Conflicts, crackdowns mar 2008 Asian rights record: HRW report | Pakistan Press Foundation (PPF)

Pakistan Press Foundation

Conflicts, crackdowns mar 2008 Asian rights record: HRW report

WASHINGTON: Human Rights Watch (HRW) blamed Asian giants China and India for abuses against their own citizens but also for backing military dictatorships such as Myanmar, in its annual report for 2008 released on Wednesday.

The New York-based group detailed worsening trends in much of Asia, including China’s Olympic-year crackdown on civil liberties and its repression of protests across the Tibetan plateau.

Wars turned more bloody in Afghanistan, which saw the “worst violence since the fall of the Taliban”, and Sri Lanka, where the government last January formally scrapped a ceasefire with the separatist Tamil Tigers.

Conflicts also flared up again in less-watched hotspots, including Muslim regions of Thailand and the Philippines, while Indonesian forces in remote West Papua “continue to engage in abuses … with virtual impunity”, it said.

The HRW pointed to some progress in parts of South Asia, including the return to civilian rule in Pakistan, and improvements ahead of polls in Bangladesh last month.

Elections in Nepal, where Maoists took power and the king abdicated, “marked a new era… after a decade of conflict that claimed over 13,000 lives”.

But the group also highlighted tighter restrictions on freedom of association, expression and religion in China, which it said “broke its promise to improve human rights in conjunction with its hosting of the 2008 Summer Olympic Games”.

In Tibet, where simmering anger against Chinese rule erupted into major protests last March, the HRW said that following mass arrests of suspected demonstrators the whereabouts of several hundred detainees remained unknown.

The HRW also criticised Asia’s other population giant, India, for “serious abuses”, including in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, which was again rocked by major unrest in 2008.

The report pointed to India’s “pattern of denial of justice and impunity” and a “failure to protect women, children and marginalised groups such as Dalits, tribal groups and religious minorities”.

India, as an emerging global player, was now often placing economic and strategic interests over rights concerns as it tried to compete with China in countries such as Myanmar, said the HRW.

“As the world’s most populous democracy, India might be expected to be at the forefront of global efforts to promote human rights,” it said. “However, its current foreign policy often would make a confirmed dictator proud.”

In Myanmar, also known as Burma — which the HRW said also draws support from China, Russia and Thailand — democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi went into her sixth straight year of house arrest, one of over 2,150 political prisoners.

Life in Asia’s other hermit state, North Korea, remained even more dire, with the regime continuing to ‘enslave’ citizens in prison camps and executing people for crimes that include hoarding food, said the report.

Across much of Southeast Asia, human rights were also on shaky ground.

In Thailand “the end of a military-installed administration has not led to the restoration of rights and democracy” as political tensions “led to protracted protests and occasional deadly clashes”.

Cambodia “continued its drift toward authoritarianism” as Prime Minister Hun Sen consolidated power through flawed July elections, while a tribunal to address Khmer Roug-era crimes made slow progress.

Source: Daily Times

Date:1/15/2009