Chapter 4 Regional and national human rights mechanisms and the Asia-Pacific
Regional mechanisms
4.1
The Australian Human Rights Centre provided a useful definition of a
regional convention in the following terms:
A regional convention is an indication that fundamental
commonalities bind a group of states. Because of these commonalities, states
are prepared to subscribe to a joint articulation of human rights and are
prepared to be held accountable by a regional monitoring body for violations of
those rights.[1]
4.2
There is typically broad support for the idea of having a regional
mechanism in place to uphold the promotion and safeguarding of fundamental
human rights in a way that is appropriate to the distinctive conditions of a
given region. They are an important complement to international and national
human rights systems.
4.3
In essence, a regional mechanism is a forum for reviewing a human rights
situation and, when needed, putting pressure on its regional members to observe
the human rights standards that the region itself has determined as important.
Regional mechanisms may comprise an establishing charter, an executive body or
commission, and a form of judicial body or court.[2]
4.4
The Committee noted the comment from the RRRT that:
The UN encourages the establishment of regional human rights
mechanisms because the experience from other regions with such mechanisms is
that they are better able to take account of regional conditions and
peculiarities.[3]
4.5
The AHRC observed that:
Europe, the Americas and Africa have established regional
treaties stipulating key norms and setting up machinery or mechanisms which
range from regional human rights commissions to regional human rights courts.
The common feature of these regimes is that they review the human rights
situation in states within the region and apply pressure to achieve
accountability. They afford remedies in the absence of national remedies or
where the national mechanisms are inadequate or do not provide the necessary
redress.[4]
4.6
SCIL informed the Committee that regional frameworks can deliver the
following benefits:
- implementing
international human rights standards and enhancing their relevance and
legitimacy in the region;
- providing an
effective medium through which specific regional issues and concerns could be
cooperatively targeted and addressed;
- facilitating the
development of complementary human rights norms that are of regional concern
and filling the lacunae in the reach and influence of international human
rights institutions;
- helping to build
awareness of, respect for, and a continuing dialogue on human rights;
- providing support for
regional governments with less established national human rights mechanisms;
and
- strengthening the
independence and institutional capacity of national human rights institutions.[5]
4.7
Along similar lines, the HRLRC supported the development of regional
mechanisms for the following reasons:
- regional arrangements
allow for norms, institutions and processes to be designed to fit the
distinctive characteristics of the region and can provide specialised resources
and promote the development of valuable region-specific expertise;
- the localised
knowledge and legitimacy of such institutions means that regional mechanisms
are uniquely placed to identify and respond to human rights abuses;
- a regional mechanism
could support national engagement in the international human rights system by
providing resources and know-how that are currently not available to many Pacific Island countries due to financial constraints;
- if properly funded, a
regional human rights mechanism could facilitate human rights education
programs which are currently not financially viable; and
- regional mechanisms
provide a forum independent of government in which the implementation of human
rights objectives may be pursued in a transparent environment less susceptible
to political interference than national human rights bodies.[6]
4.8
However, it was also argued that there is an underlying tension between
being able to fully subscribe to universal human rights standards while also
addressing regional variations and concerns. Submitters stressed that
regionalism ‘must not be promoted in such a way as to undermine universalism’.[7]
4.9
This concern about the potential ‘watering down’ of human rights
standards to accommodate regional conditions have been, and will continue to
be, a thorny agenda item for discussions on regional (or sub regional)
mechanisms for the Asia-Pacific.
4.10
Prior to recent movements on the development of the ASEAN
Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights—the ASEAN human rights body—the
Asia-Pacific was the only region not covered by any regional human rights
mechanism.
Africa
4.11
The foundation document for the African human rights mechanism is the African
Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR). The ACHPR was adopted in June
1981, by the then Organisation of African Unity—which became the Africa Union
in 2001—and came into force on 21 October 1986. The preamble reaffirmed its
members’ commitment to:
…coordinate and intensify their cooperation and efforts to
achieve a better life for the peoples of Africa and to promote international
cooperation having due regard to the Charter of the United Nations and the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[8]
4.12
Each state party to the Charter must report, biennially, on the
legislative or other measures taken, with a view to giving effect to the rights
and freedoms recognised and guaranteed in the ACHPR. The Charter provided for
the establishment of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights to
promote human and peoples’ rights and ensure their protection in Africa. Its
major functions are the:
- protection of human
and peoples’ rights;
- promotion of human
and peoples’ rights; and
- interpretation of the
African Charter.[9]
The Asia-Pacific Forum noted that the
African Commission’s role also involves considering individual complaints of
violations of the Charter.[10]
4.13
A protocol under the African Charter makes provision for the
establishment of an African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights. The African
Commission will play a role in the preparation of cases for submission to the
Court. The APF observed that the court would be integrated with the African
Court of Justice:
The Court of Justice of the African Union is intended to be
the “principal judicial organ of the Union”, to take over the duties of the
African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, as well as act as the supreme
court of the African Union, interpreting all necessary laws and treaties. The
Protocol establishing the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights entered
into force in January 2004 but its merging with the Court of Justice has
delayed its establishment.[11]
4.14
In contrast to the European and inter-American human rights systems, whose
judicial bodies were more integral to their development, the African Court is a
belated development that is yet to commence operation.
4.15
Existing courts in the international system specifically to address
African matters are the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the Special
Court for Sierra Leone—a joint project of the United Nations and the Government
of Sierra Leone.
The Americas
4.16
The inter-American human rights system comprises its main instruments in
the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man (1948) and the American
Convention on Human Rights (1969), other supporting instruments,[12]
the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights.[13]
4.17
The inter-American human rights system coexists with the UN human rights
mechanisms. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), established
in 1959, is an autonomous organ of the Organisation of American States (OAS)
and is responsible for the promotion of the observance and defence of human rights
in the region. The following are the key features and functions of the IACHR:
- representing all 35
OAS members and seven members who act independently;
- a permanent body that
meets in ordinary and special sessions several times a year;
- investigating individual
petitions which allege human rights violations;
- observing the general
human rights situation in the member States and publishing special reports
regarding the situation in a specific State, when it considers it appropriate;
- recommending to the
member States of the OAS the adoption of measures which would contribute to
human rights protection; and
- submitting cases to
the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and appears before the Court in the
litigation of cases.[14]
4.18
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights, established in 1979, is made
up of jurists—elected and serving in an individual capacity—with recognised
expertise in human rights. The Court is responsible for:
…enforcing and interpreting the provisions of the American
Convention on Human Rights. It hears and rules on specific cases of human
rights violations referred to it and it issues opinions on matters of legal
interpretation brought to its attention by other OAS bodies or member states.[15]
Arab states
4.19
An attempt was made to put in place a human rights charter for the Arab
states with the adoption of a charter on 15 September 1994. However, no
states ratified that charter, which was criticised for failing to meet
international human rights standards.[16]
4.20
The original charter was revised and the current Arab Charter on
Human Rights was adopted by the Council of the League of Arab States[17]
on 22 May 2004, paving the way for a regional human rights mechanism for
the Arab states.[18] The Arab Charter came
into force in March 2008, with the states agreeing to ‘place human rights human
rights at the centre of the key national concerns of Arab States’ and to ‘entrench
the principle that all human rights are universal, indivisible, interdependent
and interrelated’.[19]
4.21
The APF observed that:
The revised Charter is a substantial improvement on the
original document, especially on issues such as state of emergency, fair trial,
slavery, sexual violence, disability and trafficking. Some provisions in the
new Charter, however, are still inconsistent with international human rights
law, e.g. provisions for death penalties for minors; right to life derogated in
states of emergency and no references to cruel, inhuman and degrading
punishment, although torture is prohibited.[20]
4.22
The Castan Centre similarly expressed concerns that too many of the
rights contained in the Arab Charter were ‘subject to lawful restrictions’,
thus creating the potential that a given right need not be observed as long as
legal provision was made to allow for this.[21]
4.23
The Arab Charter provides for the establishment of an Arab Human Rights
Committee that would:
- consist of seven
independent and impartial committee members of parties to the charter (elected
by secret ballot);
- consider the
triennial reports that member states are required to submit to the Council of
the League’s Secretary-General, on progress made in their state on giving
effect to the rights and freedoms in the Charter;
- submit an annual
report on its activities, with any comments and recommendations to the
Secretary-General; and
- be provided with all
the necessary financial and human resource and facilities that are required to
discharge its functions effectively.[22]
4.24
It is too early to tell what impact the Arab Charter will have on
improving human rights in the region. Since it came into force, the first Arab
Conference on Human Rights was held in Doha, Qatar in December 2008. Outcomes
of the conference included:
- encouraging all Arab
countries to ratify and comply with international human rights treaties, as
well as the Arab Charter on Human Rights;
- participants calling
for a regional human rights work plan
involving the Arab League, national governments and civil society organisations;
- urging Arab
governments to develop a supportive legal framework and to establish mechanisms
for improved protection of human rights, including an Arab Tribunal for Human
Rights; and
- recommending the
establishment of an Arab Fund, under the umbrella of the Arab League, to
promote human rights.[23]
Europe
4.25
The Council of Europe, founded in 1949, is an international organisation
working towards European integration. It works through convention and
international treaties to set the common legal and human rights standards and
the human rights code for its membership.[24]
4.26
The European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms (1950), the European Social Charter (1961)[25]
and the European Court of Human Rights form the foundation of the European
human rights system. Other instruments include European Convention for the
Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (1987)
and the Framework Convention on National Minorities (1995).
4.27
The European Court of Human Rights ‘supervises compliance with the
Convention and thus functions as the highest European court for human rights
and fundamental freedoms’. All Council of Europe member states have signed the
European Convention and so come under the Court’s jurisdiction.[26]
4.28
In its submission, the RRRT reproduced the United Nations Development
Program assessment that:
The European human rights system is by far the most developed
of the regional systems. Distinguished by its preference for judicial
approaches, it has gone the furthest in developing judicial processes. The
European system also enjoys the highest rate of state compliance with its
decisions.[27]
4.29
Another organisation addressing human rights issues at the regional
level in the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). The
OSCE is the largest regional security organisation in the world, working on
early warning, conflict prevention, crisis management and post-conflict
rehabilitation. It recognises that lasting security is not possible without
respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. OSCE institutions are,
therefore, active in human rights protection:
The OSCE monitors and reports on the human rights situation
in each of its 56 participating States, particularly in the areas of freedom of
assembly and association, the right to liberty and to a fair trial, and the use
of the death penalty. It provides training and education across the field of
human rights, including for government officials, law-enforcement officers,
rights defenders and students.[28]
The Asia-Pacific
4.30
In its submission to the Committee, the APF observed that:
Unlike Europe, the Americas and Africa, the Asia-Pacific does
not have a regional inter-governmental human rights mechanism. Perhaps
reflecting its immense size and diversity, neither [do] Asia and the Pacific
have a pan-regional inter-governmental human rights machinery which parallels
those established in other regions of the world.[29]
Association of Southeast Asian Nations
4.31
Until recently, the Asian and Pacific regions did not have any formal
regional human rights mechanism. However, ASEAN now has a subregional human
rights body covering its member countries.
4.32
ASEAN was established in 1967 to: accelerate economic growth, social
progress and cultural development in the region; and to promote regional peace
and stability through abiding respect for justice and the rule of law in the
relationship among countries in the region and adherence to the principles of
the United Nations Charter. Its original membership—Indonesia,
Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand—has since expanded to include
Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, the People’s Democratic Republic of Laos, Myanmar
and Vietnam.[30]
4.33
On 20 July 2009, the terms of reference for an ASEAN human rights body
were adopted at the 42nd ASEAN Ministerial Meeting of Foreign
Ministers. It was agreed that the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human
Rights (AICHR) would be formed. The formal establishment of the Commission took
place at the 15th ASEAN Summit in Phuket, Thailand in October 2009.[31]
4.34
The AICHR will cover the ASEAN countries and it is anticipated that
progress by the body on human rights issues will be incremental.[32]
Its terms of reference outlines AICHR’s purpose:
- to promote and
protect human rights and fundamental freedoms of the peoples of ASEAN;
- to uphold the right
of the peoples of ASEAN to live in peace, dignity and prosperity;
- to contribute to the
realisation of the purposes of ASEAN as set out in the ASEAN Charter in order
to promote stability and harmony in the region, friendship and cooperation
among ASEAN Member States, as well as the well-being, livelihood, welfare and
participation of ASEAN peoples in the ASEAN Community building process;
- to promote human
rights within the regional context, bearing in mind national and regional
particularities and mutual respect for different historical, cultural and
religious backgrounds, and taking into account the balance between rights and
responsibilities;
- to enhance regional
cooperation with a view to complementing national and international efforts on
the promotion and protection of human rights; and
- to uphold
international human rights standards as prescribed by the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, and
international human rights instruments to which ASEAN Member States are
parties.[33]
4.35
Some are optimistic about having an ASEAN human rights body. For
example, the APF noted that in her address at the 2007 Annual Workshop for
Asia-Pacific regional cooperation on human rights, Ms Louise Arbour, the then
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, commented:
I believe than an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism can articulate
a common approach to a complex problem, an approach that will assist ASEAN
Member States, from a position of shared regional values, to address
shortcomings in their national frameworks…Finally, I believe that an ASEAN
human rights mechanism will serve as the inspiration and model for further
progress within the other sub-regions of this broad and diverse Asia-Pacific
region.[34]
4.36
However, concern remains about the perceived limitations of the AICHR’s
mandate. During the development process, concerns were expressed about the
limited scope of the mandate,[35] and that ASEAN countries
would continue to observe the tradition of non-interference in members’
domestic affairs, thus limiting the effectiveness of monitoring functions.[36]
4.37
In welcoming remarks at the 8th Workshop on the ASEAN
Regional Mechanism on Human Rights in July 2009, comments by the Chairperson of
the Malaysian Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism, Data Param
Cumaraswamy, appeared to confirm that the body’s terms of reference would not
meet many interest groups’ expectations. He stated:
At this juncture, it is really no secret that civil society,
the Working Group included, and even some governments perhaps, would have
preferred a much stronger, a much more balanced, human rights body than what
the imminent one will most likely be. We would have preferred a [Terms of Reference]
document more legal than political in nature.[37]>
4.38
The National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) of Indonesia, Malaysia,
the Philippines and Thailand (the ASEAN NHRI forum) prepared a joint position
paper—following formal discussions in Jakarta on 27 August 2009—on the new
AIHRC. The ASEAN NHRI forum congratulated ASEAN on the adoption of the terms of
reference for the AIHRC and acknowledged the significance of this step, but
also drew attention to what it identified as deficiencies in the AIHRC mandate,
including: its lack of independence, its protection power severely
circumscribed by the terms of reference, and its promotional functions
dependent on the political will of member states. They suggested that the AICHR
should establish a process for regular engagement with the region’s NHRIs, and
that AICHR should be supported by a separate, permanent and professional
secretariat.[38]
Background on the development of an ASEAN
human rights body
4.39
In November 2007, the ASEAN Charter was signed by the 10 ASEAN nations.
Article 14 of the Charter provided for the establishment of an ASEAN human
rights body (AHRB) ‘in conformity with the purposes
and principles of the ASEAN Charter [in] relation to the promotion and
protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms’.[39]
4.40
FORUM-ASIA noted that the ASEAN Charter
contained a number of references to human rights:
- ASEAN will “[adhere]
to the principles of democracy, the rule of law and good governance, respect
for and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms.”(Preamble)
- The purpose of ASEAN
is “to strengthen democracy enhance good governance and the rule of law, and to
promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms, with due regard to
the rights and responsibilities of the Member States of ASEAN.”(Purpose)
- ASEAN and its member
state shall act in accordance with the “respect for fundamental freedoms, the
promotion and protection of human rights, and the promotion of social justice.”
(Principles)[40]
4.41
The ASEAN Eminent Persons Group was set up to make practical
recommendations on the creation of a human rights charter. At the outset, it
commented that ‘the establishment of an ASEAN human rights mechanism is a
worthy idea that should be pursued’.[41]
4.42
During the development process the likely effectiveness of the emerging
human rights body was questioned. Illustrative of this concern is the academic
paper which queried whether the mechanism would have a ‘tongue but no teeth’.[42]
4.43
FORUM-ASIA felt that the development of an AHRB could be an important
human rights milestone for the region. However, in its submission, FORUM-ASIA
highlighted a number of its concerns coming out of its engagement with the
process for the creation of the body:
- Although the ASEAN
Charter recognises the importance of human rights in its Preamble and the
Principles, there is however no specific mention of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights. It is therefore of utmost importance to ensure that the Term
of Reference (TOR) of the AHRB will specifically recognise the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and international human rights laws as a source of
guidance for its mandate and work on human rights.
- The TOR must take long term vision into account to include ensuring that the TOR is not drafted in
finite terms that would obstruct its development in the future. We believe that
the TOR should set out the plan or road map, commensurate with benchmarks for
its development. Once the benchmarks are met, the gradual improvement of ASEAN
human rights mechanism and system may be undertaken. Nevertheless, AHRB should
start from their commitment which was made in 1993 on human rights.
- Ultimately, AHRB
should develop a comprehensive human rights treaty or treaties reflecting the
international human rights laws and standards. However, there had been a
resistance stand point from civil society groups during the 2nd Regional
Consultation on ASEAN and human rights in Jakarta from 4-7 August 2008 on
having [an] ASEAN human rights convention. There is a fear that the ASEAN will
compromise the international human rights standards with the so called “Asian
values”, and ASEAN principles of non-interference.[43]
- The ongoing process
of establishing the ASEAN Commission on the promotion and protection for the
rights of women and children (ACWC) should finally [be] subsumed within the AHRB
to mainstream women’s rights and children’s rights in the main human rights
organ of ASEAN. We also believe that AHRB shall be open for the creation of
other sub-commissions, including sub-commission on migrant workers, indigenous
peoples, ethnic minorities, people with disability and others.[44]
4.44
The draft AHRB terms of reference emerged from the 8th
Workshop on the ASEAN Regional Mechanism on Human Rights in July 2009. The
summary of proceedings also contained a number of conclusions. In particular,
the Committee noted the following:
- The Workshop
recognizes that while member-states of ASEAN still have diverse records on
human rights, it is encouraging that ASEAN itself, as a rules-based regional
organization, has increasingly paid attention to human rights.
- The Workshop
recognizes that a main challenge for ASEAN is to develop from an
inter-executive association into an inter-peoples and people-oriented
organization.
- The Workshop
envisages a regional system on human rights which is progressively capable of
effectively promoting and protecting human rights.
- The Workshop
encourages civil society to continue to engage the AHRB and other ASEAN organs,
and to make its opinions count in shaping the human rights architecture of
ASEAN.
- The Workshop notes
that while there appears to be an imbalance between the promotion and
protection functions of the AHRB, there are openings in the ToR which can be
taken advantage of, and forward-looking strategies may be adopted to advance
human rights in the region.
- The Workshop
reiterates that the AHRB has to be seen in the context of the ASEAN Charter.
Although the AHRB is the main venue for asserting human rights, stakeholders
should make use of all other platforms within ASEAN for the purpose of human
rights promotion and protection.[45]
4.45
Also coming out of the workshop was the recognition that:
…the AHRB will depend not only on a preset roadmap, but also
on how ASEAN will evolve as a community.[46]
De facto mechanisms
4.46
The new ASEAN human rights mechanism aside, the rest of the region still
remains uncovered by any formal regional human rights mechanism. There are,
however, what could be described as ‘de facto’ mechanisms currently operating
at the regional and subregional levels.[47]
The Commonwealth
4.47
The Commonwealth is a collection of 53 countries that have joined
together to work cooperatively towards democratic and development goals. Its
membership comprises some of the world’s richest and poorest countries, and
includes some Asian and South Pacific nations.[48]
4.48
Promoting human rights is an important part of the Commonwealth’s
mandate. In particular, it is tackling human rights issues through the
Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative (CHRI). The CHRI, formed in 1987, is:
…an independent, non-partisan, international non-governmental
organisation, mandated to ensure the practical realisation of human rights in
Commonwealth countries. The CHRI’s mandate is to promote awareness of and
adherence to the Harare Principles, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
and other internationally recognised human rights instruments and declarations
made by the Commonwealth Heads of Government as well as domestic instruments
supporting human rights in the Commonwealth.[49]
4.49
The CHRI works towards the practical realisation of human rights in the
Commonwealth. In the Pacific, for example, the CHRI has been working to deepen
and build its presence in the region, leading to the strengthening of its involvement
and influence with governments, media, non-government organisations and civil
society groups on human rights issues.[50] The CHRI’s major program
areas are the right to information, constitutions, and police and prison
reforms.[51]
4.50
RegNet made the point that:
In working with governments on the ground [the CHRI] have
managed to achieve quite a lot that the UN has found difficult and indeed, on a
bilateral basis, it has been quite difficult to achieve.[52]
4.51
The Commonwealth also provides practical assistance to the region
through the Commonwealth Joint Office.[53] The Joint Office in New
York assists small nations, including Nauru, Samoa, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu,
to participate in United Nations discussions by providing the office as a base
for small nations to operate, when having permanent missions would be
prohibitive.[54]
Asia-Pacific Forum of National Human Rights Institutions
4.52
The APF is seen by many as a de facto mechanism, or at the least the
closest thing to a human rights mechanism, covering the Asia-Pacific region.
NHRIs, since 2006, have had formal rights to participate directly in the work
of the UN Human Rights Council and its subsidiary mechanisms (see figure 3.2).[55]
4.53
The Asia-Pacific Forum, established in 1996, is a member-based
organisation that supports the establishment and strengthening of national
human rights institutions in the region. The APF’s primary functions are:
- Strengthening the
capacity of individual APF member institutions to enable them to more
effectively undertake their national mandates.
- Assisting governments
and non-government organisations to establish NHRIs in compliance with the
Paris Principles.
- Promoting regional
cooperation on human rights issues.[56]
Table 4.1 Membership
of the Asia-Pacific Forum
Full Members
|
Full Members
|
Associate Members [57]
|
Candidate Members
|
Afghanistan
|
New Zealand
|
Maldives
|
––
|
Australia
|
Palestinian (Independent
Commission for Human Rights)
|
Sri Lanka
|
|
India
|
Philippines
|
|
|
Indonesia
|
Qatar
|
|
|
Jordan
|
Republic of Korea
|
|
|
Malaysia
|
Thailand
|
|
|
Mongolia
|
Timor Leste
|
|
|
Nepal
|
|
|
|
Source APF
website[58]
4.54
As listed in Table 4.1, there are currently 15 Paris Principles
compliant NHRIs that are members of the APF. Australia and New Zealand both
have accredited NHRIs. Other regional members falling within the scope of this
inquiry include Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Sri Lanka,
Thailand and Timor-Leste. However, with the troubled case of the Fiji Human
Rights Commission losing its compliance with Paris Principles, there are
currently no accredited NHRIs in the Pacific.[59] The APF also anticipate
being joined by Bahrain, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea and Samoa, who
have all made a commitment to establish an NHRI.[60]
4.55
The APF is funded through a diversified base of donors, including UN
agencies, governments, foundations, NGOs, individuals, and from membership
fees. The Australian Government provides the APF with approximately 30 per cent
of its funding. The Committee noted the APF’s advice that:
The Australian Government has supported the work of the APF,
both financially with the provision of regular financial support through AusAID
and politically through Government statements in a variety of international
fora, since its establishment in 1996.[61]
4.56
According to APF, it:
...advances human rights in the Asia-Pacific through its
member institutions and, by facilitating the formation and growth of NHRIs
through the provision of training, networking and resource sharing, plays a key
role in developing regional and sub-regional human rights dialogues, networks
and practical programmes of support…Its work
also includes the development of jurisprudence for the Asia-Pacific
through the APF’s Advisory Council of Jurists.[62]
4.57
It further commented that:
In the absence of a formal inter-governmental Asia-Pacific
regional human rights mechanism, the APF, through its member NHRIs, is uniquely
positioned to directly influence the development of human rights law and
practice in the Asia-Pacific.[63]
4.58
A number of submitters agreed that the APF is the closest thing that
Asia and the Pacific had to a wider regional rights body. The Castan Centre
observed that:
The APF is effectively operating as a surrogate ‘regional
body’, in the absence of a more formal regional system. It is of course a very
different ‘body’ to those that operate in more formal systems, such as the
American or European Court of Human Rights. It operates in a more informal,
grassroots manner. It also covers an idiosyncratic ‘Asia-Pacific’ area,
including for example Afghanistan whilst currently excluding all Pacific
islands. However, the formation of a mechanism on the basis of Paris-compliant NHRIs
rather than strict geographic concerns is not illogical.[64]
4.59
The APF informed the Committee that it ‘already functions, in an
informal sense, as the sole existing pan Asia-Pacific human rights mechanism’,
and is the only existing regional human rights body which includes an Asia-Pacific
membership.[65]
4.60
However, the Commission cautioned that while the APF was the only
existing regional human rights body with Asia-Pacific membership, ‘…it is
important to recognise that the APF is not a formal intergovernmental body like
the regional human rights bodies in Europe, the Americas and Africa’.[66]
4.61
The Castan Centre commented that:
…at the moment [the Asia-Pacific Forum] is very much an
informal network of national human rights institutions. They are doing very
good work in terms of engagement and fact-finding in investigation, and they
are engaging in some very interesting research projects, but they do not really
go any further than that. They are not an enforcement body. They are an
advocacy body to some extent, but it is very much a federation of national
institutions, and the national institutions themselves have very different
mandates from one country to another. So it is extremely loose, and it is an
extremely good start, but it is a long way short of the version that they have
under the Council of Europe or something of that sort.[67]
4.62
The AHRC is currently conducting a three-year study (2008-2010) into the
work of the Asia-Pacific Forum, examining its impact on the capacity of NHRIs.
Based on its research, the AHRC saw the Asia-Pacific NHRIs network as having
made human rights contributions in the region through:
- increasing domestic
civil society awareness and understanding of human rights via educational and
training initiatives;
- increasing the
investigation and reporting of complaints of human rights abuses, affording
them visibility and the potential for regional and/or international
condemnation;
- the development of
innovative forms or models of redress appropriate to specific societal or state
needs;
- assisting in the
implementation of government policies, laws and programs consistent with
international human rights treaties;
- the development of
regional NHRI, or national human rights institution, networks, which facilitate
important transnational collaboration on issues of human rights concern—for
example, trafficking and migrant workers; and
- the incremental
dissemination of human rights principles and standards into domestic
jurisdictions where state governments might have otherwise resisted their
reception if instigated by other sources, for example, a United Nations
resolution.[68]
4.63
The APF advised that it:
…is currently collaborating with the regional office of the
UN Development Program (UNDP) to develop and trial a capacity needs assessment
project to support NHRIs in the Asia-Pacific. The project aims to develop an
approach that will see NHRIs and UNDP country teams undertake their own needs
assessments and then share their ideas in order to identify achievable and
sustainable steps to build the capacity of NHRIs. This joint project with the
UNDP is seen as an important initiative that will provide a more solid basis
for international support for NHRIs and for the institutions themselves to
develop and work more effectively.[69]
4.64
The APF indicated that:
…[it] will continue, within available capacity, to respond to
requests for assistance and support from a variety of regional stakeholders as
Pacific States lead and shape the issues and considerations which must be taken
into account in the continuing debate around national and regional mechanisms.
As with options for national human rights mechanisms, regional mechanisms can
take a variety of forms.[70]
Pacific Islands Forum
4.65
The PIF, originally founded in 1971 as the South Pacific Forum, is a
regional economic and political intergovernmental organisation for the Pacific.
It is the focal point for cooperation on regional issues. Its membership
includes Australia, the Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji,
Kiribati, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Republic of
Marshall Islands, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.
4.66
An Eminent Persons Group was appointed by PIF Leaders in 2003. They
developed a vision—adopted by PIF the following year—for:
…a region of peace, harmony, security and economic
prosperity...respected for the quality of its governance, the sustainable
management of its resources, the full observance of democratic values and for
its defence and promotion of human rights.[71]
4.67
The Pacific Plan, subsequently endorsed by the PIF leaders in 2005, and
revised in 2007, was to give effect to this vision. It identified 15 strategic
objectives to achieve the goals of economic growth, sustainable development,
good governance, and security. It included a call for the strengthening of
human rights mechanisms within the region. Some direct efforts have been made
on fostering dialogue on this issue in the region. For example, a symposium
entitled ‘Strategies for the Future: Protecting Human Rights in the Pacific’
was held in April 2008:
One key outcome of this was the garnering of support for the
establishment of a Working Group to carry out further work on the development
of a Pacific human rights charter and mechanism, within the scope of the
Pacific Plan.[72]
4.68
The Commission noted that the PIF secretariat and the APF have been
working:
…towards establishing the position of a human rights adviser
within the PIF structure. According to the APF, this new role
will provide the PIF with much-needed human rights capacity and capability
which will benefit member States across the Pacific region.[73]
4.69
The Australia-West Papua Association (Sydney) suggested that:
As a PIF member Australia should be
supporting the Forum financially to set up a mechanism to
improve the human rights situation in the Pacific region.[74]
Pacific Regional Rights Resource Team
4.70
The RRRT is guided by the Pacific Leaders’ vision and the Pacific Plan,
and strongly advocates for the establishment of a Pacific regional rights
mechanism. It provides human rights training, technical support, and policy and
advocacy services tailored specifically for the Pacific region; filling the gap
when nations and NGO lack capacity in these areas.[75]
It works primarily in the Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Samoa, Solomon Islands,
Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.[76]
4.71
It was originally established in 1995 as a United Kingdom Department of
International Development project for women’s legal literacy, but has since
expanded to more general human rights work, and moved under the umbrella of the
Secretariat of the Pacific Community in 2008. Its core support comes from New
Zealand’s International Aid and Development Agency (NZAID) and the Australian
Agency for International Development (AusAID).
4.72
The RRRT described itself as:
…a regional indigenous human rights body, with a dedicated
focus on the broad range of civil, political, economic, social and cultural
rights, and covers many of the functions of a regional human rights mechanism.
However, it does not monitor individual violations of rights nor receive and
investigate complaints.[77]
4.73
The RRRT commented that:
…[it] works with Members of Parliament, judges, magistrates,
senior decision makers in government, institutions, civil society groups and
NGOs. Evaluators of the RRRT project say that RRRT uses a unique combination of
persuasive and challenging techniques, and avoids the traditional ‘naming,
blaming and shaming’ methods favoured by most human rights organizations,
leading to innovative and successful partnerships with both Governments and
NGOs.[78]
Other organisations
4.74
There are also other organisations whose work influence human rights
concerns in the Asia-Pacific region, including multilateral organisations, non
government organisations (NGOs), churches, trade unions and civil society
groups.
4.75
The Australian Bahá’í Community asserted that:
NGO capacity is an important consideration in considering
human rights mechanisms in the Asia-Pacific region.[79]
4.76
The HRLRC agreed that:
NGOs are in a position to witness and advocate for victims of
abuses and are also best placed to discern where changes need to be made. If
adequately resourced, NGOs can also provide training, convene fora and organise
other activities designed to promote a continuing dialogue and developments
around human rights.[80]
4.77
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, in its Human Rights Manual,
stated:
Concern for human rights and fundamental freedoms is not the
reserved domain of States…Given their independence, commitment and diversity,
NGOs play a legitimate, well-established and respected role both domestically
and internationally in the promotion and protection of human rights…The work of
the Australian Government in the human rights field is reinforced by the
ongoing relationship which exists between the government and human rights NGOs.
While the views and methodologies of NGOs do not always coincide with those of
Government, the input which NGOs bring to the domestic and international human
rights debate is both legitimate and an important source of positive dialogue.[81]
4.78
The Australian Bahá’í Community commented that:
It should also be noted that with very limited resources,
human rights NGOs, particularly those working on women’s rights, have
effectively operated at a regional level in the Asia-Pacific. Two prominent
examples are Asia-Pacific Women’s Watch and the Asia-Pacific Forum on Women,
Law and Development. Increased support for these regional networks of NGOs
would enable them to play a greater role.[82]
4.79
The HRLRC noted that NGOs have played an increasingly important role
within the UN human rights system, for example through the preparation of
shadow reports for treaty bodies, and promoting dialogue between states and
independent human rights experts.[83]
4.80
The Australian Bahá’í Community suggested that:
The positive contribution of NGOs applies equally at
national, regional and international levels. Additional measures to assist NGOs
throughout the Asia-Pacific region to develop their strength and competence,
such as training, funding and other forms of capacity building, should be
considered in the context of this inquiry.[84]
4.81
HRLRC reproduced and endorsed recommendations of the 1998 report, by the
Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade, Improving
But…Australia’s Regional Dialogue on Human Rights, including:[85]
Recommendation 6:
The Australian Government should conduct an audit of NGOs
doing human rights work in the Pacific and implement policies that strengthen
and support these organisations. This may involve, among other things, building
on existing programs such as AusAID’s Human Rights Fund and the Human Rights
Small Grants Scheme. Government policies aimed at promoting human rights in the
region should be developed and implemented in partnership with these
organisations.[86]
4.82
However, just as with the smaller nations themselves, NGOs also face the
challenge of limited funding. UNIFEM informed that Committee that it was
working to help address this issue by:
…trying to assist them to gain funding, UNIFEM has set up
what is called the Pacific Facility Fund. That helps NGOs to get their
governance requirements to a level where they can apply for and successfully
administer grant funding. You all know that DFAT has a human rights grants
program at a very small level; even those very small grants entail quite a heavy
load of administration and accounting for money spent and quite a level of
bureaucracy. UNIFEM is trying to make sure that Pacific NGOs have the capacity
to deal with those sorts of governance requirements.[87]
4.83
The Uniting Church informed the Committee that:
Regionally there is the Christian Conference of Asia. It has
a very strong focus on human rights and on gender empowerment. It is
particularly looking at discrimination against women across the region and how
churches both contribute to and can be a part of dealing with those issues. It
also has a focus on environmental issues. As churches, we are active
participants within that regional forum, the Christian Conference of Asia.[88]
4.84
UNIFEM also noted that:
A lot of the mechanisms in the Pacific, in particular at the
civil society level, are arranged around the churches; so the Pacific Council
of Churches is a very important organisation. But it is extremely difficult in
the Pacific to engage across all the islands and across all the groupings—from
Melanesia, Polynesia and Micronesia—in an effective manner, so that is the
challenge.[89]
4.85
In his experience of the region, the Uniting Church representative
observed that:
In the communities where the church has been strong
traditionally, there is a strong yearning for that continuing relationship, but
there is a real sense of reluctance in the broader community about the work of
the church there. It is seen to be the West having influence there, and we have
to be constantly aware of that.
Having said that, when you look at the church in the Pacific
and in Asia, in terms of numbers and the direction in which the church is
growing, it is becoming an Asian and a Pacific church. To a certain extent, we
have a degree of decline here in Australia. Look at bodies like the Christian
Conference of Asia and Pacific Conference of Churches: it is the Asian and the
Pacific churches, particularly the Asian and the African churches, that are now
dominating the world scene.[90]
4.86
Amnesty commented that:
…there has been a proliferation of NGOs, particularly in the
more democratic South-East Asian countries. That is evidence of a developing
human rights culture and also, just generally, a culture of a stronger civil
society.[91]
4.87
Amnesty emphasised that any mechanism that may emerge in the region
should be in cooperation with civil society.[92]
The NCYLC, similarly, recognised the importance of civil society groups and
recommended that:
By ensuring programmes and initiatives include and are
increasingly run by civil society (rather than exclusively by governments and
development agencies) the benefits are entrenched and civil society is given
legitimacy and made more sustainable.[93]
4.88
Trade unions also have the potential to impact on human rights in the
region, particularly in the area of workers’ rights. The Australian Council of
Trade Unions (ACTU) informed the Committee that it:
…has had long experience in relations with trade unions in
countries across the Asia-Pacific and has been involved in various regional and
subregional human rights fora. Obviously, taking up the fundamental rights of
workers and of trade unions is something that we see as an act of solidarity
with colleagues in Asia-Pacific countries, and many of them appreciate the work
of unions in countries like Australia, where perhaps labour laws or, indeed,
the parliamentary system is more open to considering human rights concerns. For
us, certainly regional cooperation across the trade union spectrum is
important, but to also see those issues raised seriously as a part of
government policy is very important.[94]
4.89
In its evidence, the ACTU advised that trade unions had contributed to
the development of the ASEAN Social Charter.[95] The ACTU is also
involved in addressing wider human rights issues through Union Aid Aboard - Australian
People for Health, Education and Development Abroad (APHEDA), which was created
in 1984 as the ACTU’s overseas aid agency. The ACTU indicated that APHEDA was
also doing work on HIV education:
In many countries in the Pacific the cultural and, indeed,
social awareness around HIV is limited or based on traditional concepts of
transmission of HIV, so that has provided specific challenges, but in Papua New
Guinea, for example, where it is a huge issue—and in a number of other
countries where it is seen as an emerging issue—the ACTU, through its overseas
aid and development agency, Union Aid Abroad-APHEDA, has been involved in
workplace based education programs for many years.[96]
4.90
When discussing the work of the International Labour Organisation, the
ACTU contended that while the focus is:
…specifically about labour law and improvement of labour law
or working conditions in those countries. But as a fundamental human rights
issue, we see the capacity of the ILO’s work across the region as a very clear
mechanism to promote fundamental workers’ rights. Indeed, to have the kind of
social dialogue where non-government actors including trade unions can have
input to the members of parliament and to government institutions and
structures is something that we should not take for granted in the region. To
ensure both the capacity of those organisations to address human rights issues
as a structure but also to fund and resource those kinds of consultations is
something that we would encourage, and encourage the Australian government to
think about, in the relations with those countries at a government to
government level.[97]
4.91
The ACTU also highlighted the value of the NGO sector:
…for raising concerns that might not otherwise be understood
in government circles or not necessarily engaged with at a
government-to-government level. Through the ACTU, we engage in many NGO
consultations, domestically and internationally. We do liaise with the Asia-Pacific
Forum of Human Rights Institutions. We do not have a formal role, but we, and
indeed other unions in the region, have input into those discussions.[98]
National mechanisms
4.92
It is also important to have mechanisms for human rights to be upheld
and issues addressed at the national level. The APF commented that:
It is the national framework/system for the promotion and
protection of human rights which most interrelates, and is accessible to,
individuals. The system consists of a variety of mechanisms. The more formal
machinery or mechanisms include the judicial system, parliamentary committees,
national human rights institutions and/or ombudspersons. The non-formal actors
include members of civil society, such as NGOs, active media and concerned
individuals. Generally, they act as checks-and-balances to ensure equilibrium
in the use of State power and to advocate and/or provide redress where there
are grievances in relation to the implementation of human rights. Their roles
vary in scope and content – and the quality of their impact varies according to
the context in which they live.[99]
4.93
The UN consider the key features of human rights protection at the
national level to be:
- Democracy: democratic
institutions and processes that enable participation;
- The rule of law:
including the incorporation of international human rights standards in the
national constitution and laws;
- An independent and
corruption-free judiciary that applies international human rights standards and
jurisprudence;
- Good governance: effective
structures of government at central, regional and local levels that recognise,
respect and apply human rights standards;
- Specialised human
rights institutions and formal procedures for accountability;
- Human rights
information and education;
- An active civil
society: i.e. citizens that engage, organise and participate; [and]
- A focus on the most
vulnerable parts of the population.[100]
Constitutional protections
4.94
One avenue for human rights protection at the national level is to have
human rights and fundamental freedoms enshrined in a constitution. However,
evidence to the Committee suggests that constitutional provisions for human
rights protection are not necessary reflected in the day-to-day reality of
nation states.
4.95
Many Pacific nations already have some human rights reflected in their
constitutions or legal frameworks. However, the HRLRC questioned the
effectiveness of existing provisions:
When I have been speaking to people, I have heard that these
legal frameworks, like the human rights within constitutions and national laws,
are not necessarily helpful for a lot of people within the Pacific who do not
access the centralised government based legal systems. Instead, they solve most
of their day-to-day issues and problems under the customary laws or via the
chieftains within the villages.[101]
4.96
The HRLRC further commented that:
…high-level legal frameworks might not be the best way to
promote human rights in these societies. It suggests to me that it has to be
something that is more around, or at least supplemented by, very strong
education programs and those sorts of things.[102]
4.97
The Commission observed that most of the Pacific constitutions only
guaranteed civil and political rights and did not address economic, social and
cultural rights.[103]
4.98
In particular, the Fijian Constitution includes ‘recognition of the
human rights and fundamental freedoms of all individuals and groups,
safeguarded by adherence to the rule of law, and our respect for human dignity’
and section 42 provides for the establishment of Fiji’s Human Rights
Commission.[104]
4.99
However, given the current state of affairs in Fiji, this is a clear
example that constitutional provisions offer no guarantees that democratic
principles and human rights standards will be adhered to. In April 2009, the
Fijian President suspended the Constitution of Fiji, dismissed all judges and
constitutional appointees and assumed governance of the country.[105]
A new reformed constitution is anticipated in 2013 and an election is not
expected until 2014.
4.100
The Vietnam Committee on Human Rights raised the case of Vietnam. While
the Constitution ‘formally guarantees human rights such as freedom of
expression, religion, assembly and association’, in practice the exercise of
these freedoms are restricted by conditioning them on compliance with state
policies and interests:
Article 70 states that “All citizens shall enjoy freedom of
belief and religion”, but that “no-one can misuse beliefs and religions to
contravene the laws and State policies”. Since State policies are established
and enforced by the one-Party State which has extensive control over the
executive, legislative and judiciary powers, these provisions gravely limit the
scope and exercise of human rights.[106]
Ombudsman offices
4.101
The primary focus of an Ombudsman’s office is to investigate cases of
administrative misconduct; addressing individual grievances and working to
improve administrative practice. However, concerns about the difficulties of
establishing national human rights commissions, have prompted the suggestion
that the role of other domestic bodes, such as Ombudsman offices, could be
enhanced to take on a great role in promoting and protecting human rights at
the national level.[107]
4.102
In their submission to the Committee, some Pacific NGOs were adamant
that Ombudsman offices:
…are not expected nor equipped to perform the broader roles
envisaged for a human rights commission, such as public education about human
rights, assisting courts or parties in litigation involving human rights
issues, or assisting governments with their reporting or implementation
obligations under human rights Conventions.[108]
4.103
In particular, Amnesty disagreed with including human rights commission
functions within the Pacific Ombudsman Network:
…because we see the Ombudsman as playing quite a different
function to a Human Rights Commission. There is no reason that the two
functions could not be co-located to provide resource savings, but we think
there are serious issues with trying to merge the two functions.[109]
4.104
So while they perform functions contributing to the protection of human
rights, Ombudsman offices may not be ideal substitutes for human rights
institutions at the national level.
National Human Rights Institutions
4.105
NHRIs are bodies that have been established by a State—either by
legislation or constitutional provision—with a specific mandate to promote and
protect human rights. National human rights systems complement regional and
international systems.
4.106
The Paris Principles set out the minimum standards that an NHRI must
meet in order to be effective in its role. They came out of the first NHRIs
conference held in Paris in October 1991, and were adopted by the UN General
Assembly in December 1993. NHRIs must have:
- a clearly defined and
broad-based mandate, based on universal human rights standards;
- independence
guaranteed by legislation or the constitution;
- autonomy from
government;
- pluralism, including
membership that broadly reflects the society the institution serves;
- adequate powers of
investigation; and
- sufficient resources.[110]
4.107
A complaints function—to hear complaints about human rights breaches— is
a feature of some NHRIs. However, this is not a requirement under the Paris
Principles.[111] NHRIs may take various
forms, but their functions generally include:
- reviewing national
laws, policies and programmes to ensure that they are consistent with human
rights standards;
- monitoring a States’
compliance with its own laws and with international human rights standards and
recommending changes when necessary;
- education: raising
community awareness and understanding of human rights issues; and
- complaints handling:
receiving, investigating and/or mediating complaints of discrimination or human
rights abuses.[112]
4.108
First established in the 1970s, there are now approximately 90 NHRIs in
operation around the world. However, only around two-thirds of these are
accredited as compliant with the Paris Principles.[113]
4.109
The International Coordinating Committee for the Promotion and
Protection of Human Rights administer the Paris Principles and the
accreditation of NHRIs. The Committee noted the Commission’s advice that:
Over the last three years the accreditation process has
undergone reform and now rigorously applies a body of principles recorded in
the General Comments developed by the [International Coordinating Committee]
Sub-Committee on Accreditation.
All accredited NHRIs are presently going through the process
of re-accreditation which applies these principles and will in future be
required to go through a re-accreditation process every five years.[114]
4.110
The APF observed that:
Models of NHRIs vary and the characteristics of a particular
NHRI will, to some extent, reflect the political system of the State, its
domestic legal system and cultural setting. In practice, all are
‘administrative’ bodies – that is, they do not have the power to ‘make’ laws or
‘enforce’ laws. NHRIs operate independently from government…[but the] degree of
independence which each NHRI enjoys will depend on a range of factors,
including its legal framework, its membership and its financial resources.[115]
Advantages of NHRIs
4.111
The UN human rights system recognises the positive roles that NHRIs can
play in the promotion and protection of human rights. As well as acknowledging
the importance of regional and subregional mechanisms, the 1993 Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action encourages the establishment and
strengthening of NHRIs.
4.112
The Commission contended that:
…establishing NHRIs in Pacific Island countries is the most
effective way of enhancing human rights protection for people living in the
Pacific.[116]
4.113
The Commission suggested that NHRIs have significant benefits and
privileges that other domestic bodies working on human rights lack, such as:
- status within the
community;
- capacity to act as an
official body to receive and remedy individual complaints;
- ability to provide
legal assistance in human rights matters to disadvantages persons;
- power to pursue
systemic responses to human rights issues;
- access to expert
technical assistance from OHCHR and regional networks;
- participation in the
UN Human Rights Council; and
- expertise in
international human rights law.[117]
4.114
ASEAN has endorsed the need to develop NHRIs. The APF noted that the
conclusions of the 7th Workshop on the ASEAN Region Mechanism on
Human Rights highlighted the need:
- For ASEAN member
countries that have not already done so to establish NHRIs;
- To involve/consult
with NHRIs in the development and operation of the ASEAN human rights body; and
- For a more formal
dialogue between ASEAN and ASEAN NHRIs.[118]
4.115
The High Level Panel on the establishment of the ASEAN human rights body
in August 2009 acknowledged that the success and effectiveness of the new body
would ‘depend on the relationships it established with NHRIs, civil society
groups and other stakeholders’.[119]
4.116
The Castan Centre encouraged the development of NHRIs and commented
that:
The development of such bodies at a local level is arguably a
necessary prerequisite to a regional mechanism.[120]
4.117
The APF noted that in Asia:
…the four existing ASEAN NHRIs continue to play a role not
only in the possible establishment of other NHRIs in the region but also, and
significantly, have provided a crucial ‘building block’ – and a critical mass
of capability and capacity – to enable progression of the debate around a sub-regional
mechanism.[121]
4.118
Along similar lines, the RRRT commented:
There are two potential models for the way forward. The first
is setting up a national human rights commission in each PICT, and the second,
is a regional human rights mechanism. Both ought to be explored.
We do not see the two models as mutually exclusive but rather
that the establishment of one promotes advancement of the other; both are
mutually reinforcing.[122]
4.119
The APF agreed that:
Under ideal circumstances, both are desirable and – with the
possible exception of very small Pacific States – both may be attainable over
time.[123]
Concerns about NHRIs
4.120
While the Uniting Church acknowledged that NHRIs offer an independent
check on the human rights performance of government, it noted that ‘the
performance of such bodies within the Asia-Pacific region is mixed’.[124]
For example:
In the case of Sri Lanka, the submitting bodies are concerned
that the Government of Sri Lanka has undermined the independence of the Human
Rights Commission by the President making appointments directly onto the
Commission, rendering the body weak and ineffective as a check on gross human
rights abuses committed by members of the security forces and paramilitary
groups aligned to the security forces.[125]
4.121
However, there are concerns that complying with the Paris Principles can
be too onerous for many states, especially smaller nations that are still
developing. In particular, the requirements for it to be sufficiently resourced
and for independence from government are challenges. For example, groups have
expressed their concerns that the ‘independence and efficacy [of NHRIs] in many
countries has been seriously challenged’.[126]
4.122
Establishing and maintaining NHRIs are challenges for many of the
smaller countries in the region. In the Pacific in particular:
It is difficult for countries like Tuvalu (pop 9561), Tokelau
(pop 1466), Niue (pop 1679), Cook Islands (pop 11,900) or even Tonga (pop
97,784) to fully comply with [the minimum standards of the Paris Principles]…
The problem of resource constraints faced by most Pacific
Island countries will mean that the Paris Principles relating to the status of
national human rights institutions will be hard to meet. One of the Principles
requires national institutions to have adequate funding for its staff and
premises so that it is independent of government control. The publication of
the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat (PIFS) and the NZ Human Rights
Commission, Pacific Pathways, recognises these difficulties and acknowledges
that PICTs may need to give their “own unique expression to the international
standards (the Paris Principles) for NHRIs.” Not all Pacific countries will be
able to satisfy these excellent criteria. A regional commission on the other
hand will have increased autonomy, more distance from government and so better
be able to satisfy the Paris Principles.[127]
4.123
The AHRC stressed that:
The establishment of an NHRI and its compliance with the Paris Principles does not
provide a panacea for the human rights problems that any country faces; nor do all
NHRIs, even those formally in compliance, necessarily show the level of
independence and vigour that might be desirable. The effectiveness and impact
of a NHRI is the result of many factors, including not just the efforts of the
NHRI’s members and staff, but also of the government’s attitude to human rights
and the NHRI and the broader political and social context. Furthermore, a NHRI
is generally just one of a number of actors which contribute to the observance
of human rights in any country—parliaments, courts, ombudsmen and similar
offices, the media, and civil society organisations are all necessary
components of an effective system for the protection of human rights.[128]
4.124
To address some of the resource and capacity constraints, the Commission
recommended:
That a ‘building blocks’ approach to the development of NHRIs
in Pacific States be adopted, gradually increasing the role and functions of
the NHRI as resources and capacity become available. This approach should
include education and awareness-raising programs on the meaning of human rights
and their interaction with custom.[129]
4.125
The Committee also noted the HRLRC’s advice that:
…it may not be appropriate for each Pacific Island country to
have its own NHRI…The Australian Government should be sensitive to context and
capacity when developing its policy on NHRIs in the Pacific.[130]
Australian Human Rights Commission
4.126
As an accredited NHRI and APF member, the Commission:
…undertakes an international education and training role,
with a specific focus on the Asia-Pacific region. This work builds the capacity
and experience of the Commission in promoting and raising awareness about human
rights, which enhances its domestic activities in this area.[131]
4.127
The Commission’s core budget is devoted to fulfilling its domestic mandate
and so must source funding for human rights activities in the region from
external sources.
4.128
A significant area of achievement for the Commission has been in
providing technical assistance. The Human Rights Technical Cooperation Program
(HRTC) came out of the Australian Government’s human rights dialogue with China,
and is provided through AusAID, which has entered into a Record of
Understanding with the Commission to manage the overall implementation of this
program.[132]
4.129
The Commission commented that:
…[it] has engaged with some of the most
authoritarian regimes in the region, and in the area of technical cooperation
has developed a management style and process that sustains human rights
engagement. The engagement with China is the most substantial illustration of
this. Australia, through the Australian Human Rights Commission, is the only
nation that has been able to sustain a government-to-government program that
deals specifically with human rights in China. While other governments have
programs with China in broader governance related areas, Australia’s is the only bilateral program with an explicit human rights focus. The success
and longevity of the program reflects its non-confrontational management style,
the emphasis on building of relationships, and the program’s alignment with the
priorities of the partner government.[133]
4.130
The Commission’s recent participation in the region to enhance human
rights mechanism in the Pacific has included:
- attending the Strategies
for the Future: Protecting Rights in the Pacific Conference in Samoa, April
2008;
- presenting at the
Australasian Law Reform Agencies Conference on the Potential Role of
National Human Rights Institutions in the Pacific in Vanuatu, September 2008;
- participating in the
Pacific Disability Forum's Council Meeting and National Women with Disabilities
Forum in Samoa;
- conducting training,
on behalf of the APF, on Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
and advocacy to government, and a workshop on the international framework
protecting the rights of women with disability; and
- participating in
regional Pacific networks among Indigenous peoples, such as in preparation
for the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.[134]