Thursday, March 15, 2012, Source: Human Rights Watch ...
Legal Reforms Should Meet International Human Rights Standards
(New
York) – Burma’s new law on the right to peaceful assembly falls far
short of international standards, Human Rights Watch said today.
President Thein Sein signed the assembly law, the Law Relating to
Peaceful Assembly and Peaceful Procession,on December 2, 2011.
Human Rights Watch urged Burma’s parliament to repeal the law’s
provisions that fail to meet international human rights standards, such
as imprisonment as a penalty for permit violations. In the meantime,
the Home Affairs Ministry should consult with international
organizations as it drafts regulations to mitigate some of the law’s
harsh effects.
“Burma’s new law on assembly rejects the
previous ban on demonstrations, but still allows the government to
trump the Burmese people’s basic rights,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “There is a lot of excitement
about changes in Burma these days, but the government shouldn’t be given
credit for allowing some freedom just because none existed before.
Instead, it should be pressed to make sure its laws meet international
standards.”
The Burmese government has long used laws banning
marches, demonstrations, and gatherings of more than five people to
arrest, prosecute, and imprison peaceful protesters. While ostensibly
accepting the right of peaceful assembly, the new law makes the right
subject to the overbroad control and the discretion of the authorities,
Human Rights Watch said. Under international law, legal restrictions
on basic freedoms should be clearly and narrowly identified, strictly
necessary, and proportionate.
The new assembly law requires
anyone planning a demonstration to seek permission from the township
police chief five days in advance. Permission is required for any
gathering of “more than one person in a public area … in order to
express their opinions.” The authorities are required to respond 48
hours before the planned gathering. If permission is denied, the
authorities must offer reasons.
The law states that the police
chief may only refuse a permit if the application is “contrary to Union
security, prevalence of law and order, community peace and tranquility
or public order and morality.” Organizers may appeal the decision to
the state or regional level police authorities. The administrative
appeals process is final, with no appeal to the courts allowed.
Holding an assembly without permission can result in a one-year prison
sentence. Even if permission is granted, theassembly lawprovides
criminal penalties of up to six months in prison for various types of
conduct, such as giving speeches that contain false information, saying
anything that could hurt the state and union, or “doing anything that
causes fear, a disturbance or blocks roads, vehicles or the public.”
These offenses are articulated in vague and uncertain terms, Human
Rights Watch said.
The original bill banned shouting slogans at
public assemblies. Parliament amended the final bill to allow slogans,
but only if they are pre-approved.
“Requiring approval for
the content of slogans shows just how far the government needs to go to
understand basic freedoms,” Adams said. “Peaceful protesters shouldn’t
go to jail just because a police officer may not like what they said.”
Burma has a long history of repression of peaceful protests.
Pro-democracy marches in 1990 were put down by the authorities with
lethal force. Security forces killed an estimated 2,000 protesters.
Peaceful marches led by the opposition 88 Generation Students group in
August 2007 and Buddhist monks in September 2007 were violently broken
up. Human Rights Watch’s investigation
documented killings by the security forces and hundreds of arbitrary
arrests. Some protest leaders were sentenced to over 65 years in
prison, and only released in the government’s January 2012 amnesty.
In 2011, the police forcibly dispersed several protests in Rangoon, the
former capital. One small protest on October 27 led to the arrest of
eight landless farmers and their lawyer, activist Phoe Phyu, for illegal
assembly after they protested the forcible acquisition of their land
by government-backed companies. Phoe Phyu, now free on bail pending
trial, is also defending a group of farmers who led protests in the
Irrawaddy Delta region in September. The authorities also arrested and
briefly detained a rights activist, Myint Naing, in Bassien in November
for filming the farmers’ protest and charged him with distributing
unauthorized material under the Electronics Transactions Act.
The assembly law will not go into force until regulations are drafted.
Human Rights Watch urged the Home Affairs Ministry to consult with
relevant international organizations in drafting the guidelines to
mitigate the harsh effects of the law. For instance, the regulations
could provide guidance to police chiefs about criteria for granting a
permit and the exercise of discretion in the administrative appeals
process.
The regulations should state clearly that the assembly
law is meant to facilitate gatherings and processions, and the
enjoyment of the constitutional right to assembly, Human Rights Watch
said. They should make clear that permits should not be refused merely
because the gathering might disturb “community peace and tranquility.”
The regulations should clearly define, based on objective criteria
terms such as to “frighten” or “disturb” the public, or “hurt the
state.” They should clarify that criminal penalties should only be
sought for acts of violence or incitement and not for the peaceful
exercise of rights to expression, association, and assembly, such as
giving false information in a speech or using unapproved slogans.
Since taking office in March 2011, Burma’s new government has
introduced many bills into the national bicameral assembly, debating
these laws in the three parliamentary sessions to date in a manner not
seen in Burma for decades. Nevertheless, the passage of some laws has
been shrouded in secrecy. Full drafts of legislation are often not
distributed outside the parliament, and there has been little community
consultation.
“The real test of new laws will be to see what
happens when Burmese attempt to use them,” Adams said. “Burma’s
government will deserve kudos for legal reform only when people are
allowed to exercise their basic rights.”
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Thursday, March 15, 2012
Burma: New Law on Demonstrations Falls Short
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