Asia Pacific

Urgent Cases

Malaysia: Delay in proceedings as human rights lawyer P. Uthayakumar still denied medical treatment in detention

Front Line is deeply concerned following reports of the delay in proceedings in the case of human rights defender and lawyer, Mr P. Uthayakumar. He continues to be deprived of his required prescription medication for diabetes and is suffering from a number of diabetes related illnesses. Mr P. Uthayakumar is a human rights lawyer working to defend the rights of the ethnic minority Indians and an active Legal Advisor of Hindu Rights Action Force (HINDRAF). He was arrested on 13 December 2007 for organising a peaceful demonstration.  Read More

India: Attempted assassination of human rights defender Advocate Parvez Imroz

Front Line is gravely concerned following reports of the attempted assassination of human rights defender, Advocate Parvez Imroz, at his home on 30 June 2008. Advocate Parvez Imroz is the co-convener of the International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Indianadministered Kashmir, and the co-founder and president of the Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society.  Read More

Malaysia: Human rights lawyer P. Uthayakumar denied medical treatment in detention

Front Line is deeply concerned following reports that detained human rights defender and lawyer, Mr P. Uthayakumar, is being deprived of his required prescription medication for diabetes and is suffering from a number of diabetes related illnesses. Mr P. Uthayakumar is a human rights lawyer working to defend the rights of the ethnic minority Indians and an active Legal Advisor of Hindu Rights Action Force (HINDRAF). He was arrested on 13 December 2007 for organising a peaceful demonstration.  Read More

India: Intimidation and harassment of conveners of the International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice

Front Line is deeply concerned following reports that human rights defenders Dr Angana Chatterji and Advocate Parvez Imroz, conveners of the International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Indian-administered Kashmir have been subjected to intimidation and harassment. The International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Indian-administered Kashmir began on 5 April 2008 and was formed by the Public Commission on Human Rights in order to investigate charges of institutionalised violence and human rights violations in Indian-administered Kashmir.  Read More

Burma: Arrest of human rights defender Zaw Thet Htwe for disaster-relief work

Front Line is deeply concerned following the arrest of human rights defender Zaw Thet Htwe on 13 June 2008. Zaw Thet Htwe is a journalist who has criticised corruption and attempted to provide disaster relief to people in Burma in the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis.  Read More

China: Torture of human rights defender Liu Jie while undergoing re-education through labour

Front Line is deeply concerned following reports that human rights defender Liu Jie has been tortured during her re-education through labour (RTL). Liu Jie is a defender of human rights in rural communities who has campaigned for political and legal reforms in China.  Read More

The Philippines: Death threats against human rights defender Kelly Muñez Delgado

Front Line is deeply concerned following reports that human rights defender Kelly Muñez Delgado has received death threats and is reportedly under constant surveillance. Kelly Muñez Delgado is Secretary General of the KARAPATAN Alliance for the Advancement of People's Rights in the Southern Mindanao Region of the Philippines. His work as a human rights defender has involved responding quickly to reports of human rights violations, in particular those perpetrated by the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) against indigenous peoples and farmers.  Read More

India: Complaints filed against human rights defenders in relation to the People's Tribunals on Torture

Front Line is deeply concerned following reports that complaints have been filed against human rights defenders Mr Henri Tiphagne, National Director of the National Project on Preventing Torture in India (NPPTI), Executive Director of People's Watch and Member of the National Core Group of NGOs of the National Human Rights Commission of India; Mr S. Martin, Advocate and Regional Law Officer of People's Watch in Trichirapalli; Mr G. Ganesan, State Human Rights Monitoring Officer of People's Watch in the State of Tamil Nadu; Mr Prabakar, District Human Rights Monitor of the NPPTI for Madurai District in Tamil Nadu; and Mr Kirity Roy, President of Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha (MASUM) and State Director of the NPPTI in Howrah, Kolkata, West Bengal.  Read More

China: Arrest and detention of human rights defender Ren Shangyan

Front Line is deeply concerned following the arrest and detention of human rights defender Ren Shangyan on 16 May 2008. Ren Shangyan is Assistant Director of China Justice Advocacy Web (Zhonghua Shenzheng Wang), a website which has worked to monitor corruption in China since 2005.  Read More

Throughout 2006 attacks on human rights defenders have been carried out by both state and non state actors in many of the countries in the region. Extrajudicial executions and “disappearances” were carried out in Afghanistan, Nepal, Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand. Arrests, detentions and judicial harassment were reported in Bangladesh, Burma, Cambodia, China, India, Malaysia, Nepal, Philippines, Republic of Korea, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. In some countries such as Laos, Burma, and North Korea the repression of human rights defenders is so intense that it is virtually impossible for them to operate. Throughout the region governments made strenuous efforts to limit freedom of expression and association. These abuses took place with almost total impunity. Environmentalists, trade unionists and cyber activists are among the groups at risk in many countries. read more

In Bangladesh hundreds of members of an ngo working for womens rights and electoral reform were arrested for attempting a sit-in near the office of the Prime Minister. In Cambodia demonstrations have been banned since 2003 and a new law will formally restrict the right to freedom of assembly. Defenders acting on behalf of religious minorities are particularly at risk.

In China is is still extremely difficult to organise almost any kind of human rights activities. For the 17th. anniversary of Tiananmen Square those who took part or their friends were put under close surveillance, while community leaders who protested at official corruption were arrested, In China many human rights defenders, including journalists and lawyers continue to face re-education through labour or even prison terms. Defenders acting on behalf of communities forcibly evicted to make way for urban renewal are punished particularly severely as are the lawyers acting on their behalf. Aids activists challenging state policy have been repeatedly targetted.

In Malaysia demonstrations against price increases were violently broken up and the leaders arrested. In Nepal despite an end to the state of emergency the police continued to use excessive force in breaking up demonstrations in which 6 people were killed and thousands injured.

In Pakistan the families of people who disappeared in 2001, after being arrested by the military, were arrested when they organised a peaceful demonstration outside the headquarters of the military authorities.

In the Philippines the government introduced a state of emergency ostensibly to prevent violence by extreme left wing and right wing groups but which also served to prevent any peaceful demonstrations like those planned to coincide with the ASEAN meeting. The number of extrajudicial executions of human rights defenders, journalists and opposition politicians increased dramatically especially in those areas with a strong military presence.

In Indonesia the right to freeom of expression remains severely restricted: in West Papua human rights defenders have been subjected to arbitrary detention for criticising the government and face the risk of torture and ill-treatment. In Aceh human rights monitors have been deployed for the first time and the general situation has improved. Across the country the police have used excessive force to break up demonstrations and have targetted religious and peaceful pro-independance activists while a new trend is the use of defamation suits to target human rights defenders who criticise the government.

In Thailand martial law was imposed after the military coup imposing complete restrictions on any public demonstrations.

In Cambodia a new draft law on the registration of ngo's would severely limit the work of human rights defenders, imposing tough controls on registration and imposing fines and a prison term of up to a year for those ngo's which have been dissolved but continue to operate. Human rights defenders acting for land rights or access to natural resources are especially targetted.

In India new ngo legislation would restrict the acceptance of foreign funds and would in essence allow the government to decide which organisations receive funds and what they could use the money for.

In Sri Lanka the government has introduced new anti-terrorist legislation which will allow the authorities to criminalise the activities of almost any ngo. Foreign aid workers and local human rights defenders have been targeted by both sides in the conflict.

In Afghanistan human rights defenders working in the conflict zones run a very high risk of being killed and human rights defenders have been assassinated by the various parties to the conflict.

In Burma the government has introduced even more restrictive guidelines to govern the activities of international ngo's, including insisting on approval of their programme, monitoring their finance and sending government minders on all trips.

Despite this the struggle for human rights continues across the region and human rights defenders continue to campaign for economic, social and cultural rights, particularly in China, India and the Philippines. The first-ever global gathering of women human rights defenders in Sri Lanka in December 2005 was a landmark event. Women human rights defenders are to the fore in almost every country in the struggle for gender equality in spite of the specific and additional threats that they face.