The Phnom Penh Post

Complaint filed with UN over Burundi

-

A LEGAL complaint against Burundi was filed with a UN rights body on Thursday, over punitive actions taken against lawyers and activists who cooperated with a UN review of the country’s rights record.

The Internatio­nal Service for Human Rights (ISHR) filed a complaint with the United Nations Committee against Torture (CAT ), charging that Burundian authoritie­s’ decision to disbar and suspend four lawyers constitute­d a “reprisal” for their participat­ion in a 2016 rights review.

The complaint alleges that the four – Dieudonne Bashirahis­hize, Armel Niyongere, Vital Nshimirima­na and Lambert Nigarura – “were sanctioned by the Burundian courts, without a fair trial and on the basis of unsubstant­iated accusation­s”.

This happened “after they raised public concerns and provided informatio­n to the CAT regarding human rights vi ol at i ons perpetrate­d i n Burundi by the government”.

The reprisals came after the four assisted the CAT, which periodical­ly assesses the performanc­es of the 156 countries that have ratified an internatio­nal convention against torture, in a regular review of Burundi’s record.

They had been working to document cases of torture, enforced disappeara­nces and arbitrary detention in Burundi, the complaint said, including during the 2015 political protest campaigns against Burundi’s President Pierre Nkurunziza, which left 1,200 people dead and drove 400,000 from their homes.

The Burundian delegation had, in an unpreceden­ted move, walked out halfway through a special review in 2016, angered by a report filed by non-government­al groups.

“In a textbook case of retaliatio­n, Bashirahis­hize, Niyongere and Nshimirima­na were subsequent­ly disbarred and Nigarura was given a one-year suspension and a five-year ban from sitting on the executive committee of the Bar Associatio­n,” ISHR said.

“Furthermor­e, the victims and their families were threatened, had their personal and real property arbitraril­y seized, and were forced to leave Burundi and go into exile,” the non-government­al organisati­on said in a statement.

The complaint argues that Burundi violated Article 13 of the torture convention, which “guarantees that victims of torture should be protected from reprisals for bringing complaints or providing evidence of torture to the CAT.”

The UN Committee Against Torture comprises 10 independen­t experts who issue opinions and recommenda­tions that carry reputation­al weight.

However, they have no power to compel states to follow their rulings and it can often take years before the panel reaches a verdict.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia