Chapter 1 Introduction
The inquiry
1.1
On 3 September 2008, the Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs, the
Hon. Stephen Smith MP, asked the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence
and Trade (the Committee) to inquire into and report on international and
regional mechanisms currently in place to prevent and redress human rights
violations, with a view to providing options on possible models that may be
suitable for the Asia-Pacific region. The United Nations human rights system,
regional mechanisms and roles for parliaments were to be particular foci for
the inquiry.
1.2
The Chair of the Committee’s Human Rights Sub-Committee, Ms Kerry Rea
MP, issued a media release announcing the commencement of the inquiry on 18
September 2008. The inquiry was subsequently advertised in The Australian
and promoted through various human rights networks. The Committee invited an
array of regional stakeholders, and groups and individuals with established
interest in human rights to submit to the inquiry, including relevant
Australian federal and state ministers and agencies, high commissions of
various nations in the region,[1] non-government
organisations and civil society groups in Australia and the region.
1.3
The Committee received 35 submissions and 19 exhibits from a range of
groups and individuals within Australia and the region. The Committee also took
evidence from 21 organisations and individuals at five public hearings held in
Canberra, Sydney and Melbourne over the course of the inquiry.[2]
The Asia-Pacific region
1.4
The Committee appreciates that the concept of the Asia-Pacific[3]
region is a politically constructed rather than geographically determined
entity. It understands that definitions of the region and constituent
sub-regions may sometimes vary depending on the parties involved and the
underlying purpose for which it is being examined.[4]
1.5
Figure
1.1 United
Nations operations in Asia and the Pacific[5]
1.6
In determining its regional focus, the Committee was guided by the
Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights’ sphere of operations in the
region, which consists of three subregions: the Pacific, South-East Asia, and
South and West Asia.[6] The United Nations
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific’s (ESCAP) division of
its operations into five subregions,[7] and the membership of the
Asia-Pacific Forum[8] (APF) were also
considered.
1.7
For the purposes of this inquiry, the areas considered were South East
Asia, South and South West Asia, and the Pacific.[9]
North and Central Asian states,[10] and most East and
North-East Asian states,[11] excluding China,[12]
were not considered by the Committee during the course of the inquiry. Also,
although Afghanistan, Iran and Jordan may be included in some groupings, they
were not considered for the purposes of this report.
1.8
Unlike other regions of the world, the Asia-Pacific region does not have
strong, broad-based regional human rights mechanisms for preventing and redressing
human rights violations.[13] This fact, coupled with
the Committee’s long-standing interest in human rights in the region,[14]
lends Asia and the Pacific as natural areas of focus for an inquiry into human
rights mechanisms.
1.9
This focus on the Asia-Pacific is consistent with the 1993 Vienna Declaration
and Programme of Action, which recognised that regional arrangements play a
fundamental role in promoting and protecting human rights, and emphasised ‘…the
need to consider the possibility of establishing regional and subregional
arrangements for the promotion and protection of human rights where they do not
already exist’.[15]
Structure of the report
1.10
The Committee’s report focuses around the inquiry terms of reference.
This introductory chapter outlined the inquiry scope and process and the
concept of the Asia-Pacific as a region. Chapter 2 discusses human rights
challenges facing the Asia-Pacific and includes a sampling of evidence received
by the Committee to indicate the range of human rights issues affecting the region.
Chapters 3 and 4 outline international, regional and national human rights
mechanisms currently in operation and their application in the Asia-Pacific
region. Chapter 5 is a discussion of possible future approaches for addressing
human rights concerns in the region, including considering the feasibility of a
regional human rights mechanism. Chapters 6 and 7 examine the roles that
Australia and parliaments, respectively, can play in enhancing the promotion
and protection of human rights in the region.