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- <text>
- <title>
- Overview
- </title>
- <article>
- <hdr>
- Human Rights Watch World Report 1992
- Asia Watch: Overview
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Human Rights Developments
- </p>
- <p> With few exceptions, Asia in 1991 was one long paroxysm of
- bad news on the human rights front. Civilians continue to bear
- the brunt of civil strife or outright war in Afghanistan;
- Cambodia; the states of Punjab, Kashmir and Assam in India; Aceh
- in Indonesia; East Timor; the Philippines; Sri Lanka; Tibet;
- and along Burma's borders with Bangladesh, China and Thailand.
- Anachronistic, one-party states continue to detain dissidents
- and nonviolent advocates of democratic change thousands in the
- case of China and Burma, hundreds in Vietnam and Indonesia, and
- an unknown number in North Korea. (Indonesia in fact has three
- legal political parties the ruling GOLKAR and two smaller
- parties but the latter are tightly controlled by the government
- and would not be allowed to challenge GOLKAR seriously, let
- alone to win.) Pakistan, the Philippines and South Korea only
- recently the shining examples of restored of democracy in the
- region, were looking increasingly tarnished in 1991 in terms of
- respect for basic freedoms. Refugees continued to face the
- threat of refoulement from Hong Kong (to Vietnam), Malaysia (to
- Indonesia) and Thailand (to Cambodia).
- </p>
- <p> But there were also a few qualified bright spots. Parties to
- the Cambodian conflict signed a peace accord on October 23,
- with numerous human rights safeguards built in. At the end of
- the year, however, the feasibility of that accord was in some
- doubt, and reports from Phnom Penh of fear not only of the Khmer
- Rouge but also of the security forces of Prime Minister Hun
- Sen's government were widespread. Afghanistan also inched
- toward peace after the announcement of U.N. Secretary General
- Javier Perez de Cuellar's five-point framework in May.
- </p>
- <p> In another positive development, countries in the region
- that were once the first to say that human rights abuses were
- an entirely domestic affair began to concede ground to their
- critics. On November 2, China issued a White Paper on Human
- Rights, acknowledging the government's acceptance of the
- validity of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights but
- arguing that international standards must be viewed in the
- historical context of each country. Indonesia became a member
- of the U.N. Human Rights Commission and invited U.N. Special
- Rapporteur Pieter Kooijmans to Indonesia in November. Kooijmans
- was in East Timor when a massacre of demonstrators by the
- Indonesian military occurred on November 12. Malaysia and
- Indonesia, stung by the United Nations Development Program's
- publication of a "human freedom index" in May, in which Malaysia
- was rated on a par with Haiti and Indonesia on a par with North
- Korea in terms of respect for human rights, called for the
- development of an Asian concept of human rights. Any effort to
- move away from universal standards would be dangerous, but the
- Malaysian-Indonesian call reflected a recognition that human
- rights issues cannot be ignored.
- </p>
- <p> External powers began to be more vocal on human rights in
- Asia, most importantly with the award of the Nobel Peace Prize
- to Aung San Suu Kyi, the detained Burmese opposition leader, and
- the passing of a U.N. General Assembly resolution in November
- condemning Burmese human rights abuses. The European Community
- (EC) told the six countries of the Association of Southeast
- Asian Nations (ASEAN, including Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia,
- the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand) in May, at an EC-ASEAN
- dialogue in Luxembourg, and again in July, following the ASEAN
- prime minister's conference, that henceforth development aid
- would be linked to human rights. The EC countries also wrung
- from ASEAN a mild rebuke of the Burmese leadership, the first
- such criticism of Burma from its Asian neighbors. Japan was
- also unusually outspoken on Burma at the end of 1991, and a
- Japanese official even raised the possibility in November that
- the massacre in Indonesia might provoke a review of Japan's
- Official Development Assistance to Indonesia. The Japanese
- stance reflected a new policy articulated during the year that
- Official Development Assistance should be linked to the human
- rights performance of recipient countries.
- </p>
- <p> Far and away the biggest cause of human rights violations in
- the region was war. Annual death tolls of civilians were in the
- thousands in Kashmir, Punjab and Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka, the
- scale of the conflict approached conventional warfare with five
- thousand guerrillas of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
- laying siege to an army post in July. Both sides engaged in
- summary executions, torture and disappearances. In Punjab and
- Kashmir, Indian security forces retaliated against whole
- villages and neighborhoods for ambushes by militants, and
- suspected guerrillas were arrested, tortured and often killed
- in custody. Counterinsurgency operations against a small
- separatist movement in Aceh, on the northeast coast of Sumatra
- in Indonesia, continued to result in widespread killing of
- civilians, mass arrests and torture during the year.
- </p>
- <p> The use of weapons that cannot distinguish between civilian
- and military targets, in violation of the laws of war embodied
- in the Geneva Conventions and their protocols, was another
- characteristic of war in Asia. In Afghanistan, the opposition
- mujahedin fired poorly aimed and inherently inaccurate Sakr-B
- rockets on population concentrations in Kabul and other cities.
- The Sri Lankan army bombed the Jaffna Peninsula in what
- appeared to be an indiscriminate manner; in addition, its 1990
- bombing of the electric power grid in Jaffna left most of the
- peninsula without power needed for refrigeration of medicines,
- among other things. In Cambodia, the relief brought about by the
- signing of the peace accord was tempered by the realization of
- what the war would leave behind the largest concentration of
- land mines per capita of any country in the world. The danger
- that mines pose to those returning from camps along the
- Thai-Cambodian border was so high that Asia Watch warned against
- mass repatriation of refugees until an effective mine-mapping
- and mine-clearing program was well underway. The indiscriminate
- way in which mines maim or kill, long after their military
- purpose has been served, led Asia Watch to call for an outright
- ban on their use, not only in Cambodia but around the world.
- Prince Sihanouk of Cambodia took up that call in a speech before
- the U.N. General Assembly in September.
- </p>
- <p> Religion was manipulated for political ends. In Pakistan,
- the state's political use of the shari'a or Islamic law, and
- particularly the law on zina, or adultery, made women
- particularly vulnerable to abuse. In China, a government
- campaign against Catholic and Protestant activities intensified,
- and the Communist Party called religion a vehicle for "hostile
- infiltration from abroad" and "national splittism." The
- Indonesian army accused the Catholic Church in East Timor of
- fomenting anti-government activity and, in October, stormed a
- church where pro-independence youth had sought sanctuary.
- </p>
- <p> Little progress was made during the year toward the creation
- of more open societies. In Thailand, a democratically elected
- government was overthrown in a military coup in February. In
- China, controls on freedom of speech, assembly and association
- remained tight. Cautious steps toward a more consultative form
- of government in Singapore were halted after the opposition in
- the August elections quadrupled its seats in the fifty-one-seat
- national parliament from one to four; Singaporean leaders
- decided that the increase was a popular rejection of their own
- version of glasnost. Freedom of expression took a beating all
- over, from Afghanistan, where a newspaper editor was briefly
- detained for printing a "war-mongering" article, to Indonesia,
- where another editor received a five-year prison term for
- publishing the results of an opinion poll deemed offensive to
- Muslims. Wherever nationalist conflicts were present, speaking
- of independence became a dangerous act, whether in East Timor,
- Kashmir or Tibet. Urging reunification with North Korea was
- off-limits in South Korea; discussions of reunification with the
- republic of Mongolia was banned in the Chinese province of Inner
- Mongolia. In India, the government seized newspapers in Punjab
- and Kashmir, while separatist militants threatened and killed
- journalists.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout the region, internal security acts permitting
- prolonged detention without charge or trial were used to arrest
- and hold political suspects for indefinite periods, sometimes
- without access to family or counsel. The Terrorist and
- Disruptive Activities Act in India, the Anti-Subversion Law in
- Indonesia, the Internal Security Act in Malaysia, and the
- National Security Law in South Korea are only a few examples of
- the laws used and abused in 1991. China continued to arrest and
- detain dissidents for the crime of "counterrevolution" which
- encompassed twenty-two separate acts.
- </p>
- <p> The year was more notable for the continued detention of
- long-term political prisoners than for their releases. Wei
- Jingsheng, the pro-democracy activist in China, entered his
- thirteenth year in prison; he was believed to be working in a
- salt mine. Chia Thye Poh, suspected by the Singaporean
- government of belonging to the Communist Party, entered his
- twenty-sixth year of detention and restrictions on his liberty
- without charge or trial; since his release from prison in 1989,
- he has been forced to live in a form of limited house arrest on
- Sentosa Island.
- </p>
- <p> The refugee crisis in Asia got no better. By mid-December,
- two planeloads of Vietnamese refugees had been sent against
- their will from the abysmal detention centers in Hong Kong back
- to Vietnam. While Hong Kong authorities claimed that the
- refugees were economic migrants, procedures to determine who was
- fleeing persecution were too flawed to accept that statement at
- face value. Burmese refugees in Thailand continued to face abuse
- from Thai authorities as well as the possibility of forced
- deportation. The Khmer Rouge in October made plans to force
- some 40,000 Cambodians in a camp called Site 8, in Thailand,
- across the border into Cambodia; they were only prevented from
- doing so by a massive international campaign and the quick
- action of international relief agencies along the border. The
- Indonesian and Malaysian governments agreed on but have yet to
- proceed with the return of some two hundred refugees from Aceh
- who had fled to Malaysia in early 1991 and have been in
- detention ever since. Japan forcibly deported one Chinese
- dissident who had unsuccessfully sought political asylum but
- showed greater flexibility in handling requests for visa
- extensions from Chinese students than it had in 1990.
- </p>
- <p>The Right to Monitor
- </p>
- <p> Local human rights organizations were generally free to
- document and publicize abuses by their governments in India,
- Malaysia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, Sri
- Lanka and Thailand. Yet, this freedom did not prevent at least
- two monitors in India from being killed for their work in 1991,
- or the harassment of human rights lawyers in Malaysia and the
- Philippines.
- </p>
- <p> Human rights monitors also worked openly in Indonesia,
- although there were clear, if unwritten limits, as to what was
- acceptable. The government prevented members of the Legal Aid
- Institute in Jakarta from going into highly sensitive areas to
- conduct fact-finding missions and barred Institute lawyers from
- defending suspects in subversion trials in Aceh and East Timor.
- </p>
- <p> In most countries of the region, however, human rights
- monitoring was considered a subversive activity. In China,
- members of a Shanghai group called the Study Group on Human
- Rights Issues in China were arrested in April, and individual
- efforts, such as those of Hou Xiaotian, wife of detained
- dissident Wang Juntao, were met with surveillance and temporary
- detention. In Vietnam, those members of a human rights group in
- Danang who had not fled as refugees to Hong Kong were in
- Vietnamese custody. Government antagonism has made it
- impossible for human rights monitoring groups to form legally
- in Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, China, North Korea, Singapore and
- Vietnam.
- </p>
- <p>U.S. Policy
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration by and large did not treat the
- protection of human rights as a high priority in Asia. In some
- cases, like Burma, where pariah governments ruled and strategic
- interests were minimal, the Administration was consistently
- critical, and pushed its friends in the region, like the ASEAN
- countries, to be so as well. In other cases where strategic
- interests were high, notably China, the Administration seemed
- reluctant to press for reform of what remained one of the worst
- human rights records in the region, arguing that this would
- "isolate" the world's largest country. As a rule, the
- Administration was reluctant to move beyond verbal criticism to
- take concrete steps, or even threaten to take such measures,
- against major human rights abusers.
- </p>
- <p> China continued to represent the biggest blot on the Bush
- Administration's human rights record. The Administration's
- decision in May to extend unconditionally Most Favored Nation
- trading status lifted the economic pressure on the Chinese
- government that had been one factor in the release of almost
- nine hundred detainees in 1990. If the Administration expected
- rewards in terms of human rights concessions from the Chinese
- for this move, it got none. It proceeded with a visit by
- Secretary of State James Baker to Beijing in November a visit
- desperately desired by the Chinese government despite having
- neither sought nor received any commitments on human rights in
- advance. Human rights ended up being a major focus of the trip,
- but it was largely because of pressure from outside the
- Administration, and the trip produced few results. The
- Administration sought information from the Chinese government
- about a list of political prisoners but then allowed the Chinese
- to sit on the list for nearly six months without demanding a
- response. One got the impression that the Administration saw
- human rights abuses in China as an irritant that it devoutly
- wished would go away, rather than as a major problem to be
- tackled vigorously.
- </p>
- <p> The same thing could be said of the Administration's actions
- toward other countries, like Indonesia, where rather than
- offend a friendly government, the Administration played down the
- extent of human rights abuses in the Aceh region, asserting in
- February that it had no reason to believe that abuses were
- taking place on a massive scale. After the massacre in East
- Timor in November, the Administration quickly expressed regret,
- sent a team to Dili to investigate and called in the Indonesian
- ambassador, all to its credit, but the sharp contrast with its
- reaction to Aceh appeared to be because two American journalists
- witnessed and were injured in the course of the Dili killings.
- Unlike the Dutch and Canadian governments, the Bush
- Administration held back in using economic leverage to press
- Indonesia to account for the massacre.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. law was invoked in a few Asian cases to press for human
- rights improvements in 1991. No country save Burma was denied
- foreign aid on the grounds that it engaged in a systematic
- pattern of gross abuses. In South Korea, were guarantees to
- potential U.S. investors from the U.S. government's Overseas
- Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) were denied on the
- grounds of violation of worker rights. The small amount of U.S.
- development aid given to Thailand was suspended following the
- February coup, but that was mandatory under U.S. law rather
- than a decision taken voluntarily by the Administration out of
- concern for basic freedoms. Assistance for military training to
- Indonesia continued despite the killings in Aceh and East Timor,
- with the State Department continuing to insist that the training
- gave Indonesian officers a good grounding in professionalism
- and humanitarian behavior.
- </p>
- <p> In many cases, the Administration did not speak with a
- single voice, sending mixed signals to offending governments.
- In Burma, the State Department and the Drug Enforcement Agency
- worked at cross purposes. In Afghanistan, the CIA reportedly
- continued to press the mujahedin to take the offensive as the
- State Department was working toward peace. These contradictory
- actions undermined the Administration's effectiveness.
- </p>
- <p>The Work of Asia Watch
- </p>
- <p> Asia Watch helped to define and generate attention to some
- of the key human rights issues in Asia in 1991. Two of those
- issues in China were the trials of key dissidents in early 1991
- and the use of forced labor to produce products for export. In
- the first case, Asia Watch revealed hitherto unknown accounts
- of why dissidents like Chen Ziming and Wang Juntao had been
- branded the "black hands" of the 1989 pro-democracy movement,
- and obtained key documents from their trials. The wealth of
- information made it possible to see many of these dissidents as
- individuals with characters and personalities instead of
- faceless victims of a repressive government. In many ways it was
- the Asia Watch information on Chen and Wang that led Human
- Rights Watch Chairman Robert Bernstein to set up the Committee
- to End the Chinese Gulag, a campaigning organization headed by
- Fang Lizhi, Liu Binyan, Yuri Orlov, Cyrus Vance and Bernstein
- himself, which aims to work for the release of all those
- imprisoned for peaceful dissent in China.
- </p>
- <p> Asia Watch also published articles from restricted
- circulation journals in China which demonstrated beyond any
- doubt that it was central government policy in China to produce
- export goods in labor camps, and that some of those goods were
- going to the United States in violation of U.S. law. In its
- efforts to uncover the truth about prison exports, Asia Watch
- was primarily concerned about drawing attention to the use of
- political prisoners in the production of these goods, the
- appalling conditions under which prisoners were forced to work,
- and the subordination of humanitarian reasons for having inmates
- work to the economic imperative of boosting export earnings by
- relying on extremely cheap or unpaid labor. The issue of prison
- export became one of the outstanding human rights issues between
- China and the United States.
- </p>
- <p> Another issue that Asia Watch helped to define was the
- problem of land mines in Cambodia. Relief workers along the
- Thai-Cambodian border had long known of the magnitude of the
- problem but international awareness of the issue was limited.
- The report, produced jointly by Asia Watch and Physicians for
- Human Rights in September, led Prince Sihanouk to call for a
- worldwide ban on mines, beginning in Cambodia, and encouraged
- the U.S. government to allocate more funds for mine-clearing
- programs. Scheduled for translation into French in early 1992,
- the report also helped to draw attention to the particular
- iniquities of mines as a weapon: their tendency to injure
- civilians more often than combatants; their durability for
- years, and sometimes decades, after the war they were used in
- is over; and the failure of most armed forces to record where
- mines are laid and to remove them after a battle.
- </p>
- <p> The work on Aceh helped to generate international awareness
- to a little-known region of Indonesia and added to the pressure
- on the Indonesian government to allow a visit there by the
- International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in July.
- However, the need for more pressure continues to be apparent,
- as the ICRC has not been permitted to make a return visit, let
- alone set up an office in the troubled area.
- </p>
- <p> Cooperation with and support of local human rights monitors
- remained a high priority for Asia Watch. In India, human rights
- organizations working on Kashmir and Punjab saw the two Asia
- Watch reports produced on those areas in 1991 as supportive of
- their own efforts. In Indonesia, a Ford Foundation-funded
- internship program allowed two Indonesian interns from the
- Legal Aid Institute to work with Asia Watch during the year and
- helped to send Indonesian-speaking Americans to Jakarta to
- assist in translating key documents into English. Asia Watch
- staff responded to requests for help during the year from human
- rights monitors in virtually every country where human rights
- organizations were permitted.
- </p>
- <p> One way of keeping up the contacts with such organizations
- was by travel to the region, and in the course of the year,
- Asia Watch staff and consultants visited Australia, Burma,
- Cambodia, China, East Timor, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan,
- Malaysia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Tibet.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-