-Caveat Lector-

--- In [EMAIL PROTECTED], L A Hazard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (by way of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Published on Wednesday, January 2, 2001 in the Los Angeles Times
U.N. Fears Abuses of Terror Mandate
Rights Monitors See Some Governments Using New Requirements to
Justify
Repression

by William Orme

UNITED NATIONS -- Demands by the Security Council that U.N.
members act
against global terrorism are being used by some regimes to justify
repression of domestic dissent, U.N. officials and independent human
rights
advocates say.

The anti-terrorism campaign has been used by authoritarian
governments to
justify moves to clamp down on moderate opponents, outlaw criticism of
rulers and expand the use of capital punishment.

Compliance with the Security Council requirements "could lead to
unwarranted infringement on civil liberties," Bacre Waly Ndiaye, the
chief
human rights officer at the U.N. Secretariat, told the council's new
counterterrorism committee. "There is evidence that some countries are
now
introducing measures that may erode core human rights safeguards." In
an
unexpectedly swift response to the attacks on the World Trade Center
and
the Pentagon, the Security Council called on U.N. members on Sept. 28
to
provide information within 90 days about their legal restrictions on
fund-raising, financial transfers, arms acquisition and immigration.

But there is no agreement on what constitutes terrorist activity, U.N.
experts say, and some governments are presenting what critics contend
are
police-state measures as part of the U.N.-endorsed campaign.

"In some countries," Ndiaye told the counterterror committee at its Dec.
13
meeting, "nonviolent activities have been considered as terrorism, and
excessive measures have been taken to suppress or restrict individual
rights, including the presumption of innocence, the right to a fair trial, �

freedom from torture, privacy rights, freedom of expression and
assembly,
and the right to seek asylum."

Ndiaye carefully refrained from identifying those countries, but human
rights advocates quickly came up with a long list, from Algeria to
Zimbabwe. In an interview at his office here last week, Ndiaye said he
was
concerned that the campaign could backfire and undermine U.N. efforts
to
promote democracy and the rule of law in Eastern Europe, Southeast
Asia and
his native West Africa.

"The challenge is how to make counterterrorism measures compatible
with
human rights," he said. "Unfortunately, under the guise of fighting
terror,
some governments are pursuing other agendas. Our concern is that this
may
provide cover to many governments to get rid of their opponents."

Insulting Mugabe May Be Outlawed

On Dec. 20, the Cuban legislature, with President Fidel Castro presiding,
unanimously passed a law that state media said expanded the
application of
capital punishment for crimes defined as terrorism, including the use of
the Internet to incite political violence.

A week earlier, the government of Zimbabwe published a proposed law
that
would make it a crime to "undermine the authority of or insult" President
Robert Mugabe, who is again seeking reelection. Mugabe's aides
defended the
legislation as necessary to combat terrorists, a category they said
includes most of the president's opponents as well as critical journalists.�


"We agree with President Bush that anyone who harbors, finances or
defends
a terrorist is himself a terrorist," a presidential spokesman said.

In Central Asia, the government of Uzbekistan has defended its jailing of
moderate Islamist opponents as part of the world campaign against
"evildoers," while Kyrgyzstan has intensified internal travel controls on
dissidents.

The trend to toughen statutes aimed primarily at domestic dissent
worries
advocates such as Michael Posner, executive director of the New York-
based
Lawyers Committee for Human Rights.

"We are going to see repeated examples of governments using the new
security environment as a pretext for silencing dissidents," he said. "This�

gives a green light to the Mugabes of the world to go after their
opponents
under the cover of what the U.S. and the U.K. are doing" to fight terror.

The chairman of the Security Council's counterterrorism committee,
British
Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock, has agreed to Ndiaye's request that he
add a
human rights specialist to the committee's advisors, who already include
specialists on money laundering and intelligence gathering. But the
council's priority is to combat terrorism.

"The counterterrorism committee is not going to be the tool to resolve
human rights problems around the world," said a European official at
the
committee who asked not to be named.

The U.N.'s own human rights advocates are limited to an advisory role in
Security Council proceedings, noted Ndiaye, the New York deputy of
Mary
Robinson, the Geneva-based U.N. high commissioner for human rights.
She in
turn reports to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

Robinson, a former president of Ireland, is viewed with suspicion in
Washington, Moscow and Beijing because of liberal stands that are
widely
admired by human rights activists. Russia and China have publicly
interpreted the Security Council's counterterror push as an endorsement
of
their own armed campaigns against Muslim rebels, which have drawn
strong
criticism at U.N. human rights forums.

By the midnight deadline Thursday, more than 100 of the U.N.'s 189
member
states had filed their replies to the council, and most of the rest pledged�

to submit responses when the U.N. resumes sessions early this month.
The
published responses range from long catalogs of efforts to disrupt
terrorist networks to cursory reiterations of official policy.

A Two-Page Memo From Venezuela

The U.S. report, which American officials say was intended as
a "template"
for other countries, runs 23 pages. Venezuela, which has been accused
of
sheltering Colombian terrorists, sent a two-page memo pledging
cooperation
with the council and summarizing its long-standing international treaty
commitments. The hard-line military regime in Myanmar, in an equally
terse
submission, depicted itself as a victim of global terrorism, citing last
year's occupation of its embassy in Bangkok, Thailand, by dissidents it
labeled "expatriate terrorists."

Within Myanmar itself, however, "there are no terrorists," the
government
assured the Security Council.

One of the first Middle Eastern submissions came from Syria, which is
poised to join the council for a two-year term this month. The Syrian
response makes a virtue of Syria's strict controls over both the economy
and the political system, contending that financial support for terrorists �

is effectively curtailed by the absence of any private banking system or
independent charities. The Syrians cite as a further deterrent
their "harsh
penalties" for threats to the public order, including capital punishment
for such offenses as the "disruption of means of information,
communications or transport."

The United States still officially calls Syria a terrorist state because of�

its backing of Hezbollah guerrillas in southern Lebanon and because of
Damascus' history as a haven for Islamic Jihad and other militant
Palestinian factions. Syria asserted in its report that although it has
ratified several regional and international conventions against terrorism, �

the "legitimate struggle against foreign occupation" does not fall under
the definition of terrorism in these treaties. Syria, which does not
recognize Israel, condones armed attacks by Palestinians within Israel's
borders as well as in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

Israeli and Palestinian diplomats said in interviews that the U.N.
counterterror push has already blunted outside criticism of methods
used on
both sides to combat accused terrorists, including preventive detention
and
restrictions on speech and assembly. The Israeli submission to the
Security
Council cites laws on the books since Israel's founding that impose fines
and jail time for "propaganda speeches" on behalf of terrorists or the
possession of literature published by such groups. For decades, civil
libertarians in Israel have urged that these statutes be rescinded.

Foreign condemnation of Israel's "extrajudicial killings" of accused
terrorists has been muted since September, said Yehuda Lancry, Israel's
U.N. representative.

Palestinian officials say that although they have come under intense
criticism for arresting dissidents without charges or published evidence,
the pressure on the Palestinian Authority to stop terror attacks has now
relegated such concerns to the sidelines.

"The atmosphere everywhere has changed since Sept. 11," said Nasser
Kidwa,
the permanent Palestinian observer at the U.N. "The American people
themselves are saying, 'Forget about due process, we want to stop
terrorism,' and you are hearing things that would have been
unmentionable
here before, like military tribunals."

The prospective American military tribunals, though perhaps the single
most
significant change in U.S. counterterror policies since Sept. 11, are
notably not highlighted in the report submitted by the U.S. government
to
the Security Council last month. Yet the tribunals' ultimate impact on
regimes elsewhere might be greater than any other counterterror
initiative
by council members, human rights activists say.

In a joint letter to Bush early last month, eight leading American human
rights groups said his order authorizing the tribunals--which could
impose
the death penalty--will be cited by foreign dictators "for decades to
come"
as a justification for summary executions.

"The credibility and effectiveness of the United States in opposing such
repressive procedures will be seriously harmed by this precedent," the
letter said.

The United States, in an embarrassment to the State Department, was
voted
off the Human Rights Commission in Geneva last year. The U.S. is
expected
to reclaim a seat on the commission when it reconvenes in March, but
human
rights groups that strongly supported U.S. membership say they are now
concerned that Washington will be a less aggressive advocate for
judicial
reform and the protection of dissent.

"The State Department's last annual human rights report was filled with
critical references to due-process concerns in places like Colombia,
Egypt
and Turkey," said the Lawyers Committee's Posner. "Whether they are
going
to be able to say all that again without subjecting themselves to ridicule �

is an open question."

U.N. human rights officials say they are also concerned that the
counterterror focus could pose problems for U.N. efforts to encourage
independent judiciaries and free election environments in violence-
racked
societies such as East Timor, Sierra Leone, the Yugoslav region of
Kosovo
and--in the coming year--Afghanistan.

"'The terrorists pose a threat to both security and human rights, and
many
countries may, and rightly, resort to exceptional measures," said Ndiaye,
a
burly, soft-spoken Senegalese lawyer and former Amnesty International
official. "But even after 9/11, defendants still deserve a fair trial, and �

a government's opponents still have the right of speech and assembly.
These
should not be restricted. If you do, you are undermining the very reason
that you are fighting against them."

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times




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