Two years after Myanmar’s military coup, human rights violations continue to escalate

Two years after Myanmar’s military coup, human rights violations continue to escalate

Two years after the Myanmar military launched a coup on 1 February 2021, civil society organizations strongly condemn the ongoing human rights violations, and call for accountability and the restoration of a legitimate government. The attempted coup breached Myanmar’s constitution and international law, and was met with massive and largely spontaneous protests that illustrated the lack of meaningful support for the junta among the people of Myanmar. To date, sustained opposition among the population has denied the junta full control over the country, despite an escalation in brutality. There are many well-documented cases of the military committing atrocities, including strong evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

In this context, human rights defenders are more vulnerable because of their work and their visibility, and their safety in both Myanmar and neighbouring countries continues to deteriorate.

As of 30 January 2023, local human rights monitoring group Assistance Association for Political Prisoners (AAPP), has documented a total of 2,901 killings, 17,525 arrests of political prisoners with 13,719 still detained, and a total of 101 individuals on death row, including at least nine women human rights defenders. The real number is likely several times higher, due to the difficulty of documenting facts on the ground. The Penal Code, particularly sections related to treason, defamation and statements causing public disorder, is being widely used by the military junta to curtail freedom of expression and stifle dissent.

The military’s use of torture and other forms of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment against detainees, including human rights defenders, political dissidents, journalists and civilian protesters, has been well documented. The executions of Phyo Zeya Thaw, a former member of the National League for Democracy, and prominent democracy activists Kyaw Min Yu, Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw in July 2022, represented an escalation in the junta’s human rights violations to suppress pro-democracy movements.

Many human rights defenders in Myanmar have been forced into exile, where they continue to face numerous challenges. These range from the insecurity of living in refugee camps, to the fear of being tracked, arrested and deported back to Myanmar due to the lack of legal documents, and the challenges of ongoing trauma. Those human rights defenders who have valid travel documents face the impossibility of renewing their passports or requesting visa extensions in neighbouring countries once they expire.

Alongside human rights defenders, journalists are among those most at risk, as documented by the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). Many are detained under Article 505(a) of the Penal Code, an anti-state provision that broadly penalises “incitement” and “false news”, both ill-defined terms in law and arbitrarily interpreted by martial or military-influenced courts to hand down two- and three-year sentences.

The already dire situation of the Rohingya remaining in Myanmar has been further exacerbated in this context. As the military continues its violent campaign against any form of resistance, including by conducting airstrikes against ethnic areas and villages, over a million people have been displaced internally, and approximately 50,000 new refugees have fled to neighbouring countries as of November 2022. The attempted coup has also added to existing challenges to safe, voluntary, dignified and sustainable return of Rohingya refugees to their places of origin or choice in Myanmar. At the same time, all minority communities in Myanmar continue to bear the brunt of the junta’s ongoing violence in the country. The significant escalation of violence by the junta against ethnic communities in Myanmar bears hallmarks of the grave atrocities against Rohingya.

In this sense, the killing of Rohingya human rights defender and community leader Mohib Ullah, killed in Cox’s Bazar on 29 September 2021, is illustrative of the risks that many human rights defenders members of ethnic communities, incur.

On the 2nd anniversary of the coup, FORUM-ASIA, Front Line Defenders and ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR) urge the international community to:

  • Stand in solidarity with the people of Myanmar, including by increasing financial support for human rights defenders and civil society organizations in the country and in exile;
  • Systematically and publicly call out violations against human rights defenders, request their immediate and unconditional release, and access to human rights defenders in detention; denounce the violation of fair trial rights, the use of military tribunals, and call to ensure access of family members and lawyers to those detained;
  • Recognise the precarious situation that many human rights defenders in exile face and ensure access to visas and other necessary travel documentation, as well as schemes for safe passage or temporary relocation in third countries;
  • Deny the junta any recognition or legitimacy as representatives of the people of Myanmar. This should include denying it access to international fora or meeting with its representatives;
  • Denounce the upcoming elections planned by the junta as a brazen attempt to legitimize the coup, recognising the increased risks for the population and in particular human rights defenders and journalists if elections were to go ahead;
  • Take necessary measures towards accountability for genocide against Rohingya, and well documented war crimes and crimes against humanity as well as widespread and systematic human rights violations against the people of Myanmar, including those in exile in neighbouring countries, by referring Myanmar to the International Criminal Court or setting up an ad hoc tribunal. Support Gambia in its case against Myanmar for the Rohingya genocide at the International Court of Justice, as well as initiatives to make the military accountable in national courts, such as Argentina and Germany most recently, using the principle of Universal Justice;
  • Impose a comprehensive global arms embargo and coordinated, targeted sanctions against the Myanmar military, its leadership and associates as well as businesses affiliated the military.

Signatories:

ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights

Forum Asia

Front Line Defenders

Parliamentarians urge ASEAN to take greater action to resolve Rakhine crisis

Parliamentarians urge ASEAN to take greater action to resolve Rakhine crisis

JAKARTA – Ahead of the 37th ASEAN Summit this week, current and former parliamentarians have submitted an open letter to ASEAN urging it to play a positive role in resolving the ongoing crisis in Myanmar’s Rakhine State. 

Dozens of current and former lawmakers from across Southeast Asia have urged the policy-making body to ensure that its actions create positive and sustainable change that contribute to ending the cycle of violence and displacement in Rakhine. 

“While we welcome ASEAN playing a proactive role in the Rakhine crisis, there is so much more it can do to help bring it towards a resolution,” said Mercy Barends, an Indonesian MP and Board Member of ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR). “Importantly, it must recognize that this is more than a humanitarian issue, and address it from all aspects, whether they are human rights, political, humanitarian, social or economic.”

“It is time for ASEAN to articulate a coordinated and long-term strategy that addresses the root causes of this crisis. Failure to do so will risk causing further harm and suffering for the Rohingya, and all other communities in Rakhine,” Barends said. 

Three years since a brutal Myanmar military crackdown forced more than 740,000 Rohingya to flee to refugee camps in Bangladesh, Myanmar’s government has not taken any meaningful steps to address the root causes of the crisis, APHR said. Refugees are still making perilous journeys by sea, while inside Myanmar approximately 600,000 Rohingya are still facing discriminatory restrictions imposed by the government, deprived of their rights to citizenship, freedom of movement, and access to essential services. In addition, an intensifying armed conflict between the Arakan Army and the Myanmar military threatens the safety of thousands of civilians from all communities, the MPs added. 

In their open letter, the lawmakers make a number of recommendations to ASEAN in how it can play a proactive and positive role in resolving the crisis, including by promoting transparency in its decisions, and ensuring meaningful consultation with the Rohingya and refugee communities, as well as with civil society actors. The MPs also called on ASEAN to strengthen the capacity of its institutions to respond to “man-made disasters” such as the one in Rakhine State. 

“Until now, ASEAN has allowed the Myanmar government to dictate the terms of its engagement on the Rakhine issue, but this week’s ASEAN Summit presents the perfect opportunity to change course, and use its political leverage with the Myanmar government to push for measures that bring meaningful change on the ground in Rakhine State,” said Barends. “We urge ASEAN to develop a strategy that listens to the people most impacted by this crisis, and most importantly, one that abides by the principle of ‘Do No Harm’”. 

APHR President Eva Sundari meets with Myanmar delegation

APHR President Eva Sundari meets with Myanmar delegation

On 10 February, Eva Sundari received U Tha Lu Shay, Myanmar deputy minister of ministry of border affairs and delegation preparing a draft bill on conflict resolution. The delegation included government’s apparatuses of Rhakhine State: minister U Tha Lu Shay (ministry agriculture n livestock breeding), state minister U Mra Aung (ministry development affairs) and state minister of security and border affairs, Col Htein Linn. The visit was facilitated by UNDP Myanmar in which the country director, Tolly Kurbanov, was with the delegation.

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PHILIPPINES HOUSE RESOLUTION NO 1175: Grave Concern over Thai Military Coup

PHILIPPINES HOUSE RESOLUTION NO 1175: Grave Concern over Thai Military Coup

On May 28, 2014 a bipartisan group of members of the House of Representatives of the Philippines filed a resolution expressing grave concern over developments in Thailand and demanding a swift return to democratic processes and the holding of free elections. The congressmen who filed the resolution were Reps Barry Gutierrez, Akbayan Partylist; Walden Bello, Akbayan Partylist; Kaka-Bag-ao, Dinagat Islands; Jose Atienza, Buhay Partylist; Raymond Democrito Mendoza, TUCP Partylist; Sherwin Tugna, CIBAC Partylist;

HOUSE RESOLUTION NO 1175

MAY 28, 2014

EXPRESSING GRAVE CONCERN ON THE MILITARY COUP IN THAILAND AND ITS FAR REACHING EFFECTS ON DEMOCRACY, HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL GLOBAL ORDER

WHEREAS, on 20 May 2014, the Thai Army declared Martial Law throughout the country;

WHEREAS, two days after, the military staged a coup ‘d etat against the duly elected government and abolished the country’s constitution;

WHEREAS, the junta, the National Peace and Order Maintaining Council (NPOMC) has arrested more than a hundred political leaders in Thailand, the whereabouts of some are still unknown today;

WHEREAS, the NPOMC has also prohibited the foreign travel of 155 political figures in Thailand;

WHEREAS, the current autocratic rule in Thailand is not the solution to the seven-month old political crisis but will merely deepen the divide between the contending political groups;

WHEREAS, the coup goes against the momentum towards democracy in Southeast Asia and threatens the consolidation of democratic rule in countries in the region that have embraced democracy;

WHEREAS, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, along with several other states, has called for a full restoration of civilian control in Thailand;

WHEREAS, a free and democratic election is the best forum to determine who should rule a nation;

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, AS IT IS HEREBY RESOLVED, to urge the Royal Thai Army, to immediately relinquish the political leadership of Thailand to the duly constituted civilian authority under the constitution and existing laws of the country, with the end view of restoring democracy and the full political and civil rights of all the citizens of Thailand.

Adopted,

Walden Bello

Akbayan Partylist

Ibarra Gutierrez III

Akbayan Partylist

Kaka Bag-Ao

Dinagat Islands

Sherwin Tugna

CIBAC Partylist

Jose Atienza

Buhay Partylist

Raymond Democrito Mendoza

TUCP Partylist