Mar 12, 2017 | Advocacy, Non-legal submissions
The ICJ has made an oral statement to the UN Human Rights Council on a range of measures needed to ensure truth, justice, reparations and non-repetition of past violations, in Nepal.
The statement read as follows:
TRUTH, JUSTICE, REPARATION, AND GUARANTEES OF NON-RECURRENCE IN NEPAL
10 March 2017
Mr. President
Without effective measures to ensure truth, justice, reparation and guarantees of non-recurrence, countries in situations of transition or post-conflict fail victims and put future reconciliation, peace and stability at risk. One example is Nepal.
Nepal’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission and Commission of Investigation on Disappeared Persons have not been effective. Changes are needed to bring their legal frameworks and operations in line with international standards and Supreme Court jurisprudence. These bodies require adequate resources. Trust-building measures including consultation processes must address the perspectives and needs of victims and for victims to feel ownership over the transitional justice process in Nepal.
Nepal must ensure prompt, independent and impartial investigation and prosecutions for serious human rights violations, including those committed during the armed conflict.
It must ensure justice and reparation for victims, including as provided for in the UN Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation.
It must criminalize serious crimes under international law in a manner that is consistent with international law, to help prevent such violations ever occurring again.
Nepal should also issue a standing invitation to all thematic special procedures of the Council.
Thank you, Mr. President.
Mar 7, 2017 | News
The ICJ welcomes Thailand’s decision to drop spurious criminal defamation complaints against three prominent human rights defenders who had raised allegations of torture by security forces in Thailand’s restive deep South.
“It’s good news that the Thai military has dropped these unfounded complaints, but these charges should never have been brought. Thailand should now ensure the allegations of torture and ill-treatment are independently and effectively investigated,” said Sam Zarifi, the ICJ’s Asia Director.
“Thailand should also work to repair the considerable damage that was caused to alleged victims of torture and civil society who have been intimidated into silence by the prosecutions,” Zarifi continued.
On 10 February 2016, three Thai organizations, the Cross Cultural Foundation (CrCF), Duay Jai Group (Hearty Support Group), and the Patani Human Rights Organization (HAP), issued a report that documented 54 cases of alleged torture and ill-treatment by the Thai security forces in the deep South since 2004.
In response, the Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC) brought criminal defamation complaints against the three co-editors, Ms. Pornpen Khongkachonkiet (Director of the CrCF), Mr. Somchai Homlaor (Senior legal advisor to CrCF and Hearty Support Group), and Ms. Anchana Heemmina (founder and Director of the Hearty Support Group).
On 26 July 2016, the Thai police charged the three human rights defenders with criminal defamation by means of publication under Article 326 and 328 of the Penal Code, and importing false information to a computer system under Article 14 (1) of the Computer-Related Crime Act B.E. 2550 (2007).
The ICJ has been concerned by the abuse of criminal laws, including the already problematic criminal defamation law, as a means of effectively silencing human rights defenders.
“Thailand should now drop other outstanding criminal complaints against human rights defenders, including the complaint of sedition made against human rights lawyer Sirikan Charoensiri, and ensure that they are protected from retaliation,” Zarifi said. “We look forward to the ISOC following through on its commitment to working with civil society to end torture and ill-treatment and bring any perpetrators to justice.”
Background
On 7 March 2017, the ISOC 4 Forward Command – created to resolve the situation in the deep South – and the three human rights defenders, held a joint press conference.
The ISOC 4 Forward Command announced the ISOC will drop the complaints, citing the need for authorities and NGOs to work together collaboratively to address alleged human rights violations. ISOC 4 Forward Command also announced the establishment of a “joint fact-finding committee” which will be made up of officials and NGOs to look into allegations of human rights violations and to explore preventative measures.
The dropping of the charges occurs against the backdrop of the National Legislative Assembly (NLA) referring a draft law criminalizing torture and enforced disappearance back to the Cabinet, effectively delaying its passage indefinitely, despite Thailand’s repeated assurances on the international stage that it will pass the law in the near future.
On 13 and 14 March 2017, the UN Human Rights Committee will review Thailand’s compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which it is a State Party.
In a joint submission to the Committee, the ICJ and Thai Lawyers for Human Rights (TLHR) called for an end to the legal harassment of human rights defenders and for all allegations of torture, ill-treatment and enforced disappearance to be independently, impartially, and effectively investigated.
Further reading
https://www.icj.org/thailand-stop-use-of-defamation-charges-against-human-rights-defenders-seeking-accountability-for-torture/
https://www.icj.org/thailand-immediately-withdraw-criminal-complaints-against-human-rights-defenders/
Contact
Kingsley Abbott, Senior International Legal Adviser for Southeast Asia, ICJ, email: kingsley.abbott(a)icj.org or mobile: +66 94 470 1345
Thailand-HRD dropped charges-news-2017-THA (Statement in Thai, PDF)
Sep 14, 2016 | Events
This panel discussion features two Iraqi torture survivors, Salah Hassan Nsaif and Ali Shallal Abbas, who will share their first-hand accounts serious abuse suffered at Iraq’s notorious Abu Ghraib prison, and the role of U.S. contractors in that torture and abuse.
The event organised by the International Commission of Jurists, the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH), and the Center for Constitutional Rights, takes place 15 September 2016, 11:00-12:00, at the Palais des Nations Room XXVII in Geneva, Switzerland.
CCR Senior Staff Attorney Katherine Gallagher will discuss legal cases, Saleh v Titan and Al Shimari v CACI, brought in the United States on behalf of victims as they seek justice. The cases will be placed in context of broader corporate accountability efforts, including those of the UN Working Group on Mercenaries and the Open-Ended Working Group on a legally binding instrument on transnational corporations and other business enterprises.
Speakers:
Salah Hassan, journalist and photographer for Al Jazeera network and Abu Ghraib torture survivor
Ali Shallal Abbas, Founder and President of the Association of victims of the American and Iranian prisons in Iraq, and Abu Ghraib torture survivor
Katherine Gallagher, Senior Staff Attorney, Center for Constitutional Rights
Carlos Lopez, Senior Legal Adviser, Business and Human Rights, International Commission of Jurists (moderator)
Remarks will also be made by Patricia Arias, Chair of the UN Working Group on Mercenaries.
Following the event, there will be the opening of an art exhibit organized by the UN Working Group on the use of mercenaries. Ms. Arias, Mr. Nsaif, and Mr. Abbas will make remarks, and guests are invited to engage with the photographs, multimedia display, and virtual reality film. The exhibit is open to delegates, NGOs, and the public. “Private Actors in Warfare: Stories from victims of private military and security companies and foreign fighters” will take place at 13:00 – 15:00 in Palais des Nations Room XXIII.
A flyer for the event may be downloaded, in PDF format, here: side-event-pmsc-abu-graib-sept2016
Mar 4, 2015 | Events
A panel discussion on Guantánamo and accountability for torture, featuring UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan E. Méndez and other experts, will take place in Geneva on 9 March 2015 in connection with the UN Human Rights Council session.The panel features:
- Juan E. Méndez, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture
- Jamil Dakwar, Director, Human Rights Program, American Civil Liberties Union
- Peter Jan Honigsbert, U of San Francisco Law School, Founder & Director of Witness to Guantánamo
- Julia Hall, Expert on Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights, Amnesty International
moderator: Connie de la Vega, University of San Francisco Law School & Human Rights Advocates.
The ICJ joins the ACLU, Amnesty International, Human Rights Advocates, Conectas, Human Rights Watch, CELS, and OMCT in supporting this event.
The event takes place 9 march 2015, at 15:00-17:00, Room XXIII, Palais des Nations, in Geneva.
The event flyer may be downloaded in PDF format here: SideEventTorture
Nov 6, 2014 | News
The ICJ, REDRESS and OMCT submit report to the UN Committee Against Torture in Geneva ahead of its 12-13 November session on the USA.