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Burma: Time for Stalling on Human
Rights Over
August 4, 2008 – (Irrawaddy) The United Nations
Human Rights Council sent a special rapporteur, Tomas Ojea Quintana,
to Burma this week to seek improvements on the human rights situation
in Burma.
One might have expected that Than Shwe's junta would make some concessions
on human rights prior to Quintana's trip—instead, the exact
opposite has happened, as human rights abuses have increased.
The mission, only the latest in dozens of failed trips to Burma
by UN envoys and rapporteurs, was off to a bad start even before
it has begun.
Instead of making substantive moves on human rights, over the past
two months the junta ramped up its repression of the Burmese people.
Just days ago, Than Shwe's troops re-energized their scorched-earth
campaign against ethnic minorities in eastern Burma, forcing hundreds
of innocent villagers to flee their homes as refugees and internally
displaced persons.
On July 31st, the junta announced its intention to sentence Burma's
most famous comedian and social activist, Zarganar, along with the
country's leading sports reporter.
About two months ago, the junta detained various members of the
National League for Democracy, the political party of Nobel Peace
Prize recipient Aung San Suu Kyi.
On July 21, student political activist Khin Maung Tint died in Burma's
notorious prison gulag, in the midst of serving a 20-year sentence.
On July 25, the junta sentenced 10 Muslim student activists to prison
with hard labor for participating in the September 2007 Buddhist-monk
led pro-democracy uprising.
No doubt, Than Shwe's junta will try to obscure these moves during
Quintana's visit. If previous behavior is any guidepost, the junta
will make a series of promises to change that will subsequently
be broken when Quintana leaves the country. The regime will hope
for positive comments by Quintana after his trip—statements
they will use to show they are making "progress" when
in reality there are no lasting changes whatsoever.
If the junta is feeling generous, it may even release a few political
prisoners whom they deem to be unthreatening to their grip on power.
Instead of looking toward genuine change, the junta sees visits
by UN envoys as an exercise in public relations, hoping the envoys
will publicly thank the regime for allowing them to visit and thereby
diminishing hopes for actual change. That such trips happen at all
is cited as "progress" by some countries in the UN who
seek so preserve Burma’s status quo.
This pattern of obfuscation has been carried on successfully by
the junta for many years. Sadly, it has enabled Than Shwe to commit
massive, widespread, systematic atrocities that could someday land
him in the International Criminal Court.
Among other abuses, Than Shwe has destroyed many villages like in
Darfur, Sudan, forcing hundreds of thousands of innocent villagers
to flee as refugees and internally displaced persons.
He has recruited more child soldiers than any other country in the
world, also a crime against humanity.
His troops carry out a policy of using rape as a weapon of war against
ethnic minority women.
His regime now has nearly 2,000 political prisoners in its jails.
Before more people are senselessly imprisoned or killed in Burma,
we hope that Quintana delivers a strong message to Than Shwe, demanding
the immediate release of all political prisoners. While in Burma,
Quintana should meet with key imprisoned leaders, including Min
Ko Naing, Ko Ko Gyi, Su Su Nway and Zarganar.
Quintana must call on the military regime to immediately end all
attacks on ethnic minorities in the country. That Than Shwe has
gotten away with such attacks for so many years is devastating to
Burma’s ethnic groups, and it sets a terrible precedent for
the rest of the world.
Finally, Quintana should make it clear to Than Shwe that change
must come immediately—if the junta attempts to draw the envoy
into a protracted game of cat and mouse on human rights implementation,
the UN must seek stronger action from the Human Rights Council and
UN Security Council.
The time for stalling on human rights is over.
From:http://www.irrawaddy.org/opinion_story.php?art_id=13689
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