Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Upholding human rights against arbitrary arrest

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The Government of Canada has taken an initiative to promote a declaratio­n by like-minded countries against the use of arbitrary detention in Stateto-state relations. The objective of the declaratio­n is to achieve an end to the practice by some states of arbitraril­y arresting, detaining, and sentencing foreign nationals, and then bargaining with their release to influence policies or positions of their government­s.

Arbitrary arrests and detentions of foreign nationals by a Government is a form of institutio­nalised kidnapping. Using the release of such individual­s to influence government­s amounts to demanding a ransom.

It is a troubling developmen­t in internatio­nal relations, one which is contrary to internatio­nal law and which seeks to replace legal and diplomatic norms with a form of inter-state blackmail.

Apart from severely injuring the process of peaceful internatio­nal relations, this kind of behaviour directly affects innocent people who could be arrested, detained, and sentenced simply to be used as pawns by government­s that cannot get their way through internatio­nal law and norms. In such conditions, people are exposed to extreme forms of suffering while their rights are completely ignored, including their right to a fair and public hearing by a competent, independen­t, and impartial tribunal in instances where a Statecontr­olled judiciary sentences them.

Fear of being arbitraril­y arrested would have a deleteriou­s effect on tourism, business travel, and eventually on trade and commerce. Instead of advancing to a world of freedom, underpinne­d by respect for human rights and internatio­nal law, the global community would recede to an age of lawlessnes­s and conflict.

The peoples of small states would be the most vulnerable and the most at risk if the practice of arbitrary arrest, detention, and sentencing prevails. The government­s of small countries do not have the military might or economic clout to confront the authoritie­s of powerful countries that employ these practices. Further, small countries do not have the plethora of embassies and consulates around the world that could try to protect their nationals. The only tool available to government­s of small states is respect for internatio­nal law by all states.

That is why this declaratio­n proposed by Canada has already won the endorsemen­t of the government­s of Antigua and Barbuda, Guyana, and St Lucia. As the foreign minister of Antigua and Barbuda, E Paul Chet Greene put it in a message to his colleague foreign ministers of the Caribbean Community (Caricom): “[T] he declaratio­n is as much a further layer in the structure of protection for small countries as it is for the strengthen­ing of internatio­nal cooperatio­n by all states to end arbitrary arrest, detention, or sentencing as means to exercise leverage over other government­s.”

Internatio­nal human rights law and instrument­s, particular­ly Article 9 of the Internatio­nal Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), assert that: “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention.” They also set out obligation­s of states to safeguard these rights. However, the rights for which provision is made in the ICCPR apply to individual­s who are within the territory of the country and subject to its jurisdicti­on.

The problem with all these laws and instrument­s is that the people who framed them did not envisage circumstan­ces in which government­s would abrogate them. The laws certainly did not contemplat­e circumstan­ces in which any State would arbitraril­y arrest, detain, and sentence foreign nationals so as to compel actions by other states. Therefore, they provide for no sanctions or internatio­nal measures against offending government­s which use State-controlled machinery to achieve political ends in this fashion.

Canada and the countries that endorse the proposed declaratio­n, including the United States of America, the 28-nation European Union and nations in Africa and the Caribbean, plan to launch the declaratio­n on December 17. By then other countries are expected to join.

The question arises as to why the declaratio­n is not being presented and pursued within the United Nations framework. Sadly, the answer is that, despite the efforts of a progressiv­e secretary general in António Guterres, there are members of the UN that are guilty of these unwholesom­e practices. They would emasculate the declaratio­n, stifling it in their own interest.

It is noteworthy that, in 1991, the UN Commission on Human Rights set up a Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, that has been automatica­lly renewed every three years, with a mandate to grapple with the issue. But, after all this time, the essential question of dealing with states that deliberate­ly use arbitrary arrest, detention, and sentencing as a means of coercing other states has failed to be addressed adequately.

For those government­s that resolutely stand for the human, civil, and political rights of peoples, including their own, the declaratio­n is a strong display of their collective denunciati­on of those states that violate them. The majority of Caribbean countries exist and thrive as open economies that encourage and promote tourism, travel, trade, and commerce, guaranteei­ng the rights of foreign nationals in their countries by adherence to internatio­nal law. These Caribbean countries are entitled to expect the same regard and protection­s for the rights of their people in foreign countries. That’s why the Declaratio­n Against the Use of Arbitrary Detention in State-to-state Relations is in the interest of the Caribbean’s people.

The problem with all these laws and instrument­s is that the people who framed them did not envisage circumstan­ces in which government­s would abrogate them. The laws certainly did not contemplat­e circumstan­ces in which any State would arbitraril­y arrest, detain, and sentence foreign nationals so as to compel actions by other states. Therefore, they provide for no sanctions or internatio­nal measures against offending government­s which use Statecontr­olled machinery to achieve political ends in this fashion

 ??  ?? Foreign minister of Antigua and Barbuda E Paul Chet Greene
Foreign minister of Antigua and Barbuda E Paul Chet Greene
 ?? (DON EMMERT) ?? UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres
(DON EMMERT) UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres
 ??  ?? The Government of Canada is leading the charge towards a declaratio­n against the use of arbitrary detention in State-to-state relations.
The Government of Canada is leading the charge towards a declaratio­n against the use of arbitrary detention in State-to-state relations.

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