BRIEF: Rabuka Wants 2011 Elections

BRIEF: Rabuka Wants 2011 Elections

SUVA, Fiji – Major General Sitiveni Rabuka, leader of Fiji’s two 1987 military coups, says he wants Fiji elections to be held in 2011.  He believes the interim government should ignore the Commonwealth’s order to hold elections by September.

Mr. Rabuka also says the constitutional and electoral reforms proposed by the interim government can only be made by the Parliament and the reforms should be put to the people of Fiji in a referendum.  He explained, “In that way we do not change the constitution unconstitutionally, and we leave it to parliament to make the changes that the interim government feels it should have supported or not supported in the referendum of 2011.”

Describing why 2011 is an ideal year for elections, Mr. Rabuka said, “In my opinion, the best time to have elections would be 2011, as that would be five years after the interim Government came into power.  And normally, we give a tiem frame of five years for the new government and budget cycle to work.”

For more information, please see:

Islands Business – Ignore Commonwealth deadline, elections best held in 2011: Rabuka – 18 March 2009

Radio Australia – Former Fiji PM wants 2011 elections – 19 March 2009

Pakistani Activists Detained by Government

By Shayne R. Burnham
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – The Pakistani government has arrested or detained at least 300 opposition activists led by the Pakistan Muslim League since March 10, 2009. Authorities hope to prevent the demonstration set in Islamabad, where they will end their march. Activists demand that the government reinstate judges who they claim were illegally fired under former President Perviz Musharraf.

Nawaz Sharif, former Prime Minister who resigned because of Musharraf’s deposing of judges, has rallied Pakistanis to join the march. Sharif and the Pakistan Muslim League demand the restoration to office of Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudry, the Supreme Court chief justice.

In response, the government has banned protests in the Punjab and Sindh provinces.

Among the activists are many Pakistani lawyers who also demand the reinstatement of judges. “These images have raised the passions of everyone who wants an independent judiciary,” said Aitzaz Ahsan, a spokesman for the lawyers.

Human Rights Watch, among other humanitarian groups, calls for the immediate release of the opposition activists.

“It’s a disgrace for elected public officials to mimic the discredited military government by using old and repressive laws to stifle political expression,” said Ali Dayan Hasan, senior South Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The protesters who were arrested should be freed right away and allowed to demonstrate peacefully without fear of violence or arrest.”

There has been a sharp political division in Pakistan as of February 25, when the Supreme Court upheld a ruling that banned Sharif from elections. The Court also dismissed Sharif’s brother, Shahbaz Sharif, from continuing in his capacity as chief minister of the Punjab province. As a result, Sharif has declared a “rebellion” against the government and urges Pakistanis to join the march which will converge in Islamabad on March 16.

“Pakistan’s transition to democracy is imperiled by the government reacting to a political dispute with unnecessary force,” said Hasan. “Regardless of political differences, rights-respecting leaders don’t lock up people for trying to participate in their country’s political process.”

For more information, please see:

AP – Pakistan: Opposition Should Seek Reconciliation – 13 March 2009

Human Rights Watch – Pakistan: Free Detained Opposition Activists – 11 March 2009

Times Online – U.S. and British Diplomats Scramble to Defuse Pakistan Crisis – 12 March 2009

UN Accuses Sri Lanka of War Crimes

By Shayne R. Burnham
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka The United Nations (UN) calls upon the Sri Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to stop the war in the northeast.  The UN believes that war crimes have been committed.

Navi Pillay, UN High Commissioner of Human Rights, stated, “Certain actions being undertaken by the Sri Lankan military and the LTTE may constitute violations of international human rights and humanitarian law.”  She continued, “The brutal and inhuman treatment of civilians by the LTTE is utterly reprehensible and should be examined to see if it constitutes war crimes.”

The UN accused the military of shelling safe zones to protect civilians.  The UN also accused the LTTE of using civilians as human shields and shooting those civilians who attempt to escape.

The Sri Lankan minister of human rights, Mahinda Samarasinghe, spoke for the government and said that the UN misrepresented the number of civilian casualties.

“We have very clearly stated that we have not at any time fired at the no-fire zone,” Samarasinghe said.  “We are very disappointed and we are very surprised that this kind of unprofessional statement has been issued,” he added.

But B. Nadesan, political leader of the LTTE, claims that the total number of casualties is much higher than the UN’s estimate.  Moreover, they have proof of the government’s crimes of “deliberately targeting civilians, their humanitarian supplies and the hospitals.”  “There are thousands of evidences among the civilians, officials and local aid workers.  The ICRC [International Committee of the Red Cross] has witnessed the Sri Lankan attacks on the civilians,” said Nadesan.  He added that the witnesses would be able to provide detailed accounts of how civilians are “jailed inside barbed wire internment camps” and “hundreds of civilians have gone missing.”

According to Human Rights Watch, parties to a conflict must take all necessary precautions to minimize civilian casualties, yet “[t]he government shows callous indifference by saying civilians should not expect the government to consider their safety and security” when they fail to enter the safety zones.

For more information, please see:

BBC – UN Fears Sri Lanka ‘War Crimes’ – 13 March 2009

Human Rights Watch – Sri Lanka: Disregard for Civilian Safety Appalling – 3 February 2009

TamilNet – Nadesan Urges UN to Investigate Colomb’s War Crimes – 15 March 2009

Taiwan Abandons Files of Deceased Political Prisoners

By Kristy Tridhavee
Impunity Watch Senior Desk Officer, Asia

TAIPEI, Taiwan – At an abandoned Ministry of Justice building, reporters discovered deceased political prisoners’ files and interrogation records from the White Terror period.  Along with the files, reporters also discovered body part in jars.

Both the government and the reporters contend the body parts were from homicides, not political prisoners. Among the documents found inside were records of the interrogations of late DPP chairman Huang Hsin-chieh; the late writer, human rights activist and one-time political prisoner Bo Yang; and former national policy adviser Hsieh Tsung-min, who was also once a political prisoner.

Most of the files found were from Taiwan’s White Terror period, when the Kuomintang government of President Chiang Kai-shek persecuted dissidents and people it suspected of sympathies for communism or for Taiwan Independence.

The abandoned building where the files were found was once the Ankeng Guesthouse.  It was previously used by the notorious Taiwan Garrison Command as an interrogation center and for detentions.

The Ministry of Justice Investigation Bureau [MJIB] apologized for the oversight.  It contended that the building had been guarded but recent personnel cuts had affected security.  The MJIB also said the files only contained the most basic information, including fingerprints and photographs.

Democratic Progressive Party [DPP] members have demanded that the files be sent to the National Archives Administration.  DPP Legislator Lin Shu-fen stated that the materials were “important witnesses to history and national documents” and declared that the MJIB had violated the National Archives Law by failing to hand them over to the National Archives Administration.

For more information, please see:

Taipei Times – White Terror Documents Cause Uproar – 19 March 2009

Taiwan News – Taiwan DPP Slams Investigative Bureau over White Terror Files – 19 March 2009

Taiwan News – Taiwan Reporters Find Investigation Bureau Dissident Files in Abandoned Building – 18 March 2008

Labor Activist Released After 7 Years Jail Term in China

By Ariel Lin
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

BEIJING, China – Yao Fuxin, a leading labor activist in China, has been released after serving a seven-year prison term.  He was arrested in 2002 along with another laid-off factory worker, Xiao Yunliang, after speaking at a peaceful demonstration involving at least 5,000 workers from six state-owned factories in Liaoyang. According to Human Rights in China, Yao was initially charged with “gathering a crowd to disrupt social order,” but that was later changed to “subversion of state power”, which is more serious charge.

Human Rights in China said Yao had been beaten while in detention.  He had difficulty walking, and suffered two heart attacks and a stroke in prison.  According to the Human Rights website “In the Liaoyang Detention Center, he and 19 other inmates were made to sleep on one bed. There, a guard named Lang arranged for two death-row prisoners to watch Yao. Every time Yao closed his eyes to sleep, the two prisoners would step on him.”

Yao also confirmed the abuse in prison and said he planned to take legal action against prison authorities.  “In the coldest weather, they put me under the window, which they left open,” he said. “My legs were twitching. My lower body was numb with cold.”

Yao Dan, Yao’s daughter, told AFP that her father is very happy to be out of prison.  “When he got out of prison, workers gave him a big banquet and thanked him for all the suffering he has gone through”, she says.  Yao expressed that he felt to fight for the interests of the people and the country is his duty.  “There’s nothing wrong in what I did,” Yao said in a telephone interview. “I was just exercising my rights, which are given by the constitution. What did I do wrong as a citizen? It was worth it. I feel no regret at all.”

“It is tragic for Yao and for China that a labor activist who was demanding back wages and pension payments was imprisoned for seven years and abused,” said Sharon Hom, executive director of Human Rights in China.  She urge the Chinese government to focus on protecting workers basic rights instead of cracking down on them.

For more information, please see:

AFP – China labour leader freed after 7 years in jail – 17 March 2009

AP – China labor activist free after 7 years jail – 17 March 2009

ChinaWoker – Yao Fuxin, leader of 2002 workers’ protests, is released from prison – 17 March 2009

Human Rights in China – Labor Leader Yao Fuxin is Released After Completing Seven-Year Term – 17 March 2009