Burma :
''Evolution towards a Democracy'' - excluding the Nobel Laureate
and Political Prisoners -
Kofi Annan has said Suu Kyi's detention completely derailed Burma's
moves toward democracy.
By < Zin Linn >
Burmese military junta, on 18 November 2003, made a press release
that it released 58 prisoners on 17 November, including elderly
men and pregnant women, while promising to free more people in order
to highlight its ''Evolution towards a Democracy''.
In its information sheet N0. C- 2841 ( I/L ), the junta says nine
prisoners above the age of 65 and 49 female prisoners either pregnant
or with young children were freed on 17 November on humanitarian
grounds after their sentences were commuted.
The statement gives no details about their backgrounds and did
not say whether they were criminals or political detainees. The
latest releases came a week after United Nations human rights envoy
Professor Paulo Sergio Pinheiro urged the junta to free all political
prisoners, especially the elderly inmates who were approaching their
80s.
Burma's ruling junta which seized power since September 1988, faces
international pressures for suppressing democracy and abusing human
rights. Although the junta had sponsored the 1990 elections, it
never honoured the elections results that deserved a landslide victory
to the National League for Democracy.
Releasing all political prisoners would be an important gesture
for the military regime to signal to the international community
that it was moving towards democratic political reforms, Mr Pinheiro
told the media after his sixth visit to Rangoon.
But due to analysts in Rangoon, the junta has cleverly done the
job of a trickster as there was no political prisoner out of 58
inmates released on 17 November. It's really a deception to the
outside world. It also made no mention of pro-democracy leader Aung
San Suu Kyi who is under apparent house arrest and her supporters
who have been in detention together with her after the Black Friday.
The Nobel laureate, who was detained again on May 30 after clashes
between the NLD supporters and pro-junta thugs, was still under
arrest in her own house. But the regime says she is not being held
under any security law even it refuses to let visitors, including
diplomats and party members. Her telephone-line has been disconnected
and security troops are stationed around her residence.
The Lady has made her situation clear to Mr. Pinheiro who met her
during his sixth visit to Rangoon that she would not accept freedom
until all those arrested since 30 May 2003 have been released. The
junta has not made any offer to release her as yet.
The military regime's statement says the prisoners freed on 17
November are in good health and back home together with their respective
families. It also said that it will continue to release prisoners
that will cause no harm to the community nor threaten the existing
peace, stability and the unity of the nation as the country goes
through a steady evolution towards a democracy.
But, Prof. Pinheiro says in his 12 November 2003 Statement which
he submitted to the Third Committee of the UNGA as Special Rapporteur
on the Situation of Human Rights in Myanmar (Burma) that during
his visit to Insein Prison he interviewed 19 political prisoners.
He was able to verify that the practice of extending the imprisonments
of those who have served their prison-terms by placing them under
''administrative detention'' still continues. This practice, Mr.
Pinheiro expresses, continues to be applied even to very elderly
and infirm political prisoners.
The Special Rapporteur has condemned the practice as cruel and
unacceptable. Although the junta's law provides for this measure,
he called for the repealing of the relevant legislation as these
provisions are contrary to international human rights standards.
And he also mentions the grounds for arresting these individuals
are highly arbitrary. They were arrested for the exercise of their
freedom of opinion and expression.
Last February, Burmese military junta, eager to show the world
it has cleaned up its human rights record, allowed a 10-day visit
to two Amnesty representatives meeting government ministers and
political prisoners. During in Rangoon, Amnesty's Asia-Pacific programme
director, Demelza Stubbings, urged the junta to scrap British colonial
laws used to detain prisoners without giving them access to a lawyer,
relatives or medical care. "Some of the laws that apply date
from the British colonial period -- they are extremely outdated,"
Stubbings told Reuters television in an interview in Bangkok, shortly
after returning from Burma.
"Basic fundamental human rights, including freedom of expression,
freedom of association, freedom of assembly are in fact criminalised
by many of the laws...and this is a matter of grave concern,"
Demelza Stubbings also pointed out.
As a campaign to free political prisoners in Burma, the NGOs and
Burmese students held a forum in Bangkok on 8 August 2002 to mark
the 14th anniversary of the Aug 8, 1988 political uprising, laying
wreaths and airing a videotape in which the Nobel laureate Aung
San Suu Kyi calls on the ruling junta to release all political prisoners.
In her message Daw Aung San Suu Kyi says:
'' Democracy means pluralism. That means many parties, many strands
of thought. That means that we have to be able to disagree. That
means we have to be able to agree to disagree. Because of that,
the holding of political prisoners saps peoples' confidence in the
possibility of change. If people are going to be arrested for expressing
their opinions, their political opinions, then how can we say that
there is a hope for political freedom in Burma, and without political
freedom, how can there be democracy? So, we repeat, again and again,
we reiterate, that the release of political prisoners is the most
important thing for all those who truly wish to bring about change
in Burma. ''
The article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights says,''
Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this
right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and
to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media
and regardless of frontiers.'' But the Burmese generals have been
turning a deaf ear not only the article 19 but the entire declaration.
As a result, the number of political prisoners is increasing in
the junta's prisons after the 30 May premeditated massacre at Dapeyin
and many of them in life-threatening situation. Over thirty journalists
are among those prisoners. It was confirmed that 83 unfortunate
political prisoners had passed away in the hellish prisons of the
junta.
The international community including human rights watch groups
and media teams should not show tolerance to the Burmese generals
for their inhumane behaviours and it's time to demand the military
regime to release all political prisoners prior of their death as
an important sign of ''Evolution towards a Democracy''.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan has said Suu Kyi's detention
completely derailed Burma's moves toward democracy.
The military, in power since 1962, has ignored the 1990 election
victory by Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD)
party. All other senior NLD leaders have been under detention, and
party offices across the country closed, since May 30 of this year.
Up to this day, the legitimate democratic leader of the Burmese
people and 1991 Nobel Peace Laureate still remains under house arrest,
almost all of the NLD top-line leaders are under detention, approximately
1600 democracy activists including 37 Members of Parliament are
also languishing in the junta's jails. General socio-economic situation
is rapidly deteriorating as a result of mismanagement, corruption,
and incompetence of the ruling military regime.
Without getting people's support and trustworthiness, the generals
are claiming evolution towards a democracy. ### |