Showing posts with label Signature of ASEAN charter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Signature of ASEAN charter. Show all posts

Sunday, November 18, 2007

ASEAN leaders ready to sign the TOOTHLESS PAPER TIGER landmark charter

Asean leaders ready to sign landmark charter

Singapore (dpa) - Leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations gathered in Singapore on Sunday ready to sign a landmark charter giving legal status to the 40-year-old body and making strides in human rights.

With Burmese Prime Minister Thein Sein and Foreign Minister U Nyan Win attending and the delegates from the 10-member bodies staying in 11 different hotels, police designated "protected areas" giving authorities greater leeway to deal with possible security threats, demonstrations or other incidents.

Among the affected venues and a 500-metre perimetre around each are The Shangri-La Hotel where the 40th anniversary summit is taking place, The Raffles City Convention Centre site of a gala dinner and the Asian Civilizations Museum where a reception will be held.

Nearly 1,000 delegates from 43 countries are attending.

While the charter, a blueprint for an Asean economic community by 2015, and a document on climate change and the environment are highlights, diplomats said Burma is overshadowing the other issues after its bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Septemer.

Asean countries have made many commitments over the years, but have only implemented a third of them, said Professor Tommy Koh, Singapore's representative on the task force which drafted the charter.

"This is not an acceptable record," Koh said. "A key feature in the charter is the emphasis on developing a culture of taking our obligations seriously," he added.

The secretary-general will be empowered to monitor compliance with Asean agreements and report breaches to the summit, he said.

Referring to critics who maintain that Asean is little more than a "talk shop, Koh said the charter will enable the grouping to play a bigger role in regional and global affairs.

Asean includes Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam and Burma.

The UN Secretary General's special Adviser Ibrahim Gambari is scheduled to brief the East Asia Summit which includes the Asean countries in addition to China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

Police have warned against staging any outdoor protests after learning of plans by foreign students to do so on Monday.

A petition was released however calling on the UN Security Council to bring "tangible results" in the national reconciliation and political reform process.

The document was signed by 3,626 people or 10 per cent of the Burmese nationals in Singapore.

A group calling themselves the "Overseas Burma Patriots" said they want Singapore to give the petition to the council.

Public demonstrations against the Burmese junta have flared elsewhere, but police said Singapore's prohibition against outdoor gatherings of more than four people without official approval is in full force.

Asean admitted Burma a decade ago despite opposition from the United States and the European Union over its human rights record and detention of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Critics maintain that keeping Asean's policy of non-interference in other members' affairs and continuation of decision-making by consensus could result in a "paper tiger."

While creating a human rights body, they point out the draft of the new charter lacks an effective enforcement mechanism.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Democracy activists urge ASEAN not to allow Myanmar to sign charter

Nov 16, 2007
DPA

Manila - Philippine democracy activists on Friday urged the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) not to allow Myanmar to sign a landmark charter that declares adherence to democracy and protection of human rights.

Leaders of the 10-member ASEAN are scheduled to sign the regional bloc's first charter on Tuesday next week during their annual summit in Singapore.

In an open letter to ASEAN leaders, the activists warned that Myanmar's signing of the ASEAN charter will taint the document 'with blood of the Burmese people brutally oppressed by the military junta for decades now.'

'By allowing Myanmar to sign without any redress of the Burmese peoples' sufferings, all the ASEAN nations will violate the tenets of the ASEAN Charter,' the activists belonging to the Free Burma Coalition said in its open letter.

They delivered the letter during a protest rally outside the Singapore Embassy in Manila. Singapore is the current chairman of the ASEAN.

The coalition noted that in its preamble, ASEAN declares that its member states adhere to the principles of democracy, the rule of law and good governance, respect for and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms.

'We therefore appeal to your excellencies to put into action the principles and commitments that the ASEAN members enshrine in the ASEAN Charter,' it said.

'Further, we urged the ASEAN to postpone the signing of the ASEAN Charter by the military junta until the political crisis in Burma is resolved in accordance with international human rights standards,' it added.

'Failing this, it must consider suspending Burma's membership from ASEAN if the (military junta) continues to ignore calls to find a lasting resolution to the crisis in Burma,' it added.

ASEAN members are Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar (Burma).

While the ASEAN Charter does not have provisions for punitive actions against members found to be violating principles and agreements, diplomats noted that the document allows leaders to discuss and agree among themselves on possible steps to take.