Rohingya 'Won't Be Deported'

Monday, August 24, 2009

The following article is written by Achara Ashayagachat (21/08/2009) in the Bangkok Post and can be found here http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/22407/rohingya-won-t-be-deported

The Immigration Bureau has allowed visitors rare access to Rohingya immigrants transferred from Ranong.The department also assured the immigrants they would not be thrown out of Thailand.

Immigration Bureau commissioner Chatchawal Suksomjit yesterday said the Rohingya would not be deported from Thailand, although the solution to the problem of illegal immigration rested with the governments of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Pol Lt Gen Chatchawal said a committee had been set up to investigate the deaths of two Rohingya during their detention in Ranong.

Doctors previously said they had died of natural causes. More than 30 Rohingya people stood flabbergasted on the concrete grounds at the detention centre at Suan Phlu yesterday while photographers took their pictures and senior immigration police officers and media tried to talk to them.

Another group of Rohingya sat wearily in a nearby room waiting for a nurse to take care of them.

Chalida Thacharoensak, of the People's Empowerment group, and activists and Rohingya representatives from the Burmese Rohingya Association in Thailand were also given a chance to meet them after they were moved from the southern province on Tuesday.

Vachareeya Thanya-ananphol, a Jesuit Refugee Service nurse who tended to all the immigrants at the centre, said about 10 Rohingya needed food and medicine.

"They feel very tired. Their legs are powerless and they feel itchy," Ms Vachareeya said.

Deputy Immigration Bureau chief Phitak Jarusombuti said the bureau would not reveal how long the Rohingya would be detained. He said they would get good care. "The NGOs and the Rohingya from outside will also provide some humanitarian support," Pol Maj Gen Phitak said.

Seventy-eight Rohingya landed off Thailand's shores in January. The centre now has 93 Rohingya, including nine who were arrested in February in Bangkok.

Joint CSO Statement: ASEAN Should Establish a Human Rights Body That is Not Below International Standards

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

(Bangkok, 18 June 2009) Civil Society Organizations in the region are concerned that ASEAN is about to establish a human rights body that is below international standards. The Solidarity for Asian People’s Advocacy Task Force on ASEAN and Human Rights (SAPA TF-AHR), a network of more than 50 organizations, is apprehensive that the final draft of the Terms of Reference (TOR) for the establishment of the ASEAN Human Rights body (AHRB) will result in a body that will be engaged mostly in the promotion of human rights, while lacking a mandate in protection work. The TOR is planned to be adopted by the ten Foreign Ministers in the 42nd ASEAN Ministerial Meeting (AMM) in Phuket, Thailand, in July.

“It is disturbing that we are only a month away from the AMM, yet, we continue to hear that the protection mandate and the appointment of independent experts are yet to be included in the TOR,” says Rafendi Djamin, the coordinator of Indonesian’s NGO Coalition for International Human Rights Working Group (HRWG).

“ASEAN should not go below international standards when setting up the ASEAN human rights body,” stressed Djamin, who is also Convenor of the SAPA TF-AHR.

NGOs are not rejecting ASEAN’s plan to promote human rights but stressed that the AHRB should be empowered to carry out protection work to address human rights violations in the region.

Yap Swee Seng, Executive Director of FORUM-ASIA said that “while the promotion of human rights is essential, in a region where human rights violations are common place, it is of paramount importance that the first regional human rights protection mechanism in Asia should have the mandate to carry out on-site visits to inquire into specific human rights concerns as well as to investigate human rights violations”.

He added “The experience of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) showed that when they visited Argentina in 1979, they received 5,000 complaints. The ensuing report remains one of the most important reports prepared by the IACHR as it showed patterns of how people were detained, taken to secret detention centres and then extra-judicially executed.”

Thun Saray, the President of Cambodian Human Rights and Development (ADHOC), also Cambodian focal point of SAPA TF-AHR said “Another key role for a human rights body would also be to assess and review the general human rights situation in the region and to publish reports and recommendations for collective action at the regional level.” He pointed out that this mechanism differs from the universal periodic review (UPR) process of the United Nations Human Rights Council. The UPR leaves the implementation of each country’s commitments to that particular country itself.

Wathshlah Naidu, the Gender Focal Point for SAPA TF-AHR and Programme Officer of the International Women's Rights Action Watch Asia Pacific based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, stressed that appointing experts to serve on the AHRB is vital. “They should serve in their personal capacity to promote and protect human rights. The selection process of these experts should be transparent, carried out after extensive and meaningful consultations with civil society,” says Ms Naidu.

“The body must provide human rights protection mechanism to ensure just remedies for all victims. A body with teeth should be established, and not another toothless mechanism ” says Sinapan Samydorai, the Singapore Country Focal Point of SAPA TF-AHR and the Convenor of the SAPA Task Force on ASEAN Migrant Workers.

“We envision an ASEAN Human Rights body that complies with the Paris Principles. It must be to fulfill the ASEAN peoples’ legitimate expectations for a body that can protect their rights,” added Sister Cres Lucero, Philippines Country Focal Point for SAPA TF-AHR and the Deputy Director of Task Force Detainees of the Philippines.

SAPA TF-AHR was established during the first Regional Consultation on ASEAN and Human Rights in Kuala Lumpur on 26-28 August 2007. It is a network of civil society organisations which aims to a) hold ASEAN member states accountable to their international and domestic human rights obligations, and b) make the ASEAN human rights mechanisms more accountable and effective. Early in 2009, the SAPA TFAHR launched the campaign on “we want ASEAN human rights commission with teeth!: accountable, effective and independent”.

For more information, please contact:

Yap Swee Seng, Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (in Bangkok), +6681 868 9178, yap@forum-asia.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Rafendi Djamin, Indonesia’s NGO Coalition on International Human Rights Advocacy (in Jakarta), +6281311442159, rafendi@hrwg.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Sr. Cres Lucero, Task Force Detainees of the Philippines (in Manila), +632 437 8054, clucerosfic@yahoo.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Thun Saray, Cambodia Human Rights and Development (in Phnom Penh), +855 23 218653, adhoc@forum.org.khThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Sinapan Samydorai, Think Centre, (in Singapore), 6594791906, samysd@yahoo.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it