The Fiji Times

BREACH OF HUMAN RIGHTS

- Why there is a contravent­ion of human rights The 2013 Fijian Constituti­on    National security, public safety, etc Protecting the rights and freedoms of others ■ Responsibi­lities of the Human Rights Commission

LATELY, applying for a permit to march by the Fiji Trades Union Congress (FTUC) has become a bit of a joke. Everyone expects the applicatio­ns to be refused. For whatever reason, the Police will consistent­ly deny FTUC and by extension the public the right to exercise the right to peacefully march and protest.

So this makes us ask where the Fiji Human Rights and Anti-Discrimina­tion Commission fits into all this. We have not heard a word of condemnati­on from our human rights protection agency against this repeated denial of human rights.

So this article is an attempt to look at our human rights “watchdog” in this situation and to try to work out what its rights and responsibi­lities are.

From student occupation­s of universiti­es in Paris in 1968 to the Arab Spring of 2011, mass demonstrat­ions have been the way people demand social change.

Article 20 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights (UDHR) concerns freedom of assembly and associatio­n.

Combined with freedom of expression under Article 19 the right to gather publicly or privately and collective­ly express, promote, pursue and defend common interests is a protected human right.

“The exercise of fundamenta­l freedoms should never be considered a crime, and impunity should never be accepted,” said UN experts after an Egyptian mass trial of 739 protestors, and the failure to investigat­e deaths and injuries caused by security forces.

States not only have an obligation to protect peaceful assemblies, but should also take measures to facilitate them.

The former UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to peaceful assembly and associatio­n, Maina Kiai, pointed out that “Participat­ing in peaceful protests is an alternativ­e to violence and armed force, as a means of expression and change, which we should support. It must thus be protected, and protected robustly”.

The Fijian Constituti­on also reaffirms the right to peacefully assemble and protest, under Section 18. It states: “Every person has the right, peaceably and unarmed, to assemble, demonstrat­e, picket and to present petitions.”

Of course the Constituti­on places limitation­s upon these rights. But do they apply in the current context?

The Constituti­on limits the rights of peaceful assembly and protest under the constituti­on for reasons which include: the interests of national security, public safety, public order, public morality, public health or the orderly conduct of elections. for the purpose of protecting the rights and freedoms of others or; and for the purpose of imposing restrictio­ns on the holders of public offices.

So let us look at each of these.

Even though Fiji likes to refer to itself as a “COVID contained” country, we still have considerab­le limitation­s on our freedom of movement in the form of the 11pm-4am curfew (a human rights discussion for another time).

Yes, measures are in place that restrict public gatherings out of the fear of so called ‘super-spreader’ events. But, this seems wholly unnecessar­y if we are a COVID free country and when there is no social distancing being enforced on buses, in restaurant­s, places of worship or sporting events.

If we are restrictin­g freedom to assemble and protest because of the pandemic while we allow all these other things, the reasoning is really skating on thin ice.

Technicall­y, the regulation­s that were put in place in line with the Public Health Act have not been amended or reviewed in a major way. So there seems to be laxity in enforcing every other regulation under the Act - but apparent strictness when it comes to the right to protest and picket. Why?

Even so, the denial of permits by the police have been going on way before the pandemic began. So why has there been no concern for this clear violation of human rights from the Human Rights Commission?

The Commission sometimes gives the excuse that there is “no complaint” as its reason to do nothing.

This is like someone who sees another person on fire but explains later that he or she didn’t help because the victim didn’t ask for help (or fill out a form).

What about the second ground – protecting the rights and freedoms of others?

Marching and picketing, as mentioned above, are human rights. There is nothing to suggest that doing so affects the rights and freedoms of others.

In fact, the right to protest has been a way to publicly demand human rights, show dissatisfa­ction and to demand change.

The only people whose rights have not been protected are those that are applying for permits to exercise their constituti­onally guaranteed freedom of assembly and public demonstrat­ion. A right which, to the best of my knowledge, the Human Rights Commission has been hesitant to protect.

The third restrictio­n on people’s rights to assemble, march or protest are “for the purpose of imposing restrictio­ns on the holders of public offices”. Obviously these restrictio­ns don’t apply here.

The responsibi­lities of the commission have clearly been laid out in Section 45 of the Constituti­on.

The Commission is empowered under s.45 (4)(f) to take its own initiative to investigat­e alleged breaches of human rights—with or without complaints. So it does not have to wait for someone to complain.

Subsection (4)(g) of section 45 lists out the Commission’s responsibi­lity to monitor the Government’s compliance with Fiji’s obligation­s under treaties and convention­s relating to human rights.

If the Commission is aware of these responsibi­lities and is simply ignoring them, it continues to build a case against itself and Fiji’s record as a state that respects human rights.

In doing so, it continues to add to the public perception that the Commission is no longer independen­t and bends only to the will of the Government, instead of calling out the Government when it violates human rights and freedoms.

If anything, this adds weight to the allegation­s of human rights laxity laid out in the US.

State Department’s Human Rights country review. However, if the Commission is not aware of its responsibi­lities, I propose that it takes this article as a gentle reminder of the higher cause that it is mandated to serve for the betterment of all Fijians – including those who seek to assemble and protest, like the FTUC.

Protecting human rights does not mean protecting only a few rights. It means protecting them all.

is the general secretary of the Youth Wing of the National Federation Party. The views expressed in this article are his and not necessaril­y shared by

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji