首頁   聯絡我們
 
‧人權新知
 
‧世界人權宣言
 
高雄國際人權宣言
 
‧人權影音資料館藏
 
‧人權圖書資料館藏
 






Myanmar law shows 'contempt' for democracy: rights group

WASHINGTON, March 10 (AFP) - A new Myanmar law preventing anyone serving a prison term from running for office, including opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, shows the ruling junta's "contempt for the democratic process," Human Rights Watch said Wednesday.

The law, printed for the first time Wednesday in state newspapers, has been widely condemned outside Myanmar as a new attempt to exclude Suu Kyi and members of her National League for Democracy (NLD) from running in elections this year.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the law would effectively exclude over 2,100 political activists and some 429 members of the NLD believed to be imprisoned in Myanmar, previously known as Burma.

"The new law's assault on opposition parties is sadly predictable," Human Rights Watch Asia director, Brad Adams, said in a statement.

"It continues the sham political process that is aimed at creating the appearance of civilian rule with a military spine."

The new Political Parties Registration Act also gives the NLD just 60 days from Monday, when the law was enacted, to register as a party if it wants to take part in the elections, or else face dissolution.

"The Burmese government is demonstrating contempt for the democratic process, the people of Burma, and international opinion, including its friends in China, India, and ASEAN, who have asked for an inclusive political process," Adams said.

The NLD has yet to announce whether it will take part in the polls promised by the junta, which are expected in October or November although the government has still not set a date.

Suu Kyi, 64, has been in detention for 14 of the last 20 years since the previous elections.

She was already barred from standing as a candidate under a new constitution approved in a 2008 referendum that stipulates that those married to foreigners are ineligible. Her husband, British academic Michael Aris, died in 1999.

The Nobel Peace laureate was sentenced to three years in prison last August over an incident in which a US man swam to her lakeside home. Suu Kyi's sentence was commuted by junta leader Than Shwe to 18 months under house arrest.


(2010-03-11 / my sinchew.com)
 
  2009 2010 2011 2012
 
3/7:Canada's Rights and Democracy agency in 'crisis,' federation warns (thestar.com)
3/7:Azerbaijan Human Rights Commissioner met with Thomas Hammarberg (apa.az)
3/9:Oscar for Short Documentary Recognizes Disabled Zimbabwean Woman's Struggle (VOANews) 
3/9:Council approves 11 for seats on new Human Rights Commission (SCTimes)  
3/10:Islamabad police set up Human Rights Cell (DailyTimes) 
3/10:AIDS the leading cause of death among women--report (TheMoneyTimes) 
3/11:Myanmar law shows 'contempt' for democracy: rights group(my sinchew.com)
3/11:Levant says libel suit aims to ‘chill’ debate(National post)
3/12:Mixed human rights record in Pakistan: US (Daily Times)
3/12:Zimbabwe Rights Activist Receives Courage Award From U.S. Sec'y of State Clinton (voanews)
 
人權學堂 ∣Human Rights Learning Studio

位置:高雄捷運O5/R10美麗島穹頂大廳方向往出口9
Position: Kaohsiung MRT 05/R10 Formosa Boulevard Hall Exit 9
郵寄地址:81249高雄市小港區大業北路436號
Address: No. 436, Daye North Rd. Siaogang Dist., Kaohsiung City 81249, Taiwan
電話Tel:886-7-2357559∣傳真Fax:886-7-2351129
Email: hr-learning@ouk.edu.tw