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12 June 2001 BURMA STILL USING FORCED LABOR
For more information, please contact:
In Washington, Mike Jendrzejczyk: +1 202 612 4341 (w), +1 301 585
5824
(h)
In New York, Sidney Jones: +1 212 216 1228 (w), +1 718 788 2899
(h)
In Brussels, Jean-Paul Marthoz: +32 2 732 2009 (w)
BURMA STILL USING FORCED LABOR
(New York, June 12, 2001)Burma has continued using forced
labor even though it officially banned the practice more than eight
months ago, Human Rights Watch charged today.
Human Rights Watch said it had evidence of the practice continuing
as recently as May 2001. It urged business and labor leaders, as
well as member states of the International Labor Organization (ILO)
now holding its annual conference in Geneva, to press the Burmese
government to take immediate action to enforce the October 27, 2000
ban and verify compliance through regular access to Burma by independent
monitors.
If Burmese authorities are serious about ending forced labor,
they should mount a nationwide program to enforce their own ban,
said Sidney Jones, executive director of the Asia division of Human
Rights Watch.Then they should invite independent monitors
in to see for themselves.
Migrants coming into Thailand from Mon, Karen and Arakan States
and Pegu and Rangoon Divisions told Human Rights Watch that they
personally had taken part in or witnessed forced labor between February
and May 2001. They said some people conscripted to work were able
to avoid doing forced labor by paying off local authorities. But
a migrant from the city of Martaban in Mon State told Human Rights
Watch that in late April a local official (a ward-level Peace and
Development Council officer) had forced him and a group of others
to dig trenches; some of the workers were as young as ten years
old. Several of the twenty military police supervising the work
struck two men with batons and kicked them when they did not work
fast enough. The witness said that resisting the order was not an
option: "If you refuse to work you could be arrested and detained,"
he said. "No one ever refuses--everyone is too scared."
The ruling Burmese State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) issued
the executive order last year just prior to a decision by the ILO
to call on all governments, employers, workers and UN agencies to
"review" their relationship with the Burmese government
because of its refusal to comply with its obligations to end forced
labor. Previous orders prohibiting the practice had been issued
by the Burmese government in 1995 and 1999, but they were never
enforced. The October 2000 order, however, for the first time stated
explicitly that all violators, including military personnel, would
be held accountable under the Burmese penal code. The United Nations
General Assembly and UN Commission on Human Rights have repeatedly
condemned forced labor in Burma.
On October 29, 2000, Burmese Foreign Minister Win Aung wrote to
the director-general of the ILO and assured him that the latest
order would be "strictly enforced." However, there are
significant obstacles to its implementation:
? There is no evidence of prosecutions. Human Rights Watch is not
aware of a single case in which a Burmese official has been sanctioned
for violating the order under Section 374 of the penal code, which
provides for a penalty of up to one year in prison, a fine, or both.
Without a sustained effort that includes highly publicized prosecutions
of those who violate the ban -- both military and civilian officials
-- the SPDC's order will amount to little more than a public relations
effort.
? Public awareness of the ban is limited. The executive order was
supposed to be circulated to village headmen who in turn were expected
to announce the ban to local villagers. It was also reportedly published
in the official Myanmar Gazette, which carries all laws and legislative
orders. But most of those interviewed by Human Rights Watch had
never heard of the ban. Human Rights Watch called on the SPDC regularly
to publicize the order through public media, including newspapers
and magazines, radio, and television, and to distribute it in ethnic
minority languages as well. It said that village headmen should
explain the decree and what villagers can do if local authorities
fail to respond.
? No international monitoring is allowed. The ILO has asked to
station international monitors in Rangoon who would be able to conduct
regular, objective assessments of conditions throughout the country.
Monitors should be given guaranteed freedom of movement to all parts
of Burma, including ethnic minority regions. Credible, outside monitoring
is crucial to ensure that further guarantees or promises by the
Burmese government are fully implemented.
The international community should keep up the pressure,
and until all forced labor is ended and this has been independently
verified, foreign companies should refrain from investing in Burma,
said Jones.
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