Invitation to Myanmar National Human Rights Commission condemned

25 February 2023
Invitation to Myanmar National Human Rights Commission condemned

Mizzima

The Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions (GANHRI) has been condemned for inviting the Myanmar National Human Rights Commission (MNHRC) to participate in its annual meeting.

The Working Group on Independent National Human Rights Institution for Burma/Myanmar (“Working Group”) and the Asian NGO Network on National Human Rights Institutions (ANNI) sent an open letter to GANHRI condemning the invitation in “the strongest terms”, on 23 February.

The Annual Meeting of The Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions (GANHRI) will be held in person in Geneva, Switzerland on 14 -16 March 2023.

The letter says that the MNHR must be disinvited because it is nothing more than a proxy-body of the Myanmar military and is complicit in barbaric human rights violations and atrocity crimes against the people of Myanmar since the illegal failed coup on 1 February 2021.

According to the letter, since its inception, and within the period of the illegal failed coup, the people of Myanmar have witnessed the repeated and consistent failures of the MNHRC, in dereliction of its duty to protect and promote human rights in line with Paris Principles. 

The MNHRC has shielded the junta from international scrutiny, by offering cover for the junta’s atrocity crimes. 

The letter says it is antithetical to GANHRI’s mandate as an international body for national human rights institutions (NHRIs) to continue to extend invitations, host and offer membership rights to the MNHRC, and contrary to its obligation to uphold human rights and to the purpose of the Paris Principles. 

GANHRI is risking damaging its own reputation, credibility and integrity, as well as being in danger of aiding and abetting the human rights violations of the Myanmar military junta by continuing to engage with the military-controlled MNHRC. 

The letter then details some of the shortcomings of the MNHRC saying: Over two years since its illegal coup attempt, the Myanmar military has shown no intention to end its nationwide terror campaign as it continues to perpetrate an all-out war against the entire population of Myanmar. 

The Myanmar military junta has reached unprecedented depths of cruelty, for instance, conducting arson attacks on whole villages, targeted killings of civilians, massacres, airstrikes, arbitrary arrests, extra-judicial killings, sexual and gender-based violence, and have persecuted political figures and human rights defenders.

As of 22 February 2023, over 3,000 people have been mercilessly killed by the junta (including at least 278 children), over 19,800 have been arbitrarily arrested, and over 15,900 remain in detention, with around 144 people on death row. Last year, the military carried out its first summary execution in decades by executing four pro-democracy activists, including a former lawmaker, drawing the ire of the international community. 

The junta is routinely committing war crimes and crimes against humanity against civilians, including children, with places of worship, schools, and hospitals being targeted by a military that is committing nationwide terror. This has triggered a full-scale humanitarian crisis, with conservative estimates of 1.2 million people becoming internally displaced and an estimated 17.6 million people in need of humanitarian assistance in 2023. 

Despite the grave international crimes being committed by the Myanmar junta over the past two years, the MNHRC has done nothing to protect the rights of the Myanmar people. 

Instead, it has been deplorably pursuing regional and international legitimacy for the military junta by joining regional NHRIs meetings and conferences, representing the interests of the illegitimate military junta and delivering the military junta material for its propaganda offensive. 

The MNHRC has described the illegal coup leader, Min Aung Hlaing, as humanitarian-minded, and praised him for releasing prisoners including some politicians, activists, and celebrities who were unlawfully imprisoned on criminal charges simply for their participation in peaceful demonstration against the illegal coup of February 2021. 

Such actions by the MNHRC are smokescreens to shield Min Aung Hlaing and the junta from its grave crimes. Instead of praising the junta leader, the MNHRC should have denounced the illegal attempted coup, supported the Civil Disobedience Movement and called out human rights violations unfolding in the country in line with duties of an NHRI as prescribed by GANHRI and the Paris Principles. 

Instead of inviting the military-controlled MNHRC, the letter says that GANHRI must shift its support towards the establishment of a new independent NHRI under the National Unity Government (NUG). 

The NUG was formed on the basis of the 2020 general elections, and enjoys widespread support, representing the will of the people of Myanmar as the only legitimate government of Myanmar. Given the unlawful attempt by the military junta to seize power, any institution that operates and serves the interests of the military junta in international forums must be disengaged with, including the MNHRC.

The letter concluded by calling on the GANHRI Bureau to revoke the MNHRC’s membership and strip it of its ‘B’ status under Article 27 of the GANHRI Statute, for falling well below ‘partial compliance’ with the Paris Principles (pursuant to Article 24.2). Furthermore, it said, GANHRI must not recognize the MNHRC as a functional NHRI given it has grievously breached the Paris Principles, which have been mounting well before the attempted coup. 

GANHRI must support the people’s movement in Myanmar, and the efforts and desire to build a genuine federal democracy and for the realization of human rights for all, it concludes.

The Asian NGOs Network on National Human Rights Institutions (ANNI) was established in December 2006. It is a network of Asian non-governmental organisations and human rights defenders working on issues related to National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs). ANNI currently has 33 member organisations from 21 countries or territories. 

ANNI members work on strengthening the work and functioning of Asian NHRIs to better promote and protect human rights as well as to advocate for the improved compliance of Asian NHRIs with international standards, including the Paris Principles and General Observations of the Sub-Committee on Accreditation (SCA) of the Global Alliance of NHRIs (GANHRI). The Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development (FORUM-ASIA) has served as the Secretariat of ANNI since its establishment in 2006.