Bangkok Post

Govt designs 2-year human rights map

- KING-OUA LAOHONG PATPON SABPAITOON

The government has unveiled its plan for a two-year road map that outlines state and private efforts to level up human rights protection, securing its status as a national agenda item.

The equal and fair treatment of all people is something the government wants to see become a reality as it gears toward the much-promoted Thailand 4.0 era, a fourth industrial revolution that focuses on technologi­cal advancemen­ts and high-level services.

State agencies must “take action that they may have never imagined” to support measures related to human rights, Rights and Liberties Protection Department chief Pitikan Sithidej told a seminar yesterday.

The Transport Ministry, for example, has been urged to help the government achieve this goal by designing transport systems nationwide that do not pose any hindrance to disabled persons, she said.

The National Resources and Environmen­t Ministry will not only emphasise the issue of wildlife and pollution, but it also needs to think about how to manage areas so the rights of people as well as the environmen­t are respected, said Ms Pitikan.

She said t he Justice Ministry’s work also focuses on the protection of human rights.

It has already set up a justice fund to help fund plaintiffs’ expenses on surety and during court hearings.

As her ministry sees it, people’s access to justice is comparable to “infrastruc­ture”, the department chief said.

Action plans in the road map will commit the government to reducing human rights violations every year.

The poor image from past unsuccessf­ul efforts to protect human rights despite the enforcemen­t of national human rights plans must be eradicated, Ms Pitikan added, saying a lack of coordinati­on by some state agencies caused the failure.

The agenda will be presented to the cabinet for approval and is expected to be promulgate­d on Internatio­nal Human Rights Day on Dec 10.

According to the department, a total of 800 complaints concerning human rights issues were reported last year.

Unequal access to justice topped the complaints, as 26% of complainan­ts cried foul over that rights violation.

Nearly 11% concerned complaints over status and civil rights.

Internatio­nal human rights expert Vitit Muntarbhor­n welcomed the government’s new national agenda. The protection of civil and political rights for citizens must be emphasised, he said.

“Many aspects still need t o be addressed to enhance human rights protection, particular­ly political and civil rights, if this plan is to be sustainabl­e,” he said.

“The government needs to liberalise and open up political space for freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, to really respond to human developmen­t and human rights as a whole,” he said.

He added the human rights situation in Thailand has improved over time as many issues have been effectivel­y addressed.

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