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5-11 December: Burma’s NHRC: Cheerleader for the Regime

December 12, 2011

On Saturday, the world celebrated International Human Rights Day. However, in Burma, this anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights marked yet another year without any improvement in the human rights situation of the people.

The newly formed National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) used the occasion to release a statement praising the regime’s commitment to human rights.

In its statement, the NHRC referred to the importance of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The NHRC is right these two texts are of high importance. In fact, they are of such importance that, if the NHRC was an independent effective human rights body, it would have surely called on the regime to ratify these two fundamental instruments.

The NHRC further states that, “The Constitution adopted on 29 May, 2008 overwhelmingly by the people of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar also enshrines these fundamental human rights.” This sentence alone is enough to clearly demonstrate that the NHRC is nothing more than a tool used to legitimize the regime. Firstly, the 2008 Constitution is an undemocratic military-drafted Constitution adopted by a flawed referendum held only few weeks after Cyclone Nargis hit Burma, killing 138,000 people and leaving 2.4 million people struggling to survive. Secondly, the 2008 Constitution itself violates the rights of the people of Burma and is an instrument used by the regime to maintain power and oppress the population. Thirdly, if the NHRC was in a position to independently carry out its work, it would not blindly promote a Constitution that enshrines human rights violations and protects perpetrators. Rather the NHRC would call on the regime to amend the Constitution to be in compliance with international human rights standards.

It is not a surprise that the language in the NHRC’s statement is identical to that used by regime officials. The NHRC is composed of people who have made a career out of defending the regime’s abysmal human rights record. The Chairman and Vice-Chairman of the commission are former regime spokespersons at the UN, who constantly denied the existence of human rights violations, impunity, forced labour and use of child soldiers in Burma. The leadership of the commission clearly lacks credibility, leaving little hope that the body will ever be able to carry out its duties independently.

The NHRC also claimed that it complies with the Paris Principles, which are the international standards that are used to determine a national human rights institution’s independence and effectiveness. However, a simple glance at the NHRC’s composition, establishment, and mandate is enough to clearly demonstrate that it violates these core principles.

In a final attempt at proving the NHRC’s effectiveness, the body states that it has finished drafting its Rules of Procedure. Where are they? There is little publicly available information about the NHRC. The entire process of its establishment is everything but transparent, making it clear that the commission is not designed to be a functional and effective institution, accessible to the public and, in particular, victims of human rights violations.

The international community must not sideline the issue of impunity in Burma because of the so called “reforms” that Thein Sein’s government has taken, including the establishment of the NHRC. Now is the time for the international community to call on the regime to take the necessary steps to make the commission a truly independent and effective mechanism by complying with the international standards. Today’s NHRC is not a solution to human rights violations and rampant impunity, but will only serve as a tool for whitewashing Burma’s appalling record of human rights abuses.

News Highlights

Weekly Eleven News receives award from Reporters Sans Frontières for its coverage of the current situation in Burma

Students who protested for the release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi in 1991 gathered in Rangoon to mark 20 years since she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize; around 1,000 people attended, including Daw Suu and foreign diplomats

Inside Burma

Deputy NLD Leader U Tin Oo says he will not contest in the upcoming by-elections because of his age

NLD founder and former secretary U Lwin passes away in Rangoon

Brian Joseph, a senior director of the National Endowment for Democracy, meets with NLD leaders to discuss economy and law enforcement

Speaker of the Lower House, Shwe Mann, denies accusations that the regime is engaging in a nuclear program with North Korea

Authorities reject an application to form a trade union in a Pegu textile, garment and leather factory

Union Election Commission warns the Union of Myanmar Federation of National Politics and 88 Generation Student Youths (Union of Myanmar) that they could be dissolved for violating regulations

Kachin Independence Army (KIA) claims its forces killed more than 60 Burma Army soldiers during offensive in Gauri, Manmaw District

KIA’s ambush against Burma Army convoy on the Mandalay-Muse road, Kutkai Township, Shan State kills three officers and another attack targeting a compound that is home to the Military Strategic Office and an adjoining police station in Munggu kills 18 Burma Army soldiers and policemen

Bomb explosion in Kutkai Township, Northern Shan State, kills three Burma Army soldiers and wounds four

Nay Myo Zin, former Burma Army captain turned charity worker who was sentenced to 10 years in prison, submits appeal to Naypyidaw Supreme Court

Regime jails 63 Rohingyas refugees on immigration charges after their boat to Malaysia ends up in Tenasserim Division

Authorities begin to give compensation to villagers forced off their land for the Shwe Gas pipeline in Namkham Township, Shan State

Two Indian journalists go missing after interviewing Indian rebel leader in Kachin State

Magazines covering business and crime will not be censored

Burma remains the fourth highest jailer of journalists in the world

Regional

Chinese authorities tell more than 2,000 refugees in Yunnan Province to return to Kachin State

Over 1,300 Rohingyas have been arrested in Bangladesh this year; President Thein Sein assures Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina that Burma will take back Rohingya refugees; Bangladesh will be the first country to move its embassy from Rangoon to Naypyidaw

Thailand to fly in migrant workers from Burma who recently fled from flooding

A delegation of MPs and regime officials will visit India to study the Indian model of government

South Korea to resume offering development assistance loans after 6-year hiatus

His Holiness the Dalai Lama expresses desire to pay homage at the Shwedagon Pagoda in Rangoon

International

US Special Envoy to Burma, Derek Mitchell, is currently travelling to South Korea, Japan and China to brief the countries on the recent visit of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; Congressman Joseph Crowley says that the regime needs to show it is serious about reforms by taking concrete actions, including an immediate end to human rights abuses

UN Envoy to Burma, Vijay Nambiar, says the UN is trying to provide humanitarian assistance to refugees who have fled armed conflict in Kachin State (Burmese)

The Vatican is sending an envoy to Burma for a religious celebration, who will also meet with Daw Aung San Suu Kyi

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Kuki Students Democratic Front and Kuki Women’s Human Rights Organization hold a peaceful protest rally and press conference in New Delhi against the Tamanthi Dam

Authorities reject application to stage a demonstration by independent politician Win Cho claiming that the law is yet to be enacted and Home Affairs Ministry has not announced procedure

Opinion

World Must Act to End Impunity in Burma
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Don’t count on change happening quickly in Burma
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Statements and Press Releases

Shwe Gas Project Operator Daewoo Must Listen to the Local People’s Voices
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BROUK Condemns Sentencing 63 Rohingyas on Immigration Charge
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Ensure Human Rights, People’s Participation and Economic Justice in Democratization
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Kuki Women Urge Burma and India: Stop Damming the Chindwin and Let Us Return Home
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Activists Condemn Norway’s Refusal to Heed Council of Ethics’ Warning on Pipeline Investments in Burma
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Reports

Attacks on Health and Education: Trends and incidents from Eastern Burma, 2010-2011
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Definitional Ambiguity and UNSCR 1998: Impeding UN-led Responses to Attacks on Health and Education in Eastern Burma
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Burma’s Weekly Political News Summary (098-2011) (Burmese)
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This post is in: Weekly Highlights