Act undermines Swaziland human rights

 

 


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Public Statement by Amnesty International and the International Bar
Association's Human Rights Institute


8 January 2008

 

 

 

Swaziland: 

Suppression of Terrorism Act undermines human rights

 

 

 

Today Amnesty International and the International Bar Association's Human
Rights Institute (IBA-HRI) published a report calling for the repeal or
immediate amendment of Swaziland's Suppression of Terrorism Act. The
government began to implement the new law in November 2008, following an
attempted bombing of the Lozitha Bridge on 20 September. 


A number of provisions in this Act are sweeping and imprecise. In
conjunction with government warnings of heavy penalties for "associating"
with certain groups, which were declared on 14 November to be terrorist
"entities" under the law, they are contributing to an atmosphere of
uncertainty and of intimidation amongst a wide range of civil society
organizations.   

 

Amnesty International and the IBA-HRI are gravely concerned that key
provisions in this anti-terrorism law are inherently repressive, breach
Swaziland's obligations under international and regional human rights law
and are already leading to the violation of the right to freedom of
expression, association and assembly. 

 

States have a duty to protect all those under their jurisdiction, including
taking measures to prevent and protect against attacks on civilians.
Swaziland participated in the adoption by the UN General Assembly of the
Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy in which all forms of terrorism were
strongly condemned. The attempted bombing of the Lozitha Bridge, during
which two of the men involved died, must be of concern to the government and
would lawfully require a full investigation and other aspects of a criminal
justice response. 

 

Amnesty International and the IBA-HRI emphasised that there is also an
absolute necessity for states to ensure that all anti-terrorism measures are
implemented in accordance with international human rights law. This
requirement has been stressed in declarations and reports of the UN Security
Council and UN human rights bodies. 

 

Today's report analyses certain provisions of the Suppression of Terrorism
Act in the context of Swaziland's international and regional human rights
obligations. The organizations have concluded that the legislation is
incompatible with the country's human rights obligations on the following
grounds:

 

.        The failure to restrict the definition of 'terrorist act' to the
threatened or actual use of violence against civilians, as well as to
restrict it to acts taken in pursuit of an underlying political or
ideological goal, a failure which affects most of the other provisions of
the law as they depend on the definition;

.        The related failure of the definition of a terrorist act to meet
the requirements of legality, that is accessibility, precision,
applicability to counter-terrorism alone, non-discrimination and
non-retroactivity;

.        The offences are defined with such over-breadth and imprecision
that they place excessive restrictions on a wide range of human rights -
such as freedom of thought, conscience and religion, freedom of opinion and
expression, freedom of association and freedom of assembly - without
adhering to the requirements of demonstrable proportionality and necessity;

.        The reversal of the onus of proof with respect to allegations of
membership of a terrorist group;

.        The lack of access to effective legal remedies and procedural
safeguards in response to actions of the Executive, consequently infringing
the rights of due process in a fair hearing;

.        The limitations placed on the role of the courts in relation to the
review of the proscription of organizations;

.        The provision allowing for up to seven days incommunicado detention
without charge or trial, with the attendant risks of torture, or other
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, or enforced
disappearances;

.        The absence of effective safeguards in the law to prevent these
human rights violations; and

.        The provision of the power to order the removal from Swaziland of
someone suspected of an offence under the law, without procedural
safeguards.

 

In view of these findings, the two organizations have urged the Government
of Swaziland to repeal or immediately amend the Suppression of Terrorism
Act, and to fully protect and uphold human rights in its responses to any
acts of violence, including suspected acts of terrorism. 

 

They have also recommended that the authorities take measures to improve the
capacity of the pre-existing criminal justice system to bring to justice
suspected perpetrators of all acts of violence, within a framework of
respect for human rights.  If there remains a demonstrated need for specific
counter-terrorism legislation, the government should ensure that a redrafted
law includes only measures necessary and proportionate to that specific need
and which are consistent with Swaziland's human rights obligations. They
should be enacted only after wider public consultation and debate.   

 

Finally, they encouraged the government to consider seeking the cooperation,
advice and technical assistance of the UN Special Rapporteur on the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering
Terrorism, the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights and similar
bodies, to ensure that Swaziland complies with its human rights obligations
while fulfilling other obligations under the UN Global Counter-Terrorism
Strategy. 

 

Amnesty International and the IBA-HRI had sent their report to the
Government of Swaziland for information and response prior to publication.
In a reply sent on 7 January, the government stated that the Suppression of
Terrorism Act was based on model legislative provisions developed by the
Commonwealth Secretariat with the agreement of the Counter-Terrorism
Committee of the UN Security Council. Amnesty International and the IBA-HRI,
however, stand by their findings that Swaziland's anti-terrorism law is not
in compliance with the country's obligations under international human
rights law. As emphasised in the UN's Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy,
"measures to ensure the respect for human rights for all and the rule of law
[are] the fundamental basis for the fight against terrorism".   


For further information or a copy of the report, please contact Carina
Trimingham in Amnesty International's Press Office on +44 (0)20 7413 5871
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected] or the
on call Press Officer on +44 (0)7778 472126.  To speak to Romana St
Matthew-Daniel in the press office at the International Bar Association,
please call her on either +44 (0)20 7691 6837 or +44 (0)7940 731915 

 


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