http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/05/13/ri-likely-sit-un-human-rights-council.html

Refl: Agaknya bagi  pembawa suara tentang masalah pelanggaran HAM  yang 
dilakukan oleh aparatus rezim  NKRI ke forum internasional akan menhadapi 
tantangan berat untuk  didengar,  karena adanya wakil NKRI di UNHRC. Seperti 
dimaklumi  bahwa setiap  wakil rezim  mempuyai tugas membela,  mempertahankan 
dan memperharumkan nama baik rezim berkuasa di arena internasional dan oleh 
karena itu  bukan saja tidak imparsial  tetapi malah akan menghalang-halangai 
adanya informasi yang dianggap mecemarkan  hakekat kekuasaan NKRI.  Benarkan 
assumsi demikian?

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/05/13/ri-likely-sit-un-human-rights-council.html

RI likely to sit on UN human rights council 
Mustaqim Adamrah, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 05/13/2011 11:24 PM | World 


Indonesia's ASEAN chairmanship will boost its chances of being elected as a 
member of the United Nations Human Rights Council, despite past and ongoing 
human rights violations in the world's third-largest democracy.

Indonesia - which chaired and was a member of the Council in 2006 and between 
2007 and 2010, respectively - is running as a candidate for Council membership, 
which will be decided in a UN plenary meeting in New York next Friday.

"I believe Indonesia's chairmanship in ASEAN will be a factor for countries 
voting for Indonesia," Foreign Ministry director for human rights and 
humanitarian affairs Muhammad Anshor said at a discussion on Thursday.

"It's because many hopes have been cast on Indonesia's chairmanship, 
particularly on democracy and human rights issues."

But it is not easy to detect which country would vote for Indonesia, because 
individual members would have their own vote, he said.

Indonesia and the Phillipines are the two ASEAN countries running for the 
candidacy. Syria and India are the other Asian candidates.

Due to domestic turbulence, Syria agreed on Thursday to swap its candidacy with 
Kuwait. 

All four countries will likely become members of the council, as there are four 
seats open in the Asian group.

On Thursday, Indonesia commemorated the falling of the authoritarian regime of 
late former president Soeharto in 1998.

Around and during that year, a number of university students were killed by the 
Indonesian Military during nationwide protests, and a number of activists were 
made to disappear "by force". The cases of those events have yet to conclude.

Last year, military officials reportedly tortured civilians in Papua. Videos of 
the torture went public, drawing domestic and international anger over the 
human rights abuse in Indonesia.

But President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono - a retired Army general - later claimed 
that there were "no gross human rights violations" committed by the military 
during his presidency.

The episodes of torture and killing of Ahmadiyah followers by hard-line Islamic 
groups in the name of defending Islamic teachings from defamation have also 
increased since last year. Some believe the National Police allowed those 
episodes to happen.

The Philippines witnessed the massacre of 33 journalists in 2009 alone. The 
development of this case is also moving at a snail's pace.

National Commission on Human Rights deputy chairman on external affairs, Nur 
Kholis, said the trend of human rights violations had increased in the past 
three years, with around 4,800 cases filed with the commission in 2008, some 
5,000 in 2009 and more than 6,000 in 2010.

"There were 1,287 complaints of human rights violations [filed with the 
commission] at the National Police in 2010 - the highest on record that year - 
followed by human rights violations by regional administrations," he said.

Human Rights Working Group executive director Rafendi Djamin said he supported 
Indonesia's candidacy for the Council.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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