violates the basic principles of human rights instruments to provide protection to victims of human rights violations and to seek fair and just remedies.

The recommendation is to create a body to shield and protect the human rights violators, such an act must be strongly condemn and rejected by all civil society organsations and the people.

Shameful and disgraceful to create tootless ASEAN human rights body that:

- Will protect ASEAN member countries from foreign criticism of human rights violation

- will NOT hold any of its members accountable

- Will NOT shame them for any human rights violations

- Will NOT intervene in domestic human rights problems

Sinapan Samydorai
President of Think Centre
A member of SAPA Working Group on ASEAN

For more information, please contact:

Sinapan Samydorai, Think Center, +65 9479 1906,
e-mail samysd@pacific.net.sg


'Protect members from foreign interference'

November 21, 2007 SINGAPORE (AP) - A human rights body to be set up by Southeast Asian nations should not intervene in domestic human rights problems, but instead protect countries from foreign meddling, according to confidential recommendations by the region's diplomats.

The recommendations were made in a report seen by The Associated Press on Wednesday. It was commissioned by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, whose leaders adopted Tuesday a landmark charter, which among other things calls for setting up a human rights agency.

The report's mandate was to list out the agency's powers and duties.

Its recommendations confirm that the human rights agency would be a toothless body with no power to rein in blatant violators such as Myanmar.

The report's contents reveal the extent of ASEAN's reluctance to hold any of its members accountable - or to shame them - for outright human rights violations such as the Myanmar junta's recent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in September that killed at least 15 people.

The international community has condemned the junta for its refusal to restore democracy and release Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, the opposition leader who has been under house arrest for 12 of the last 18 years. ASEAN has also been criticized for not doing enough to pressure Myanmar's military leaders.

The human rights body, to be comprised of representatives from ASEAN countries, should draft a "long-term roadmap" for the promotion of human rights, according to the report prepared by a task force, led by Singapore.

Such a body should also have "respect for national independence, sovereignty, equality, territorial integrity and national identity of all ASEAN member states," it said.

The task force recommended that the human rights body should uphold ASEAN's bedrock policy forbidding member countries from interfering in one another's domestic affairs - an edict Myanmar has often invoked to parry criticisms.

The report also says the rights body should oppose attempts by foreign countries to interfere in any Southeast Asian country's human rights problems.

The agency should "be faithful to ASEAN and its common interests and oppose external influence attempting to interfere in the human rights issues of any ASEAN member state," the task force said.

The body should conduct consultations and a public campaign on rights promotion and consider drafting an ASEAN declaration on human rights, it said.

The establishment of a human rights body had been the most contentious issue in the drafting of the ASEAN Charter because of strong opposition from Myanmar.

A Myanmar diplomat, Thaung Tun, said that his country wants the human rights body to become a "consultative mechanism" and that it should not "shame and blame" any ASEAN nation.

ASEAN's members are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Sources and Relevant Links:

AP 'Protect members from foreign interference'

AP Exclusive: ASEAN human rights body told to protect members from foreign interference November 20, 2007

UN OHCHR The Paris Principles Principles relating to the status of national institutions.

UN OHCHR The Rabat Declaration - United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Fifth International Workshop for National Institutions for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights (Rabat 13 - 15 April 2000)

European Convention on Human Rights

European Court of Human Rights

African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights

Inter-American Commission on Human Rights

SAPA Working Group on ASEAN ASEAN Economic Community Blueprint Only for the ASEAN Elites 21 November 2007

SAPA WG on ASEAN THE FAILURE OF ASEAN WAY: WASHING OFF THE BLOODY HANDS OFF BURMA 20 November 2007

SAPA WG on ASEAN BLOODY HANDS ON CHARTER, SHAME!

ACSC-3 No Bloody Hand on an ASEAN Charter

ACSC-3 Singapore Declaration

SWGA STATEMENT OF THE SINGAPORE CIVIL SOCIETY

SAPA ASEAN Peoples' Charter Process Launched 7 November 2007


Show some love,



Back to Previous Page