Pakistani Army Not to be Involved in Elections

By Elizabeth Breslin
Impunity Watch Reporter, Asia

The Pakistani Army announced today that it will be distancing itself from the election process.  The parliamentary elections are now scheduled for February 18th, delayed because of the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhuttoin December. (See Impunity Watch story here).

An Army spokesperson said that “conduct of elections as per Constitution is the sole responsibility of the Election Commission and Army will not be involved in the election process.”  Pakistan’s current military chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, has seemed to prefer to stay out of politics since his appointment in October 2007.   Some analysts believe that the Army is attempting to keep itself outside of the likely controversies surrounding the upcoming election.  Kayani understands that the process will be messy, and by staying out of it he will avoid any blame.

President Musharraf’s opponents are alleging that he will use his power as President to influence the elections.  There is a widespread concern that Pakistan’s Election Commission is incapable of assuring a fair election.  There are allegations that the current Chief Election Commissioner is openly partisan, as well as government officials on all levels.  Furthermore, after the removal of judges and suspension of the Constitution in November, government officials and members of the judiciary are afraid to act independently.

Pakistan’s government has assured United States and European Union monitoring teams that they will be allowed to access elections sites freely and can go in unannounced to any polling site.  They are however refusing to allow exit polls to be conducted.  Critics worry that this is problematic as exit polls are an essential tool for assuring fair and independent elections.

In a speech on Friday, President Musharraf has issued a warning to Western countries to stop criticizing Pakistan’s government regarding the election and its methods of fighting against terrorism.  He requested instead their support during this difficult time.  He reiterated that the elections would be free and fair.

For more information, please see:

CBS News – Pakistan’s Army Steps Aside From Election – 27 January 2008

Daily Times – ANALYSIS: Election manipulation – 27 January 2008

BBC News – Musharraf issues warning to West – 25 January 2008

The Kansas City Star – Pakistan bans observers from conducting exit polls for election – 25 January 2008

Egypt Brotherhood Members Continue to Protest Gaza Blockade

By Kevin Kim
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

CAIRO, Egypt – Thousands of Egyptians held protests peacefully on Friday in support of Palestinians in Gaza, calling for an end to the Israeli blockade. Many of the protesters were from Egypt’s largest opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, whose members have been detained for staging protests since the ordeal began. Many of the protesters carried banners that read: “Save Gaza” and “Free Despite Siege.”

On Wednesday, Egyptian authorities arrested scores of Brotherhood members in dawn raids for “illegally organizing protests against the Israeli blockade of Gaza.” The authorities rounded up the men in raids on their homes, including the secretary general of the Cairo doctors’ syndicate, Saad Zaghloul, in the northern port city of Alexandria. Others have also been detained in areas where the Brotherhood has a strong popular base including Giza, north of Cairo, and in Gharbia and Kafr al-Sheikh. They were accused of organizing demonstration without a permit and with belonging to a banned organization.

The crisis began when Palestinian militants first breached the wall between Gaza and Egypt on Wednesday, blowing up part of the wall that allowed tens of thousands of Palestinians to enter into Egypt and stock up on food and fuel. A second breach occurred later, when a bulldozer knocked over a new section of the border wall. Though Egypt has remained idle, allowing thousands to cross the border for humanitarian reasons, the Egyptian government plans to reseal the border in the coming days.

The Muslim Brotherhood, a non-violent group deemed illegal in Egypt, said Egypt should unilaterally open the border with Gaza. For this cause, more than 350 Brotherhood members have been arrested for continuously staging protests. Friday was no exception, where some 2,000 Egyptians protested in support of the Gazans outside the Cairo International Book Fair.

Israel had first blockaded its borders with the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip to stop Palestinian militants from firing rockets into southern Israel. The blockade has affected approximately 1.5 million people who live in Gaza Strip.

For more information, please see:

The Jerusalem Post – Protests for Gaza held across Mideast – 25 January 2008

BBC News – Egypt cracks down on Gaza protest – 23 January 2008

Ynetnews – Egypt arrests Muslim Brotherhood members protesting Gaza siege – 23 January 2008

Reuters – Egypt detains 30 Brotherhood men over Gaza protests – 23 January 2008

Opposition Demonstration in Beirut Ends in Violence

BEIRUT, Lebanon – Several Shi’a demonstrators were killed when the demonstrators and the Lebanese military clashed on January 27.  The demonstrators were protesting against power shortages in mainly Shi’a neighborhoods in Beirut.  The protestors, mostly Shi’a and supporters of Hezbollah and Amal opposition groups, claim that Shi’a neighborhoods were unfairly targeted in the government’s power rationing.  Violence began when the military intervened as protestors attempted to block a road.  According to a security official, shots were fired by the protestors and the military fired warning shots to disperse the demonstrators.

During this confrontation, Ali Hassan Hamza, an active member of Amal, was killed.  Violence escalated following Hamza’s death as angry opposition supporters took to the streets.  Demonstrators set fire to tires and obstructed streets.  Clashes between the military and the protestors resulted in at least six additional deaths and dozens of injuries.  The rioting led the military to declare Beirut’s first curfew in more than a decade.

The ruling coalition accused the opposition and Syria of manipulating the current economic and social crises to achieve their own political objectives.  Amal officials say that they were not involved in the protests and Hamza was not a party to the demonstration.  Also, Amal has acted to contained the situation by telling their supporters to stop rioting.  Nabih Berri, the leader of Amal and the Parliament Speaker, urged the demonstrators to go home and allow the military to restore order to the city.  Amal MP Ali Hassan Khalil added, “The situation must be contained. We appeal to all the people who are on the streets to go home and leave the matter into the hands of the security forces in order to restore calm to the region.”

The military announced that they plan to investigate Hamza’s death.  While Hamza was shot in the back, the source of the shots remains unclear.

For more information, please see:
AFP – At Least Seven Killed in Beirut Riots – 27 January 2008

Al Bawaba – At Least Four Dead in Lebanon Riots – 27 January 2008

Al Jazeera – Protests in Lebanon End in Deaths – 27 January 2008

Associated Press – Protests in Lebanon Leave 7 Dead – 27 January 2008

BCC – Seven Killed in Beirut Violence – 27 January 2008

Fox News – Shiite Opposition Riots Block Major Roads in Lebanon, 3 Killed – 27 January 2008

Reuters – Eight Shot Dead in Beirut Protests – 27 January 2008

Washington Post – Eight Shot Dead in Beirut Opposition Protests – 27 January 2008

BRIEF: Abuses of Children in Kenya on the Rise

NAIROBI, Kenya –  According to a press release issued by UNICEF yesterday, Kenya has seen a rise in child rapes since last month’s disputed presidential election sparked violence and forced thousands into makeshift camps.  UNICEF spokeswoman Veronique Taveau told reports that overcrowding and lack of security at the camps are making women and children vulnerable to opportunistic sexual assaults.  Girls and women in the camp “trade sex for biscuits, protection, transportation, or are raped while trying to get to a latrine during the night.”

The Gender Violence Recovery Center in Mombasa has seen a doubling of sexual violence cases since last month’s elections, especially gang rapes of young girls and boys.  As a result of these attacks, there is a very high risk of HIV/AIDS spreading as many of the victims don’t report the attacks and are therefore not getting treatment within the recommended 72 hours to prevent infection.   

UNICEF has dispatched more than $1.2 million in emergency supplies and has had teams on the ground since the violence began.  However, more funds are needed to protect children from violence and abuse and to help who have already been affected. 

800 people have died and a quarter of a million have been forced to flee their homes following the 27 December election which sparked violent clashes between supporters of President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga.

For more information, please see:

AFP – Sex attacks on the rise in Kenya: UNICEF – 26 January 2008

AP – UNICEF: Kenya Child Rapes on Rise – 26 January 2008

AllAfrica.com – Kenya: UNICEF Warns of Abuses Against Children – 25 January 2008

VOA News – UNICEF Reports Sexual Violence Increasing in Kenya – 25 January 2008

Cause of Iranian Student Death Questionable

By Kevin Kim
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

TEHRAN, Iran – A “sudden death” of a Kurdish law student while in custody in northwestern Iran has raised suspicion among his family and human rights activists regarding the truth of the official report. Officials told the student’s family that he had committed suicide while in prison and died of “suffocation.”

Intelligence Ministry agents arrested Ebrahim Lotfollahi, a political activist in the student movement of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, in front of Payame Nur University in Sanandaj on January 6. He had just finished taking an exam when the officials took him away without charge. Two days after the arrest, Lotfollahi was reportely in good condition when his family visited him, and he remained optimistic that he would be released soon. But on January 15, his parents were told that he was dead. Moreover, when family members went to the city cemetery, they were informed that the 27-year-old had already been buried and that they were not allowed to see his body. A few days after, the officials covered the grave with concrete.

Rights activists say that this case is similar to that of another recent death case which occurred in the town of Hamedan in October. In that case, a 27-year-old female physician Zahra Bani Yaghoub and her boyfriend were arrested for having an “illegal relationship.” Relationships between men and women who are not married are against the law in Iran. On the following day, officials told her family that she had committed suicide in her cell.

Following the two alleged prison suicides, Middle East deputy director at Human Rights Watch said “The sudden death in detention of two apparently healthy young people is extremely alarming. The government only heightens our concern by quickly dismissing them as suicides.” Consequently, Lotfollahi’s family wants the body exhumed for examination by doctors, including one chosen by the family. Bani Yaghub’s family has also called for an autopsy in her case.

United Nations Principles on the Effective Prevention and Investigation of Extra Legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions provide that families of the deceased and their legal representatives have the right to exhume body for an autopsy in all cases suspected of unlawful killing, including where the cause suggests unnatural death.

For more information, please see:

Workers’ Liberty – Iranian regime murders student activist – 25 January 2008

Reuters – Family wants Iran student who died in jail exhumed – 20 January 2008

Human Rights Watch – Investigate Detention Deaths – 18 January 2008

AKI – Death of Kurdish student was “suicide” says official – 18 January 2008

RadioFreeEurope – Detained student dies under ‘suspicious’ circumstances – 18 January 2008