14 October 2011
PIECEMEAL RELEASES
OF POLITICAL PRISONERS DO NOT DEMONSTRATE GENUINE COMMITMENT
TO NECESSARY REFORMS
Paris-Bangkok, 14 October 2011
- The release this week of an estimated 220 political prisoners
in Burma comes as a relief to their families and colleagues,
but again fall far short of a key benchmark for reconciliation
and genuine transition to democracy, namely the unconditional
and immediate release of all remaining political prisoners and
the cessation of military attacks on civilians, said the International
Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and its member organization
the Alternative ASEAN Network on Burma (Altsean-Burma) today.
While some prominent political
prisoners, such as the comedian Zarganar, were among those released,
many other senior democracy movement leaders such as Min Ko
Naing, Ko Ko Gyi, Min Zeya, Htay Kywe, U Gambira and leaders
of ethnic groups remain in prison. Before this week’s
releases, the number of political prisoners is estimated at
close to 2,000, almost half of whom were thrown in prison after
the brutal crackdown of the 2007 Saffron Revolution. The Burmese
government has routinely denied even the existence of political
prisoners in international fora. On August 22nd, Chief Justice
Tun Tun Oo declared to UN Special Rapporteur Tomas Ojea Quintana
that “...there is no prisoner serving a term for his belief.”
Limited and piecemeal releases
of political prisoners have taken place before, including under
former junta leader Senior General Than Shwe. Instead of leading
to more substantive reforms, there were new arrests and detention
of opposition members, dissidents, journalists and others for
merely exercising their freedom of expression, association and
assembly. Many political prisoners previously released were
placed back in arbitrary detention, such as Daw Aung San Suu
Kyi and Zarganar.
The draconian laws and regulations
under which political prisoners were charged and detained remain
firmly in place today, including provisions of the Penal Code,
the Unlawful Association Act (1908), the State Protection Law
(1975), and Electronic Transactions Law (2004). They can and
continue to be used to persecute dissidents and the opposition.
The government has so far shown no commitment or even signal
to repeal or drastically amend these laws to bring them into
line with international human rights standards.
The limited releases, along
with recent superficial gestures and statements, seem strategically
timed and aimed at relieving international pressure and are
woefully inadequate to prove the government’s professed
commitment to substantive reforms, said FIDH and Altsean-Burma.
“Universal human rights
and freedoms are not bargaining chips,” said Ms. Souhayr
Belhassen, FIDH President. “All political prisoners must
be released now and their civil and political rights fully restored.”
The unconditional and immediate
release of all political prisoners is among the minimum benchmarks
the regime has been called on to meet to demonstrate real commitment
towards genuine reforms. The government must also initiate an
inclusive dialogue with key stakeholders from democracy groups
and ethnic nationalities, including a comprehensive review of
the 2008 Constitution, and immediately cease systematic human
rights abuses and criminal hostilities against ethnic minority
groups, some of which may amount to crimes against humanity
and war crimes.
“The refusal to release
all political prisoners at once is a firm reminder to the international
community that, despite a flurry of democratic rhetoric, the
steps taken by the Thein Sein administration thus far may be
cosmetic at best and manipulative at worst,” said Debbie
Stothard, Deputy Secretary-General of FIDH and Coordinator of
Altsean-Burma. “Real change has not come to Burma and
will not come unless the minimum benchmarks are fully met.”