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RP to push for ASEAN human rights body in Singapore meeting PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 21 February 2008 03:56

GMANews.TV - Feb 19, 2008

(link)

The Philippines is set to push anew for the creation of an ASEAN human rights body when ministers of the 10-member regional bloc gather for an informal meeting in Singapore on Wednesday.

Underscoring the importance of the body, Foreign Affairs Secretary Alberto Romulo said the human person remains to be at the core of development for the Philippines as well as other ASEAN nations.

"Of particular interest to the Philippines are the creation of the ASEAN human rights body," Romulo said in a statement.

“For the Philippines and for our partners in the region, the human person is at the core of development. The protection of human rights and the creation of an environment that allows development in its fullest form are, therefore, essential," Romulo added.

The creation of a human rights body will be included in the landmark charter of the Association of the South East Asian Nations, since it will monitor human rights condition in each ASEAN country.

The ASEAN is currently in the process of drafting a Terms of Reference for the regional human rights body.

Only four of the 10 ASEAN member countries - Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand - have independent national human rights bodies. ASEAN's other members are Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore and Vietnam.

Aside from the creation of an ASEAN human rights body, Romulo said they will also discuss reforms and corresponding resource mobilization toward a stronger, more efficient and more effective ASEAN Secretariat.

He also said that ASEAN Foreign Ministers will also exchange views on regional and international issues that will have an impact on the country's sustained growth such as the nuclear issue in the Korean Peninsula and the developments in the Middle East. - GMANews.TV

 
Petition for National Human Rights Commission PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 15 December 2007 06:53

Straits Times - Dec 10, 2007

By Keith Lin

A group of human rights activists yesterday called for a human rights commission to be set up in Singapore.

The petition comes from SG Human Rights, a nine-member informal group set up in October following the July decision by Asean, the Association of South-east Asian Nations, to include a provision for a human rights body in the Asean Charter.

The petition launch at the Speakers' Corner in Hong Lim Park was one of several activities held around the island at the weekend to commemorate Human Rights Day.

The day marks the anniversary of the United Nations General Assembly's adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on Dec 10, 1948.

Founding member of SG Human Rights Chia Ti Lik, a lawyer and former Workers' Party member, said the group felt that more attention needed to be paid to human rights if Singapore was to become a truly First World nation.

He hopes for an independent panel that will check human rights abuses and educate the public on human rights issues.

The group yesterday also invited members of the public to express their views on human rights at the Speakers' Corner.

Despite the heavy rain, eight speakers showed up to address a crowd of about 30 people.

The speakers included opposition politicians Chee Soon Juan and Jufrie Mahmood, as well as social activist Bridget Lew.

Former Workers' Party chief J.B. Jeyaretnam was scheduled to speak, but failed to make the trip due to a flood outside his home in Johor Baru.

The speakers addressed a range of issues, from protection of foreign workers' rights to the death penalty and lack of youth activism.

Also commemorating International Human Rights Day yesterday was the Singapore Working Committee for an Asean Human Rights Mechanism.

Its volunteers spent yesterday afternoon distributing stickers highlighting the plight of the Myanmar people and calling on Asean to sustain the pressure on the military junta.

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Human Rights Day: Singapore Lawyers Petition to Law Society PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 10 December 2007 20:06
Official SG Human Rights video coverage.

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Singapore Protest Laws Won't Be Relaxed: Activists PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 28 November 2007 16:19

Agence France-Presse - 11/21/2007 7:14 AM

http://news.ph.msn.com/regional/article.aspx?cp-documentid=1109611

A rare series of protests during this week's summit of Asian leaders in Singapore does not signal an easing of the city-state's tight restrictions on public assembly, activists said Wednesday.

Partly because of rules that say any gathering of five or more people requires a police permit, few Singaporeans dare take to the streets like their counterparts in Bangkok, Jakarta or Manila where noisy rallies are common.

But since Sunday, four separate public protests have taken place here -- all of them over rights abuses in Myanmar and all coinciding with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit and related meetings.

Isrizal, 32, who joined one of the protests, said he could not recall civil society groups in Singapore coming together on a single issue in such a manner before.

"It's a departure," he said.

Chee Siok Chin, of the opposition Singapore Democratic Party (SDP), said protesters were "buoyed by the fact that the summit was being held here."

But Seah Chiang Nee, editor of the local political website littlespeck.com, said the number of demonstrations did not mark a step forward for free speech in the city-state.

"You're not going to get 2,000 NUS (National University of Singapore) students wearing headbands demonstrating in Orchard Road. That's not in their nature," said Seah, whose website contains political views that would not normally see print in the pro-government Singapore media.

The biggest protest this week drew more than three dozen Myanmar nationals, while another involved foreign university students.

"It would have made a difference if there were 50 or 60 locals taking part," he said.

Chee, whose party has no seats in parliament, admitted: "It may seem that there is a little bit of progress but no, there isn't."

The actions began Sunday when about 10 students released balloons outside a hotel to call for the release of Myanmar's detained democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

On Monday, nine foreign university students, all in red T-shirts, walked along the city-state's main Orchard Road tourist and shopping strip in groups of three.

They were far outnumbered by police, some with video cameras, who converged on them when they reached the edge of the protected zone near the summit site before they dispersed.

Police had said even one protester would not be allowed in the zone under special rules imposed ahead of the summit. Chee and another party member were bundled into unmarked police vans there Tuesday.

In the same area, also on Tuesday, police blocked four Singaporeans, including Isrizal, from delivering a giant greeting card bearing the image of Aung San Suu Kyi to ASEAN officials.

But police arranged for an ASEAN official to collect the card from the activists.

The largest demonstration, also just outside the restricted zone, involved about 40 Myanmar residents of Singapore. They lined up silently on Tuesday in rows of three behind a large banner and also carried smaller protest leaflets.

When about 20 police arrived and asked what the group was doing, they dispersed, but their demonstration was one of the largest seen in recent memory in Singapore.

Sinapan Samydorai, of the local rights group Think Centre, said authorities were more sensitive to actions by political figures.

"It is not about the number of people, five or 10 people, but they are worried about political expression," he said.

Singapore's leaders say tough laws against dissent and other political activity are necessary to ensure the stability which has helped the city-state achieve economic success.

 
Update on Activities during ASEAN Summit PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 22 November 2007 02:53

Four members of the informal group SG Human Rights (SgHR), Chia Ti Lik, Ho Choon Hiong, Isrizal and Seelan Palay, gathered on 20 Nov Tuesday at 1.00pm at Orchard MRT station. Their plan was to walk to Shangri-La Hotel where the 13th ASEAN Summit was being held and present a petition in the form of a giant greeting card to the ASEAN Secretariat in connection with the Burmese junta's violent crackdown on protestors. Earlier at a public forum held on 18 Nov Sunday, this greeting card had been signed by many participants who expressed their solidarity with the Burmese people.

SgHR's 4-man representation were accompanied by about 20 members of the press as well as policemen who filmed the events. They walked from Orchard MRT station to Orange Grove Road where they were stopped by the police who were on standby there.

The police did not allow the group to go towards Shangri-La Hotel even though the hotel was still open to the public. The reason they gave was that Shangri-La had been gazetted as a security area, and they were holding an item that could prove embarrassing to the Burmese representatives at the ASEAN Summit.

After half an hour of negotiation, the four members of SgHR managed to hand over the giant greeting card to a representative of the ASEAN Secretariat. After some further interviews with the press, they ended the event.

We also express our support and solidarity with the 50 Burmese who demonstrated their concerns later the same day.

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