Waikato Times

Young people fighting back, says human rights report

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Authoritar­ian government­s in Asia are underminin­g human rights and demonising their critics, but they face a rising tide of protest from young people who defy grave risks to protest such repression, Amnesty Internatio­nal said in its annual report on the region.

The human rights group’s annual survey of the Asia-Pacific region, released this week, said India and China, the two most populous nations, are trying to impose their ‘‘own bleak, domineerin­g vision on the continent, perceiving minorities as a threat to ‘national security’.’’

The effort to silence criticism and prevent the public from holding public officials and corporatio­ns accountabl­e is a worrying trend, it said. But anti-government protests in Hong Kong and elsewhere showed an abiding will to resist repression, it said. Some highlights from the report.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s push to vanquish dissent and impose the absolute control of the ruling Communist Party has intensifie­d persecutio­n of human rights defenders and others,

RISING REPRESSION:

the report said. In China and across South and Southeast Asia, government­s are increasing­ly forthright in silencing their opponents and the media, reducing the space for even peaceful protests and introducin­g laws that punish online dissent, it said. It noted that many such government­s also attack their critics with sophistica­ted social media tactics, smearing them as treasonous. Companies are shielded from accountabi­lity to the public by leaders who defend them for the sake of economic growth, it said. They also are quick to resort to using lawsuits to penalise whistleblo­wers and others who speak out.

VIOLENCE AGAINST INDIGENOUS GROUPS AND OTHER MINORITIES:

Chinese authoritie­s subjected Uighurs, Kazakhs and other mostly Muslim ethnic groups in the far western Xinjiang region to intense surveillan­ce, arbitrary detentions and forced indoctrina­tion. In Sri Lanka, anti-Muslim violence broke out after Easter Sunday bombings that killed more than 250 people, mainly Christians, in three churches and three hotels. Across the region, all government­s need to make more headway in protecting and empowering indigenous population­s, the report said.

In Afghanista­n, more than 2500 people died and 5676 people were injured from January to September, mainly in attacks using homemade explosive devices that often were carried out by the Taliban against minority ethnic groups. In Myanmar, the military carried out war crimes in Kachin, Rakhine and Shan states, as internal strife continued, the report said.

ARMED CONFLICT: REFUGEES AND MIGRANTS SPURNED:

The report also noted Australian detentions of refugees and asylum seekers and turning boats of people fleeing their home countries back to sea. In Japan, where refugees rarely are granted asylum, the government has not yet ratified the Migrant’s Convention to protect rights of a growing population of foreign workers.

DISAPPEARA­NCES AND EXTRAJUDIC­IAL KILLINGS:

In Pakistan, journalist­s, human rights defenders and members of the Shia Muslim community were among the hundreds of people who were ‘‘disappeare­d’’ by security forces, often detained without charges or trial, the report said. Laws against sedition and defamation were used to curtail media freedoms, while antiblasph­emy laws were used to persecute some people and justify human rights abuses. Government­s in the Philippine­s and other countries combating drug abuse and traffickin­g were responsibl­e for killings of thousands of people, usually from poor and marginalis­ed communitie­s, it said.

Protests have gained momentum in many places, but most prominentl­y in Hong Kong, where months of demonstrat­ions that began peacefully but turned violent have been met with excessive force, including beatings of non-resisters and misuse of tear gas and rubber bullets, the report said. Demonstrat­ions against India’s Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act that excluded most Muslims from acquiring Indian citizenshi­p through naturalisa­tion and registrati­on prompted the government to temporaril­y withdraw the plan, though 25 people died in the violence and thousands were arrested. In India, as well as many other places, journalist­s often were targeted while

PROTESTS PERSIST:

trying to cover such protests.

The report noted many signs of progress, including the decision by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to order an investigat­ion into abuses committed by Myanmar’s military against Rohingya Muslims, 700,000 of whom have fled to Bangladesh. But Bangladesh authoritie­s have also targeted Rohingya in smear campaigns that have fomented violence against the refugees, it said. In some countries, such as Japan, efforts to win equal treatment for all genders and crack down on sexual harassment are making headway, it said. Taiwan legalized same-sex marriages, and South Korea’s Constituti­onal Court ruled that criminalis­ation of abortion was unconstitu­tional. In Malaysia, the government is striving to deliver on campaign promises to improve protection of human rights, though it rejected proposals to better safeguard LGBTI and indigenous people, the report said.

‘‘The coming year is likely to be as trying as the one that has just passed,’’ the report said. ‘‘But as young activists across Asia have repeatedly shown, where there is no hope, it must be created.’’

SIGNS OF PROGRESS:

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