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2008 Report: Democracy Charade Undermines Rights Human Rights
Watch Highlights Abuses in Pakistan, Kenya, China, Somalia
(Washington, DC, January 31, 2008) - The established democracies
are accepting flawed and unfair elections for political
expediency, Human Rights Watch said today in releasing its World
Report 2008. By allowing autocrats to pose as democrats, without
demanding they uphold the civil and political rights that make
democracy meaningful, the United States, the European Union and
other influential democracies risk undermining human rights
worldwide.
States claiming the mantle of democracy, including Kenya and
Pakistan, should guarantee the human rights that are central to
it, including the rights to free expression, assembly and
association, as well as free and fair elections. But in 2007 too
many governments, including Bahrain, Jordan, Nigeria, Russia and
Thailand, acted as if simply holding a vote is enough to prove a
nation "democratic," and Washington, Brussels and European
capitals played along, Human Rights Watch said. The Bush
administration has spoken of its commitment to democracy abroad
but often kept silent about the need for all governments to
respect human rights.
"It's now too easy for autocrats to get away with mounting a
sham democracy," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human
Rights Watch.
"That's because too many Western governments insist on elections
and leave it at that. They don't press governments on the key
human rights issues that make democracy function - a free press,
peaceful assembly, and a functioning civil society that can
really challenge power."
In its World Report 2008, Human Rights Watch surveys the human
rights situation in more than 75 countries. Human Rights Watch
identified many human rights challenges in need of attention,
including atrocities in Chad, Colombia, the Democratic Republic
of Congo, Ethiopia's Ogaden region, Iraq, Somalia, Sri Lanka,
and Sudan's Darfur region, as well as closed societies or severe
repression in Burma, China, Cuba, Eritrea, Libya, Iran, North
Korea, Saudi Arabia and Vietnam. Abuses in the "war on terror"
featured in France, Pakistan, the United Kingdom, and the United
States, among others.
Grave human rights abuses are fueling the worsening humanitarian
crisis in Somalia and the Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia.
"The situation in Somalia and Ethiopia's Ogaden region, where
millions are suffering, is a forgotten tragedy," said Roth.
Sudan's government bears principal responsibility for five years
of the Darfur crisis, Human Rights Watch said. Some 2.4 million
people are displaced, and 4 million people survive on
humanitarian aid. In the last weeks, villages in West Darfur
have been attacked, and civilians are at great risk as all sides
ignore international humanitarian law.
Burma's military government, notorious for decades of abuse,
used deadly force in August and September in response to
peaceful protests by monks, pro-democracy activists, and
ordinary civilians. Hundreds of people remain arbitrarily
detained.
In Sri Lanka, heavy fighting between the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam and government forces led to deliberate and
indiscriminate attacks on civilians. Hundreds of people have
"disappeared," and more than 20,000 have been displaced.
Israel's blockade of Gaza denies 1.4 million residents the food,
fuel and medicine they need to survive, a collective punishment
that violates international law. Palestinian armed groups
continue to launch indiscriminate rocket attacks on populated
areas of Israel in violation of international law.
Human Rights Watch said sustained international pressure around
the 2008 Olympic Games could push Chinese leaders to better
respect human rights in China. But Human Rights Watch warned
that the staging of the Olympics is exacerbating problems of
forced evictions, migrant labor rights abuses, and the use of
house arrests to silence dissidents. The Chinese government is
cracking down on lawyers and human rights activists.
"The 2008 Olympics are an historic opportunity for the Chinese
government to show the world that it can make human rights a
reality for its 1.3 billion citizens," said Roth.
US abuses against so-called "war on terror" detainees are a
major concern; 275 detainees are still held at Guantanamo Bay
without charge.
Some of those remain after being cleared by the United States
for release, because they cannot be sent home and no country
will resettle them.
The United States continues to have the highest incarceration
rate in the world, with black men incarcerated at more than six
times the rate of white men.
Human Rights Watch has documented a number of elections
manipulated through: outright fraud (Chad, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Nigeria, Uzbekistan); control of electoral machinery
(Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Malaysia, Thailand, Zimbabwe); blocking or
discouraging opposition candidates (Belarus, Cuba, Egypt, Iran,
Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Libya,
Turkmenistan, Uganda); political violence (Cambodia, Democratic
Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Lebanon); stifling the media and
civil society (Russia, Tunisia); and undermining the rule of law
(China, Pakistan).
Many of these tactics are illegal under domestic and
international law, but rarely do outside powers call governments
to account for it. Human Rights Watch said established
democracies are often unwilling to do so for fear of losing
access to resources or commercial opportunities, or because of
the perceived requirements of fighting terrorism.
Human Rights Watch said the United States and the European Union
should insist governments do more than hold a vote, and demand
they uphold rights guaranteed by international law, including a
free media, freedom of assembly, and a secret ballot.
"It seems Washington and European governments will accept even
the most dubious election so long as the "victor" is a strategic
or commercial ally," Roth said.
The United States and some allies have made it harder to demand
other governments uphold human rights when they are committing
abuses in the fight against terrorism. And when autocratic
governments deflect criticism for violating human rights by
pretending to be democrats, the global defense of rights is
jeopardized, Human Rights Watch said.
In Pakistan, where President Pervez Musharraf has tilted the
electoral playing field by rewriting the constitution and firing
the independent judiciary, parliamentary elections are due in
February. But the United States and Britain, Islamabad’s largest
aid donors, have refused to condition assistance to the
government on improving pre-electoral conditions.
In Kenya, the United States has at least expressed concern about
the apparent rigging of December's presidential poll and the
violence that to date has claimed more than 700 lives. But
having accepted the results of oil-rich Nigeria's February 2007
vote, despite widespread and credible accusations of
poll-rigging and electoral violence, Washington left the
impression in Nairobi that fraud would be tolerated. It has not
even threatened to withhold aid to push the government to
negotiate with the opposition>
"Nigeria's leader came to power in a violent and fraudulent
vote, yet he's been accepted on the international stage," said
Roth. "It's no wonder Kenya's president felt able to rig his
re-election."
Bizarrely, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE), which is supposed to promote democracy, human
rights, and security, agreed to give its chair in 2010 to
Kazakhstan, which has vast oil and gas reserves coveted by both
the EU and Russia. The OSCE decision came after the Kazakh
ruling party "won" every seat in August parliamentary elections,
in which, according to the OSCE's own monitors, the media was
censored, the opposition suppressed, and the counting flawed.
Human Rights Watch noted positive developments in holding
abusive leaders to account. Alberto Fujimori and Charles Taylor,
the former presidents of Peru and Liberia, are on trial for
human rights abuses. The International Criminal Court holds its
first trial in May.
The World Report 2008 includes essays on China's
foreign policy; how activists helped create the Yogyakarta
Principles for gay rights; the scourge of violence against
children at school, in the home, on the streets and in
institutions; and the British government's erosion of the
torture ban through "diplomatic assurances" against
ill-treatment.
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