(http://www.nytimes.com/) 
 
____________________________________


October 24, 2009

Asean Inaugurates Human Rights  Commission 
By THOMAS FULLER
 
CHA-AM, Thailand — Southeast Asian governments inaugurated their first 
human  rights commission on Friday in what they hailed as a milestone for a 
region  ruled by governments as diverse as the thriving democracy in Indonesia, 
the  hermetic communist regime in Laos and the repressive military 
dictatorship in  Myanmar.  
But human rights activists called the body toothless and walked out of a  
meeting here Friday when “civil society” representatives from five countries 
 were rejected by their governments.  
“The commission has not been designed to be effective and impartial,” said 
 Debbie Stothard, a human rights activist from Malaysia.  
Establishing credibility for the Intergovernmental _Commission on Human 
Rights_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/united_nations_commission_on_human_rights/index.html?inline=nyt-org)
 , as the 
body is formally  named, was one of several challenges for leaders gathering 
at this seaside  resort south of Bangkok for a three-day summit meeting of 
the _Association of Southeast Asian Nations_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/a/association_of_southeast_asian_nations/
index.html?inline=nyt-org) , or Asean.  
Poor attendance marred the start of the meeting, when leaders from some of  
the largest Southeast Asian countries, including Indonesia, the Philippines 
and  Malaysia, did not show up for the opening ceremony Friday, citing 
reasons  ranging from weather disturbances to domestic obligations. They were 
scheduled  to arrive later during the weekend.  
The meeting, which follows one in April that was canceled when Thai  
anti-government protesters stormed the summit venue, will address preparedness  
for natural disasters, the response to future economic crises and free-trade  
agreements, among other issues.  
The leaders of several non-Asean members — Australia, China, India, New  
Zealand and South Korea — were scheduled to join the meeting later during the  
weekend.  
In his opening address on Friday, Thailand’s prime minister, _Abhisit 
Vejjajiva_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/abhisit_vejjajiva/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , emphasized the achievements of  
Asean, which was initially set up more than four decades ago partly as a 
bulwark  
against communism. In recent years, Asean has adopted a charter for the  
grouping, signed free trade agreements with other countries in the region and  
reduced tariff levels to negligible levels — although numerous other 
barriers to  trade still exist between member countries.  
“What remains is the onus that lies on Asean to prove that it can implement 
 whatever has been agreed, declared, or envisioned,” Mr. Abhisit said, in 
an  apparent response to criticism that the grouping is more talk than 
substance.  
The human rights body inaugurated Friday appeared to reinforce that  
criticism. The job of the commission will be to promote human rights, but it  
will 
have no power to investigate governments or impose sanctions.  
A statement distributed by the Thai government here said the commission 
would  “promote and protect human rights by promoting public awareness and 
education.”  
Mr. Abhisit acknowledged concerns that the commission’s scope was too 
limited  but said it was part of an “evolutionary” process.  
“The issue of human rights is not about condemnation, but about awareness,  
empowerment and improvement,” Mr. Abhisit said. “We shall not only 
demonstrate  to the world that human rights is a priority but also show them 
realistic and  constructive ways to deal with it.”  
Yuyun Wahyuningrum, an Indonesian human rights delegate who walked out of 
the  meeting with government representatives Friday, said human rights groups 
 supported the creation of the commission, but were concerned that it was 
not  independent enough. Commissioners were chosen by governments without 
outside  consultation, she said.  
“The process was very secretive,” she said.  
Southeast Asia’s human rights record is blemished at best. Myanmar’s 
military  government, which is a member of Asean, is currently detaining more 
than 2,000  political prisoners including _Daw Aung San Suu Kyi_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/daw_aung_san_suu_kyi/index.ht
ml?inline=nyt-per) , the democracy leader whose party  won a landslide 
election victory in 1990 that the ruling generals ignored.  Cambodia’s 
parliament passed a law on Wednesday that bars demonstrations of more  than 200 
people. Malaysia’s government detains people it deems threats to  domestic 
security without trial and maintains tight controls on television  stations and 
newspapers.  
Asean has ambitions to create a single market by 2015 among its 10 member  
nations, which have a combined population of nearly 600 million people, 
twice  the population of the United States.  
But its main challenge in recent months has been to tamp down long-running  
conflicts and disagreements. Relations between Thailand and Cambodia have  
worsened over a border dispute near an ancient hilltop temple, _Preah 
Vihear_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/preah_vihear_temple/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier)
 . Over the past year, troops in 
the border  area have skirmished several times, leaving seven people dead.  
Cambodia’s nationalistic and authoritarian prime minister, _Hun Sen_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/h/_hun_sen/index.html?i
nline=nyt-per) , regularly delivers diatribes against Thailand  and has 
pointedly offered asylum to _Thaksin Shinawatra_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/t/thaksin_shinawatra/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , the ousted Thai prime minister who  is sought by the Thai authorities on 
outstanding arrest warrants.  
Soon after arriving at the meeting Friday afternoon Mr. Hun Sen said Mr.  
Thaksin would be allowed to stay in Cambodia and serve as his economic 
adviser.  
“People talk about Aung San Suu Kyi from Myanmar. Why can’t we talk about  
Thaksin?” he asked.  
The Cambodian government said Friday it would reject any extradition 
request  from Thailand if Mr. Thaksin moved to Cambodia.  
The host of the meeting, Thailand, deployed more than 30,000 security  
personnel for the summit to deter supporters of Mr. Thaksin from disrupting the 
 
event. Mr. Thaksin was removed from power in a 2006 military coup.  
Elsewhere in the region, Indonesia and Malaysia have failed to resolve  
disputes over territory on Borneo island. Emotionally charged disagreements 
over  the origins of songs, traditional dances and batik cloth-printing 
techniques  have flared in recent months.  
Territorial disputes also strain relations between the Philippines and  
Malaysia and Singapore and Malaysia. In the South China Sea, Brunei, Malaysia,  
Philippines and Vietnam all have claims to areas rich in natural gas 
deposits. 




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