Governments Routinely Dodge U.N. Rights Investigators Saturday, Sep 22 2007 

The Government of Singapore, for example, with the highest per capita rate of judicial executions in the world, has firmly rejected a request for a visit. Instead the Government has opted to level ad hominem attacks by accusing the Special Rapporteur of pursuing a “personal agenda” that exceeds his mandate. Rather than opting to engage, the Government of Singapore asserts that it is for the Government whose practices are called into question, rather than the Special Rapporteur, to interpret the mandate given by the Council.

Philip Alston, the U.N. special rapporteur on extra-judicial, summary or arbitrary executions

Govts Routinely Dodge U.N. Rights Investigators by Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 21 (IPS) - The United Nations is disappointed that an increasingly large number of member states are either refusing to respond to charges of extra-judicial killings or have turned down requests for visits by U.N. special envoys mandated to monitor arbitrary and summary executions in these countries.

The 27 states that have so far failed to agree to visits range from Security Council members, such as China, Russia and the United States, to countries like El Salvador, Kenya, Thailand, Israel, Uzbekistan and Venezuela.

“The fact that 90 percent of countries identified as warranting a country visit have failed to cooperate with the system — and that the (Human Rights) Council has done nothing in response — is a major indictment of the system,” said Philip Alston, the U.N. special rapporteur on extra-judicial, summary or arbitrary executions.

“No matter how grave the issue and how blatant or compromised the conduct of the relevant government,” the Geneva-based Human Rights Council “remains entirely unmoved,” Alston said in a 21-page report to the 62nd session of the General Assembly, which opened last week and concludes in December.

He also points out that he has “long sought” to draw attention to the violations of the right to life committed by the government of Iran “as a result of its executions of juveniles and of persons accused of crimes which cannot be considered to be among the most serious.”

“Such executions,” he noted, “have recently gathered pace and the silence of the international community can only bring discredit.”

Alston said that Iran had issued a “standing invitation” but has repeatedly failed to respond to requests for specific dates for a visit — “despite several meetings and an extensive correspondence.”

The only countries that have facilitated visits during the past year are Guatemala, Lebanon and the Philippines. Brazil, the Central African Republic and Yemen have issued invitations but visits are still pending.

An agreed visit to Guinea was aborted in March 2007 and the government subsequently failed to agree to a series of requests to re-schedule the mission.

Meanwhile, six members of the Human Rights Council — Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia — have failed to issue requested invitations, according to the report. The remaining states with outstanding requests include Laos, Nepal, Singapore, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Uganda, and Vietnam.

Their responses “have ranged from complete silence, through formal acknowledgement, acceptance in principle but without meaningful follow-up, to outright rejection.”

On the practice of so-called “targeted assassinations”, Alston said he has addressed allegations of such killings to both Israel and the United States, as well as to countries on whose territories such killings have taken place.

“The largest challenge has been the lack of cooperation these countries have shown. Israel has not addressed the substance of allegations, and the United States has insisted that the whole issue falls outside the mandate” of the special rapporteur, he added.

Tania Baldwin-Pask, adviser on International Organisations, International Law, and Organisations Programme at the London-based Amnesty International (AI), says this is a “chronic problem” for all U.N. human rights investigators.

“AI has consistently raised (this issue) because it is so fundamental to the functioning of the system that all member states cooperate with the special procedures. It goes to the heart of universality and non-selectivity, which so many states are keen to stress in other contexts,” she told IPS.

She also pointed out that the issue of non-cooperation, whether framed in terms of mission requests or in terms of responding to correspondence, regularly features in many of the reports of the U.N. special rapporteurs.

Alston, she pointed out, has been the most persistent in seeking to draw the attention of the Human Rights Council and the General Assembly to this issue.

Regrettably, Baldwin-Pask said, the unwillingness of states to facilitate visit requests is quite common, although they have different ways in which they approach this.

She said few take the approach of Singapore (and as highlighted in the report) whereby they flatly refuse a mission request. Many take a considerable amount of time to “discuss with their capitals” and put in place the necessary arrangements for the visit to go ahead.

But because the Human Rights Council has no mechanism at this time to check — state by state — the status of mission requests, it is easy for states to simply ignore these requests.

Consequently, she said, you have states such as Turkmenistan which has never received a visit by human rights monitors, despite 11 different mandate-holders over the course of the past few years seeking to go on mission there.

And the Council, she complained, “as yet not taking action in response”.

It’s not only the number of visit requests either — the special rapporteur on torture, for example, has been seeking a mission to India since 1993. So, it can also be a question of time.

Citing another example, she said, it’s not only the thematic mandate-holders who struggle to gain access, even country rapporteurs can find themselves unable to visit as well. The special rapporteur on North Korea has never been able to visit that country.

Some member states like to use the opportunity of the Council or the General Assembly to announce that they have invited a particular U.N. rapporteur to visit, which on the face of it looks as if they are willing to cooperate with the special rapporteurs, or even the Council itself — only to postpone the mission, she added. Of course, states rarely make a public announcement about the postponement.

Zimbabwe, which has never allowed visits by U.N. human rights envoys, announced at a Council meeting that it would be hosting a visit by the special rapporteur on violence against women. But then it has now postponed that visit and there is no indication of when it might take place.

According to Amnesty International, Russia is one example of a state which had originally agreed to a visit by the special rapporteur on torture last October, but postponed it at the last minute apparently because visits to detention facilities would contravene national law, particularly with respect to carrying out unannounced visits and holding private interviews with detainees.

The United States has blocked a visit to its detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, because it would not allow the rapporteurs to hold private interviews with detainees, Baldwin-Pask told IPS.

“The other point to note as well is that lack of cooperation in facilitating visits is one facet of a larger problem — states should also implement the recommendations arising from such visits.”

“All too often you see that states are willing to host the visit but then take no action to follow up on the recommendations,” said Baldwin-Pask.

9/16 Slide Show! Friday, Sep 21 2007 

I was experimenting over at Slide with my 916 photos. Clicking on the slides below will open another window. You can then click “Original View”. Pump up the volume & enjoy the show!! ;-)

King of Defamation Lawsuits To Open International Legal Conference Friday, Sep 21 2007 

Lee Kuan Yew will open the International Bar Association legal conference to be held here from Oct 14-19. This uniquely Singapore joke requires an image to go along with it…….

IWANTYOU

Gahmen Unveils ‘Simplified’ Message, TalkingCock, 19 Sept 2007

Public Forum On 23 Sept (Sun) Friday, Sep 21 2007 

A Public Forum - ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism, SDP, 18 Sep 07

The ASEAN Summit that will be held in mid-November will see the signing of the ASEAN Charter in Singapore.

During the 40th ASEAN Ministerial Meeting in Manila last 30-31 July 2007, the ASEAN Foreign Ministers agreed to include a provision in the ASEAN Charter that mandates the creation of a human rights body.

As such, an ASEAN Human Rights Working Group (AHRWG) was established whose goal is to push for an intergovernmental human rights commission for ASEAN. At the moment, countries that have national Working groups and are part of the (AHRWG) are Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand.

Human rights advocates in Singapore are looking to establish a national working group. As such a forum will be held to discuss the process towards the formation of such a group here.

The forum will look to educating the public on the ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism and also the establishment of a Singapore Working Committee. Public consultation, input and participation are important if the group hopes to represent views of civil societies, NGOs, interest groups and human rights bodies.

Date: 23 September 2007, Sunday
Time: 2.00 pm
Venue: Allson Hotel, Victoria Room, Level 2

Speakers:
J B Jeyaretnam, veteran politician
M Ravi, human rights lawyer (read his article here)
Jolovan Wham, social worker
Alex Au, gay rights activist (read his article Towards a human rights mechanism)
Isrizal, arts community representative
Chee Soon Juan, politician & political activist

Admission: Free and open to the public

Let’s get busy on human rights, 20 Sept 2007

 

Remember, Remember, The 16th of Sept Saturday, Sep 15 2007 

I was “jolted” a few days ago by a SDP announcement. I say “jolted” because it hit me that I had taken 100s of photos of that historic event which began on 16 Sept 2006 and lasted for 72hrs.

I did post some of the photos here and here a few days after the event. To be precise, I was only able to take photos on the first day, 16 Sept 2006. I was not able to go down the other two days. Anyway, a few days after the event, the memory card screwed up and I couldn’t retrieve all the photos. Plus I was so pre-occupied with so many other things in my life that I put the matter of the photos aside.

Until a few days ago when I got the “jolt”.

So I got to work trying to retrieve the photos. After many painstaking hours the past few days (hey, i’m no pro ok!!!), I managed to download all the photos, uploaded it and organised it with headers describing each of them. My memory might be a bit rusty (getting older isn’t helping either!) after a year but most of what happened that day is still fresh in my mind.

You can now view all my 134 photos at my photobucket.

I hope to be at the anniversary this Sunday at 3pm beginning at Hong Lim Park aka Speakers’ Corner and moving on to other venues. But if I’m not able to attend, the time & effort I’ve put into bringing these images to you, my readers, would be my way of commemorating the anniversary of a historic event.

Commemoration Of Ist Anniversary Of 16 Sept ‘06 Thursday, Sep 13 2007 

Announcement: The first anniversary for WB-IMF protest, 13 Sept 2007, SDP

On 16 September 2006, a group of democracy advocates led by Dr Chee Soon Juan, gathered at Hong Lim Park to call on the Singapore Government to respect our rights to free speech and assembly during the annual meeting of World Bank-International Monetary Fund held in Singapore.

What was to have been a march and rally led to a 3-day standoff with the police when they formed human barricades to prevent us from moving forward.

Never in Singapore’s history has a 72-hours protest for freedom and democracy taken place with police men and women keeping watch over us every minute.

This year, the group will commemorate the first anniversary of this landmark September 16 event. We will walk, as we had originally planned in 2006, to Parliament House and from there, proceed to the Istana where we will hand a letter to the President.

We will end at Queenstown Remand Prison where fellow democrat Dr. Chee is being incarcerated, yet again, by the regime. There, we will hold a candlelight vigil to share this important occasion with him even though he cannot be with the group.

Our right to freedom of speech and assembly are guaranteed under the Singapore Constitution. However, the PAP-Government has not only violated our rights but has even persecuted those who exercise them.

We will claim those rights again on 16 September, calling for freedom and democracy for all in Singapore.

Date: 16 Sept 2007 (Sunday)
Time: 3:00 pm
Place: Hong Lim Park, Parliament House, Istana, Queenstown prison

Burden of Fare Hikes on Commuters is Unjustified - NSP Thursday, Sep 13 2007 

NSP Press Release, 12 Sept 2007

The National Solidarity Party (NSP) condemns the latest approval of bus fare hike by the Public Transport Council (PTC). Fare hikes have become an annual ritual which highlights the sordid mechanism behind the regulation of standards and fares by the PTC.

The Chairman of PTC Mr. Gerald Ee acknowledged that “the current service frequency was not good enough when ‘operational deviation’ was factored in”. The tightening of the basic Quality of Service (QoS) by the PTC therefore constitutes a tacit admission that the service standard for buses has dropped below the mark of decent acceptability for some years, even as fare hike applications continue to be favourably approved year after year.

The PTC stated that it was “mindful not to increase the cost of compliance” to Public Transport Operators (PTOs), thus opting to phase in the new standards in 2 years, with fines thereafter of up to $10,000 per month for each instance of non-compliance.

The NSP would like to punctuate the salient point that such punitive fines will unavoidably result in either the passing of the cost liability to commuters, or in an invariable reduction in service standards not directly measured by the QoS such as interior ambience and comfort of ride.

The NSP strongly recommends that fare hike applications by PTOs be dismissed until the basic service standard is first achieved within the stipulated 2 years, and subsequently maintained for at least 5 years thereafter, subjected to a stringent and transparent process of annual assessment.

Mr Gerald Ee’s assumption that Singapore’s economic growth automatically translates to affordability for bus commuters is questionable. In the latest hike, the highest increment was for the shortest trips. This will hurt the heartlanders most as they are often those with low or no income. Affordability is a nonsense reason for a fare hike, especially since public transport is an essential service.

Singapore’s “economic growth” has seen workers in the lower 40% of the population suffering little or no improvement in their salaries. Their misery is compounded by the fact that the inflation rate for the lowest 20% continued to peak well above that of the highest 20% income earners, even surpassing the general household inflation rate. And this is despite the occasional government handouts. Those with ‘extra’ money would prefer to save it or spend in on other essentials instead of ‘squandering’ it on increased bus fares.

In the latest quarterly financial report of SBS Transit, fuel cost decreased by 6.6%, while operating profit increased by 36.9% as compared to the corresponding quarter last year. Profit after tax to shareholders increased by 25%. Manpower cost increased by a manageable 4.4% which was more or less offset by the decrease in fuel cost. For SMRT, cost of staff and fuel decreased, while profit after tax increased by a whopping 38.5%.

The impressive double-digits profits of PTOs far overshadow the meagre pay increment of many citizens. It is hence dishonourable to further fatten the coffers of the PTOs by diluting the citizens’ hard-earned gains.

The PTC acknowledged that Singapore has a “restricted number of service providers and an absence of real market competition”. The unchallenged business position of the existing PTOs will allow their businesses to continue to stay attractively profitable for the foreseeable long-term without needing to rip more from commuters. This is evident from the rapid expansion of profitable businesses of the PTOs both at home and overseas.

The NSP would like to pound on the need for improvements to the grotesquely inadequate fare formula, a demand which have been repeated incessantly by the indignant public.

The formula must include elements which incorporate the degree of compliance to the QoS. The PTC must recognise that the lower and lower-middle income group constitute the bulk of public transport commuters. The formula must thus factor in their (low) earning power and relatively higher incurred inflation, and not merely incorporates the national average which skews in favour of the well-to-do who do not generally commute by bus.

Finally, the profits of the PTOs and their payouts to shareholders must be considered in the equation. If necessary, the PTC should oblige these lucrative PTOs to raise extra funds from their benefited shareholders instead of exploiting the lack of viable alternatives for the people through constant fare hikes. It is preposterous for the PTC to safeguard the interest of the shareholders of PTOs at the expense of commuters.

The NSP hopes that the members of the PTC can step onboard public transports more regularly to enable them to empathise with the commuters, and recognise their fair rights and interests.

Central Executive Council
National Solidarity Party

Singapore Anime Figurine Protesters Meet Real Police Saturday, Sep 8 2007 

SINGAPORE, Sept 7 (Reuters) - A protest action by a group of Singaporeans with Japanese anime figurines such as the 5-inch tall Ultramen, robots and monsters with placards met some real-life police in the city-state.

A handful of fans of Japanese anime had turned up at a Singapore public park on August 25 with armfuls of the toys to protest against a clampdown on Internet downloading of anime material by Singapore animation distributor Odex.

The incident was not reported in the local press, but pictures and accounts have started circulating on many blogs and political Web sites. .

“The police didn’t stop us from what we wanted to do. But their being there was enough to intimidate,” the event’s organiser — who only wanted to be known by his online moniker Zer0 — told Reuters by telephone.

He added that police — who had four anti-riot vans at the scene — also took down the anime fans’ particulars and that they were filmed by plainclothes policemen. A police spokeswoman said she could not immediately comment.

Public protests are rare in Singapore, where outdoor demonstrations are banned and any public gathering of more than four people requires a permit.

Global Club of Democracies Decide Not To Invite Singapore Friday, Sep 7 2007 

Invitations for Global Club of Democracies Deemed “Largely Credible”, Freedom House, 6 Sept 2007

The Community of Democracies, a global club for the world’s old and new democracies, has decided which governments merit invitation to its meeting of foreign ministers scheduled for November in Bamako, Mali. The end result, after months of deliberations, is “largely credible,” according to a consortium of groups monitoring the process.

The final list of 126 participating and 20 observer states, issued by the Government of Mali as chair of the body’s steering committee, follows recommendations made in February by an independent panel of high-level experts, with some notable exceptions.

The diverse group of 16 governments that make up the Community of Democracies Convening Group, which is responsible for issuing invitations to the club’s fourth ministerial meeting, decided not to invite Thailand, Fiji, Singapore, Qatar, Venezuela, Bangladesh and Tunisia, all of whom had participated in or observed the last meeting held in Santiago in 2005. Their exclusion is consistent with the recommendations of the experts panel and underscores the Convening Group’s determination to keep out those governments which have failed to uphold the democracy and human rights commitments of the group.

Notably, the Convening Group decided to downgrade both Russia and Nigeria from participant to observer status for the upcoming Bamako meeting. Given the high profile of these two countries, this decision sends a clear signal to the international community that current trends of respect for democracy and human rights in both countries are on the decline.

To be credible, the Community of Democracies must hold all states to the same universal standards of democracy and human rights adopted by the Community itself. In this light, the Convening Group has not strictly upheld the association’s criteria for participation in its decision to invite both Afghanistan and Iraq as full participants. The experts panel had recommended Afghanistan be invited as an observer due to persistent governmental instability and its effect on advancing human rights; it advised that Iraq not be invited at all due to the continuing inability to establish an accountable state there.

Several other country invitations demonstrate that there is still further work to be done to ensure that all states are held to the same standards for future meetings. The Convening Group was lenient, for example, with regard to keeping some countries, such as Bahrain, Jordan, Malaysia and Yemen, as participants despite a downward trend in democratic standards and human rights. They also maintained several questionable countries in the observer category (Egypt, Oman, Burkina Faso and Azerbaijan) despite recommendations by the experts panel to not invite, and moved several new countries that are not making sufficient progress (Cameroon, Guinea-Bissau, Rwanda, and Uganda) to the observer category for the Bamako meeting.

The independent experts panel, composed of over a dozen former heads of state, parliamentarians, human rights experts and academics from around the world, delivered recommendations based on a comprehensive assessment of how well governments are meeting the club’s standards of democracy and human rights. The panel was formed on the belief that the value of the Community of Democracies rests largely on the character of its membership. By requiring a regular review of democratic principles and practices, the Community of Democracies process acknowledges that democracy is not an end-state but a process in which states may advance on or fall away from the path of democracy.

The experts panel, known as the International Advisory Committee (IAC), welcomes the Convening Group’s invitation to continue the fruitful relationship that has formed, and looks forward to continued collaboration to ensure that the invitations process for the Community of Democracies is transparent, credible, and legitimate.

The International Advisory Committee was supported by research and analysis conducted by a Secretariat composed of the Bertelsmann Stiftung (Germany), the Center for Democratic Development (Ghana), the Democracy Coalition Project (USA) and Freedom House (USA).

The Community of Democracies, a global grouping of democratic and democratizing states, was launched in Warsaw in 2000 as a forum for strengthening international cooperation for democracy and human rights promotion. Its participants also have established a Democracy Caucus at the United Nations for the purpose of coordinating common positions on democracy and human rights at the world body.

A chart comparing the Community of Democracies invitation status of all UN member states since the first meeting in Warsaw in 2000 can be found below. (Click here)

To read the International Advisory Committee’s recommendations, click here.

Click here for the PDF version of this press release

Click here for the International Advisory Committee country report on Singapore

Singapore’s Iron Fist Jails Opposition Leader Thursday, Sep 6 2007 

Asia Sentinel, 5 Sept 2007

Chee Soon Juan, the much-jailed, harassed and bankrupted leader of Singapore’s harried opposition Singapore Democratic Party, was ordered back to jail Wednesday after being found unable to pay a fine for violating Singapore’s bankruptcy act.

Chee is to spend three weeks at Singapore’s Queenstown Remand Prison. The fine grew out of the luckless opposition leader’s attempt to leave the country in February to attend the World Movement for Democracy in Istanbul, where he had been invited to deliver an address on the island republic’s authoritarian approach to dissent. He was fined S$4,000 for trying to leave the country. The party has posted its message on YouTube.

“My colleagues and I have been repeatedly convicted and imprisoned for ‘speaking in public without a permit,’” Chee said in a press release issued before his imprisonment.

The sentence for the country’s most prominent opposition leader comes as an embarrassment to the American Bar Association, which together with Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs is organizing the World Justice Project’s International Multidisciplinary Outreach Conference on September 20. The US-based legal organization, whose motto is “defending liberty, pursuing justice,” did not answer a request for an interview on why it has lent its name to a conference in a country with some of the most restrictive laws and policies in the world.

Singapore’s legal system has been condemned repeatedly by the New York City Bar Association, Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and others. Scores of opponents of the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) have been jailed or sued to bankruptcy by the government. Defamation suits have been used against the international press to the point where they remain a cudgel against free expression – except for the republic’s increasingly ubiquitous and angry blogs. In 2006, the International Commission of Jurists condemned the “the use of defamation proceedings in Singapore to silence opponents, seriously undermining the rule of law.”

In reacting to Chee’s latest imprisonment, Amnesty International said in a statement: “This climate continues to stifle freedom of expression, deters the expression of views alternative to those of the ruling People’s Action Party and dissuades many Singaporeans from exercising their right to take part in public affairs.”

Chee himself was sued in 1993 and 2001 for defamation and ordered to pay former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew and other PAP leaders US$600,000. He was sued again in 2006 in an action that makes it virtually certain that the SDP will be bankrupted and put out of business. A neuropsychologist by training, Chee was sacked from his job as a lecturer at the National University of Singapore in 1993 after he was accused of improperly using S$226 for postage.

Chee’s party did not win any parliament seats in last year’s May poll, but won 23 percent of the votes in the wards it contested.

As bankrupts, the party’s leaders now have been banned from standing for election and from traveling overseas; Chee’s passport has been impounded.

Singapore is ranked 146th of out of 168 countries by Reporters without Borders, the journalism watchdog organization, just below Somalia and Sudan. The Far Eastern Economic Review is currently being sued by Lee Kuan Yew and his son, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, for having published an interview last year with Chee.

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