International community must act to prevent further gender-based violence in Myanmar, Southeast Asian MPs say

International community must act to prevent further gender-based violence in Myanmar, Southeast Asian MPs say

JAKARTA – As we come towards the end of this year’s 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence, ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR) calls on the international community to work to ensure the protection of women in Myanmar, particularly as the illegal junta’s military losses continue to mount.

Sexual and gender-based violence has long been used as a weapon of war by Min Aung Hlaing’s junta, and we are concerned that this will escalate as the junta seeks retaliation for their recent losses,” APHR Chair and member of the Indonesian House of Representatives Mercy Barends said today. “The international community must not allow this to happen.”

As Naw Hser Hser of the Women’s League of Burma (WLB) said in her statement to the United Nations Security Council earlier this year, “using sexual violence to attack civilian populations has long been the military’s modus operandi.” In 2017, Human Rights Watch found that the military had systematically used gang rape and other forms of sexual violence against Rohingya women and girls.

Meanwhile, since the attempted coup in February 2021, the WLB has documented over 100 cases of conflict-related sexual and gender-based violence, though the actual number of cases is likely much higher. A 2022 Amnesty International report also found that women and LGBTI post-coup detainees were subjected to “sexual violence, harassment and humiliation including invasive body searches.” Amnesty recounted that one transwoman detainee, Saw Han Nway Oo, was tortured and mocked for using feminine pronouns.  Another woman detainee, Ma Htoo, said that male guards would come into the women’s cells at anytime

We urge the international community to prioritize making international accountability mechanisms available for the survivors of sexual and gender-based violence in Myanmar,” said Barends. “A lack of action only emboldens the junta to continue to commit these violations with impunity.”

As part of this, APHR calls on the UN Security Council to refer the Myanmar junta to the International Criminal Court (ICC) and use universal jurisdiction to prosecute the junta for the systematic sexual violence as well as other crimes of humanity that it has committed. 

ASEAN, particularly the chairmanship ‘troika’, must realize that even as the junta  continues to suffer military defeats, the regime is inevitably going to escalate its violence against the civilian population, which will no doubt result in more cases of sexual and gender-based violence,” said Barends. 

APHR, therefore calls on ASEAN to pressure the UN Security Council to adopt strong measures to ensure the junta’s compliance to Security Council Resolution 2669, including targeted economic sanctions, a comprehensive arms embargo, as well as the aforementioned referral to the ICC.

As we approach the third Human Rights Day since the illegal coup, the international community still has not done nearly enough to defend and uphold the human rights of the people of Myanmar. We hope that this shameful pattern ends today,” said Barends.

Indonesia: ASEAN MPs welcome decision by Supreme Court to uphold Decree on Sexual Violence

Indonesia: ASEAN MPs welcome decision by Supreme Court to uphold Decree on Sexual Violence

JAKARTA – ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR) welcomes the decision made on Tuesday by the Supreme Court of Indonesia to uphold the Decree issued last year by the Ministry of Education to prevent and treat sexual violence, including verbal, non-physical, and digital acts,  in Higher Education, after it was challenged by a community organization from West Sumatra arguing it encouraged extra-marital sex.

In the context of rampant sexism, discriminative laws and the ongoing marginalization of women, the Supreme Court decision and the recent approval of the Anti-Sexual Violence bill in Parliament are a breath of fresh air in Indonesia. Much remains to be done, especially on implementation, but these are steps in the right direction towards gender equality and bringing about better protection for all Indonesian women and girls,”  said Mu Sochua, an APHR Board Member and former Cambodian MP.

In the face of increasing incidents of sexual harrassment in Indonesia, the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology made a progressive move by issuing a decree in 2021 aimed at eliminating sexual violence in universities by focusing on prevention and the victims’ recovery. However, in March Lembaga Kerapatan Adat Alam Minangkabau (LKAAM), an organization from West Sumatra, challenged it on spurious grounds that the Decree’s phrasing encouraged adultery.

The Supreme Court of Indonesia has made the right decision in upholding the decree, a decision that is aligned with the principle of gender equality and freedom of religion or belief that guarantees the individual rights of all Indonesians to be free of harassment regardless of their gender, said APHR.

Click here to read this statement in Bahasa Indonesian.