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COVER
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
FOREWORD
MUGIYANTO
CHAIRPERSON, AFAD
INTRODUCTION
MARY AILEEN DIEZ BACALSO
SECRETARY GENERAL, AFAD
COUNTRY SITUATION:
CHINA
INDIA (JAMMU AND KASHMIR)
INDONESIA
NEPAL
PAKISTAN
PHILIPPINES
SRI LANKA
THAILAND
MUNIR’S CASE
AFAD’S RESPONSE
FEDEFAM’S LETTER
STATISTICS ON ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCE IN ASIA:
CHINA
INDIA (JAMMU AND KASHMIR)
INDONESIA
NEPAL
PAKISTAN
PHILIPPINES
SRI LANKA
THAILAND
EPILOGUE
AFAD’S THEME SONG, DESAPARECIDOS
INDEX
BOOK WRITERS
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Reclaiming Stolen Lives
INTRODUCTION
By: Mary Aileen D. Bacalso
AFAD Secretary-General
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AFAD’s third book, Reclaiming Stolen Lives is a sincere
attempt to delve deeply into the scourge of enforced disappearances
in South and Southeast Asian countries and the uphill struggle of
the Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances (AFAD) to
continue treading the long and winding road in its
member-organizations’ collective journey towards a world without
desaparecidos. Linking arms with the Latin American Federation
of Associations of Relatives of Disappeared-Detainees (FEDEFAM)
and its other sisters and brothers in Africa and Europe who are
equally victimized by this malady, AFAD forges on amidst internal
and external threats. In the course of its journey, AFAD lost its
former Chairperson, Munir who was treacherously murdered by arsenic
poisoning on a Garuda flight from Jakarta to Amsterdam via Singapore
on 7 September 2004. The Federation also lost its woman human rights
defender in Kashmir, Aasia Jeelani who was killed by a landmine in
an election monitoring exercise in the north of Kashmir on 20 April
2004.
The articles in the book dare to look into each
country’s complex histories of colonization and neo-colonization and
their difficult transition to democracies, which up to this day,
remain fragile and in fact, are characterized by rampant
transgressions of basic human rights. The most despicable form of
these human rights violations is enforced or involuntary
disappearance. These countries’ historical backgrounds attempt to
portray both the common as well as distinct contexts of the dark
night of enforced disappearances in at least, a significant part of
the Asian continent – China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan,
Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand. Such contexts include horrors
of dictatorship coupled with internal conflicts and
counter-insurgency campaigns of governments as in the case of the
Philippines, Indonesia, Pakistan and Thailand; internal conflicts as
in Sri Lanka and Nepal and war against terrorism especially in the
case of Afghanistan and Pakistan, but this reality also exists in
the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand. In all these contexts,
national security is a common justification to disappear people.
What is worse is that the perpetrators, especially the
masterminds, enjoy complete impunity.
In what manner have enforced disappearances been
perpetrated and have continued to victimize innumerable people in
these countries principally by agents of the state and secondarily,
in some contexts, by non-state actors? The answer to this question
is elucidated in the book. A microcosm of the global phenomenon of
enforced disappearance, the situations in various countries
complemented with the long list of cases of desaparecidos,
albeit partial, already speaks volumes about the truth that enforced
disappearance is a major human rights problem in the Asian
continent. Despite the magnitude of the problem, redress is not
available for the victims and their families. The long list of
cases, if published, would surely consume more than four hundred
pages of the book, thus, instead of printing them, AFAD deems it fit
to instead put them in a compact disc and summarize them in graphs.
A summary in tabular and graphical forms is, however, printed to
provide a bird’s eye view of what is in the accompanying CD.
A crime so distinct from other crimes, enforced
disappearance needs to be codified as a distinct offense in the
penal code, yet in the vast continent of Asia, only the Philippines
and Nepal have drafted laws criminalizing enforced disappearances.
The fourteen-year old draft law in the Philippines has not yet seen
the light of day despite its being filed and re-filed in both Upper
and Lower Houses of Congress. The draft legislation in Nepal has yet
to prove that its substance indeed, responds to the real needs of
the victims. The rest of the countries in Asia, unlike many
countries of Latin America which have national laws criminalizing
enforced disappearances, have not even drafted national legislations
to criminalize enforced disappearances.
Asian countries are, therefore, bereft of
national legislations criminalizing enforced disappearances. Neither
national nor regional mechanisms of protection exist in the
continent. Thus, the immediate entry into force of the United
Nations Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced
or Involuntary Disappearances which was adopted without a vote on 20
December 2008 is all the more imperative especially for Asian
peoples. Significant to note is that this new international treaty
provides new rights – the right of the families of the victims to
know the truth and the right not to be subjected to enforced
disappearances.
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The United Nations Convention for the Protection
of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance with an independent
monitoring body for implementation was signed by fifty-four (54)
governments on 7 February 2007. To this date, only four (4) Asian
governments have signed. These include Azerbaijan, India, Japan, and
Mongolia. None of the countries cited in the articles of the book
have signed this international treaty now more than a year after the
historic signing. Seventy-four (74) governments have already signed
but none of the additional signatories stem from the Asian region.
So far, five (5) governments have ratified, namely: Albania,
Argentina, Mexico, Honduras and France. In a continent where the
international treaty is most needed, it is ironic that Asia has the
lowest turnout in terms of signatures and thus far, has no single
ratification.
The attitudes and positions of most of the
governments above mentioned visà- vis the international treaty are
presented in this publication. While China and India actively
participated in the negotiation process, they were part of those UN
member-states which insisted the inclusion of national security as
impediment to the right to truth and justice and objected to the
establishment of new rights. Indonesia was silent for a long time
during the negotiation process and at the latter part, its position
was ambivalent. However, it promised in a high level segment session
of the UN Human Rights Council that it would sign the Convention and
reiterated the same promise in other venues, but has done little to
fulfill the promise. The Philippines, which was often absent during
the drafting and negotiation process, said nothing because
accordingly, it was still studying the text and had no instructions
from the capital. It was only during the UN General Assembly level
when the text was already final that the Philippine government
mentioned that it wanted to include in the definition of enforced
disappearances those cases perpetrated by non-state actors.
However, at that advanced stage before the
Convention’s adoption, it was too late to change the text and the
Philippine government, after all, was well aware of the fact.
Afghanistan and Nepal, being non-members of the then UN Commission
on Human Rights, were absent and did not send observers even if they
could have done so.
Despite our incessant lobbying for Sri Lanka’s
presence, considering its former resolution in favor of the
establishment of the then United Nations Working Group to Elaborate
a Draft Legally-Binding Normative Instrument for the Protection of
All Persons From Enforced Disappearance, a representative from Sri
Lanka was present only during the last session in 2005 September,
but said nothing.
The living witnesses to the phenomenon of
enforced disappearances are the families of the disappeared. While
the desaparecidos are stripped of their most basic of rights,
their surviving families suffer from the pangs of psychological and
emotional trauma as a result of the disappearance of their loved
ones. Yet like the abuelas, madres y hermanos of Latin
America, there are exceptional families of victims in Asia who raise
fists and go beyond their state of victimization by transforming
themselves into human rights defenders.
- Ms. Ding Zilin, whom this writer personally
met in her home in Beijing some years ago, a symbol of the undying
love for her beloved son, continues to seek truth and justice not
only for her murdered son but also for countless other victims of
the gruesome 1989 massacre in the Square of Tiananmen, which
ironically means, in its literal sense, “Gates of Heavenly Peace.”
- Ms. Edita Burgos, mother of Jonas Burgos, a
Filipino desaparecido who was abducted by armed men more than a
year ago in the heart of Quezon City, is another symbol of a
mother who turns her grief into courage as she perseveres in
leaving no stone unturned to find her disappeared son by daring to
face the perpetrators of injustice and bringing her case and the
phenomenon of enforced disappearances to national and
international authorities.
- Ms. Angkhana Jeelaphaijit, wife of
disappeared lawyer, Somchai Neelaphaijit, in search for her
husband and in the fight for truth and justice, accompanies other
family members of the disappeared in Southern Thailand in bringing
their stories to the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or
Involuntary Disappearance (UNWGEID).
These three faces of courage may not be representative of the
thousands upon thousands of family members of the disappeared in
Asia. But their exemplary commitment to the cause of their loved
ones captivates the hearts of many other family members of the
victims and encourages them to imitate their good examples.The
fruits of their labor will, in a not-so-distant future, bring light
to the battered lives of victims and go a long way towards breaking
the cycle of impunity.
Mindful of the reality that majority of the
family members of the disappeared in Asia come from poor families
and who have not yet transcended the devastating effects of enforced
disappearance, AFAD has devised various levels of psycho-social
rehabilitation programs with the themes, to wit: “Healing Wounds,
Mending Scars” enacted at the regional and national levels; “From
Victims to Healers” and “Cycle of Healing” both carried at the
national levels. All these culminated with an internal summing-up of
the three year program entitled “Sharpening our Healing Capacities
Towards Empowerment.”
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As stated in the book, the psycho-social
rehabilitation program, which the families who have benefited from
truly appreciate, has to be complemented by local efforts using
local resources in the sense that many other families of the
desaparecidos cry out to be healed from the festering wound
caused by the crime of enforced disappearances. It goes without
saying that these efforts for inner individual and collective
healing should simultaneously go with the holistic endeavor to
search for the truth, to attain justice, redress, reparation and to
reconstruct the historical memory of the disappeared. After all,
individual healing is an integral part of social healing, enforced
disappearance being both an issue of the family and of the greater
society.
The articles on the various countries speak of
the families’ various ways of responding to their problem in an
organized way through their membership in their national
organizations which are affiliated with AFAD. For instance, as they
honor their disappeared during traditionally commemorated events,
they use these venues to express their sentiments and to air their
demands to their respective governments whose agents are the alleged
perpetrators of the crime committed against their disappeared loved
ones. Reporting cases to authorities and filing cases in court are
accomplished in some countries such as the Philippines, India,
Indonesia, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Thailand. However, breakthroughs
have still to be achieved in this regard.
In a nutshell, AFAD’s decade of journey towards a world without
desaparecidos is a significant part of the book. It is an
attempt to consolidate the gains of the Federation since its
founding on 4 June 1998. It also humbly presents its own internal
and external problems in its noble crusade to champion the cause of
the desaparecidos and their families so that never again will
this crime be repeated and that the generation of today and tomorrow
will savor the much-cherished dream for a world without
disappearances. The Federation indefatigably fights for the
realization of a world wherein no mother, no father, no son, no
daughter, no brother, no sister will ever ask the same nagging
question: “Where are you?” It is no easy journey and in the Asian
context when the issue of enforced disappearance does not yet enjoy
a strong public support, more often than not, it is a lonely
struggle. Many things, therefore, cry out for attention.
AFAD opts to march along this long road to truth,
justice, redress and the reconstruction of the desaparecidos’
historical memory. As the song, “Long Road to Freedom” goes, “if
you walk in love with the wind in your wings and cover the earth
with the songs you sing, the miles fly by.” Thus, a piano piece
on AFAD’s theme song, “Long Road to Freedom” is incorporated in the
book. Singing the song as the Federation walks along the less
trodden road to justice will facilitate a meaningful journey and
will, amidst stones, rocks and thorns that may bar the way, make
this struggle for a world without desaparecidos as
significant as its end in itself. As the music goes,
“We’ll keep fighting on
Till we find the truth
Till we find justice
Desaparecidos
We’ll keep fighting on
To honor your memory
To comfort your family
And we will be with you once again….”
The book ends with an epilogue from no less than the Honorable
Santiago Corcuera, the able Chair of the United Nations Working
Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances. Giving AFAD
encouragement to continue the journey, Honorable Corcuera
realistically points out the difficult situation in Asia vis-à-vis
enforced disappearances, the breakthrough of achieving the
international treaty and the fact that it has not yet been entered
into force. In view of this, Honorable Corcuera reiterates the
commitment of the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or
Involuntary Disappearances to fulfill its humanitarian mandate of
working on individual cases and call the attention of governments to
respond to cases and general allegations and thus, save lives.
Reclaiming Stolen Lives aims to portray
enforced disappearances perpetrated in the name of the state; the
evil brought about by this crime against humanity manifested in both
the stripping of the most basic of rights of the desaparecidos;
and the crime’s act of depriving the victims’ families and society
of women and men who potentially could have been socially productive
and added further contributions to the creation of a better society
and a better world.
This publication is, in itself, a call to all member-states of the
United Nations to immediately sign, ratify and implement the United
Nations Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced
or Involuntary Disappearance.
Finally, the Asian Federation Against Involuntary
Disappearances likewise calls on all peoples of the world to link
arms with the families of the desaparecidos and be one with
them in hoping, in dreaming, in struggling and in journeying towards
a world when the right not to be subjected to enforced
disappearances is fully respected.
Reclaiming Stolen Lives is AFAD’s precious
gift to the desaparecidos, their families and society – a
modest attempt to contribute to the gargantuan task of social
transformation. |
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