BRIEF: New Caledonia Police Put Down Union’s Right to Strike

BRIEF: New Caledonia Police Put Down Union’s Right to Strike

NOUMEA, New Caledonia — On Thursday, New Caledonian police had to forcibly remove activists from barring the entry to more than two dozen businesses. The pro-independence union members were protesting their right to strike after several members were punished for aiding prior work stoppages.

The protest stems from a clash in January between union members representing New Caledonia’s indigenous Kanak population, USTKE, and police. USTKE members had refused to leave an area of publically owned land next to the bus depot. Police used tear gas and rubber bullets to break up the strike. Roughly 30 people, including police officers, were injured in the scuffle. Union members involved may face jail sentences for their participation.

Thursday’s strike affected some 2,000 workers. Employers are denouncing the strike, claiming the protesters had been involved in illegal industrial action. Strikers firmly hold, however, that the ability to strike is a constitutional right. One protester argued that New Caledonians are still French citizens, and should, thus, be allowed to hold organized strikes.

USTKE has organized about 10 general strikes this year alone. 

For more information, please see:
ABC News: Australia — New Caledonian police forcibly remove striking workers — 11 April 2008

Radio New Zealand International — USTKE strike shuts down New Caledonia businesses — 10 April 2008

Radio New Zealand International — New Caledonia union action broken up by police — 10 April 2008

UPDATE: Elections in Nepal Begin with Violence, End with Large Voter Turnout

KATMANDU, Nepal – On the day before a nationwide election that would begin the transition to a republic, eight persons were killed in election-related violence. However, on election day voters were unfazed and came out in record numbers to cast their votes.

Maoists report that at least six members of their Young Communist League were fired on. The party also alleged that Rishi Prasad Sharma, a candidate of the Maoist’s Communist Party of Nepal, was shot and killed in the Surkhet district.

Despite the violence on the eve of elections, voters were undeterred. By Thursday afternoon, the Nepali Times reported that 75% of the electorate in Morang and Sunsari and 60% in the far west region of Nepal had voted. The paper also reported that 55% of voters in the Katmandu Valley, and 70% of voters Sindhuli, Parsa, and Rautahat had visited polling stations by mid-afternoon. More than 17.6 million Nepalis are eligible to vote, and experts predict there to be 70% turnout.

Voters came out in large numbers, early and enthusiastically. The election marks a turning point for the country that has undergone a decade of violence sparked by a Maoist insurgency. In order to create a lasting peace, Maoists will be eligible for seats in the Constituent Assembly and take part in reforming the country. The newly elected Constituent Assembly is expected to transform the country by instilling a republic, removing the monarchy, determining how to represent traditionally marginalized ethnic groups, and writing a new constitution.

Navaraj Suwal, a teacher, commented that Nepal’s elections were unprecedented, saying, “This election will determine the kind of laws that will be around for the next hundred years.” Navaraj Suwal was so excited to cast his ballot that he showed up 45 minutes early to be second in line.

For more information, please see:

Impunity Watch – Fears of Violence and Intimidation Ahead of Nepal’s Historic Election – 8 April 2008

Nepali Times – Bullet to Ballot – 11 April 2008

New York Times – Polls Open in Nepal the Day after Violence Killed 8 – 10 April 2008

BRIEF: Pakistan Government to Lift Media Restrictions

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan- The new government in Pakistan introduced a bill today to remove restrictions recently imposed upon the media.  When he implemented emergency rule in November 2007, President Pervez Musharraf had banned television and radio news, as well as any criticism of the government.

The new bill was introduced by Information Minister Sherry Rahman.  It will remove power from the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority to close down networks, seize equipment, revoke operating licenses arbitrarily, impose fines for violating the industry code of conduct, and interrupt live coverage.

“We will put our own house in order and we will allow the press to broadcast not just live telecast but all that they feel fit to broadcast,” Rahman announced.

Once these changes are implemented, the new government will return its focus to reinstating the justices removed by Musharraf under emergency rule, a task that is proving to be more difficult.

For more information, please see:

Associated Press – Pakistan Moves to Lift Media Curbs – 11 April 2008

BBC News – Pakistan drops media restrictions – 11 April 2008

BRIEF: Fiji Activists Arrested at Tibet Protest

SUVA, Fiji — Seventeen protesters were arrested yesterday outside of the Chinese Embassy in Fiji during a protest against Chinese human rights violations in Tibet.  The protest was organized by members of FemLink Pacific, Fiji’s Women’s Rights Movement, it’s Crisis Centre, and the Fiji AIDS Taskforce.  Among the seventeen people who were detained were a number of well known Fijian activists including human rights commissioner, Shameema Ali, academic Claire Slatter, Edwina Kotoisuva from the Fiji Women’s Crisis Centre, and a number of other well known activists in Fiji. 

While the interim government says that the protesters were arrested for not having a permit to assemble, Shameema Ali says that her members did not break the law by engaging in a peaceful protest.  Describing the protest, Ali said, ” Sitting in two and three at a time – no protesting and nothing serious at all, we have T-shirts which have Fiji-Tibet support group, and that’s all no words spoken, Free Tibet.”

The coordinator of FemLink Pacific said today that, despite yesterday’s arrests, their group would continue to protest Chinese human rights violations and Fiji’s interim government’s support for the Chinese government.  Those who were detained have now been released as of this writing.

For more information, please see:
Radio New Zealand International —  Fiji peace vigil group set to defy regime — 11 April 2008

Fiji Broadcasting Corporation Limited — Peace vigil show of support — 11 April 2008

Radio Australia — Tibet rights activists arrested in Fiji — 10 April 2008

Radio New Zealand International — Fiji police arrest women protesting over Tibet outside Chinese embassy — 10 April 2008

Radio Australia — Fiji police release anti-China protesters — 10 April 2008

54 Burmese Illegal Migrant Workers Suffocate to Death in a Seafood Truck in Thailand

By Ariel Lin
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

BANGKOK, Thailand – 121 Burmese migrant workers crammed inside a 20 feet long and 7 feet wide seafood container while being smuggled into Thailand as illegal laborers on Thursday.  37 women and 17 men suffocate to dead in the back of the truck.  Another 67 people were still alive when Thai police officers opened the container.  Some Survivors were hospitalized and the others were held for questioning, according to Col. Kraithong Chanthongbai, the local police commander in Ranong Province, on Myanmar’s border.

Survivors told police that they each paid 10,000 baht (US$314) to be smuggled into Thailand.  One of the survivors, Saw Win, said that about 30 minutes into the trip workers pounded on the container, screamed for air and called the driver, who briefly turned on the air conditioning.  The air conditioning later went off, and they called the driver again 30 minutes later but his phone was off. They shouted and banged on the sides of the sweltering container until he stopped the truck about an hour later, unlocked the container and fled when he saw the state of the victims.

“Television reports showed police lifting bodies out of the truck and images of the cargo-like container empty except for a few pieces of clothing,”  AP reports. “The dead migrants—many wearing little more than T-shirts, shorts and flip-flops—were seen laid out on the floor at a storage facility of a local charity.”

The London-based human rights group Amnesty International said in a report in 2005 that workers from Myanmar “are routinely paid well below the Thai minimum wage, work long hours in unhealthy conditions and are at risk of arbitrary arrest and deportation.” These workers are typically brought into the country by large smuggling syndicates in difficult and often dangerous condition.

The deaths illustrated the increasing human trafficking activities across borders into countries as far apart in the world as the United States, Britain and Thailand.  In 2001, 58 illegal Chinese migrants died when they were crammed into a sweltering tomato truck on the way to England.  In a similar incident in 2003 in Texas, 19 Latin American migrants died from overheating and suffocation inside a trailer truck.

For more information, please see:

AFP – 54 Myanmar migrants die while being smuggled into Thailand – 10 April 2008

AP – 54 Myanmar Migrants Die in Thailand – 10 April 2008

New York Time – Migrants Perish in Truck to Thailand – 11 April 2008

Thai News Agency MCOT – Interior Minister calls for urgent probe of Myanmar migrant workers’ tragedy – 10 April 2008

USA Today – Thai police find 54 dead Burmese migrants in truck – 10 April 2008