MONTREAL – The United Nations Security Council must enact concrete measures aimed at forcing Burma’s ruling military regime (SPDC) to respect human rights and end its use of violence and political repression against its people, Rights & Democracy said today in a letter addressed to UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan.
The recent renewal of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi’s detention under house arrest, which now totals more than 10 years, and the internal displacement of more than 13,000 Karen villagers after recent military assaults are two of the latest developments in Burma that necessitate a firm and unequivocal Security Council resolution in defence of human rights and democracy there.
“International interventions to bring peace to Burma and ensure respect for human rights have ended in failure,” writes Jean-Louis Roy, President of Rights & Democracy. “Peace and democracy in Burma are not only crucial to the realization of human rights for millions in Burma , but they are essential to the interests of regional and global security.”
Rights & Democracy’s letter joins a growing international campaign in support of a recent report commissioned by former Czech Republic President, Vaclav Havel, and South African Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Bishop Desmond Tutu. The report, titled Threat to the Peace: A Call for the UN Security Council to Act in Burma, concludes that a Security Council resolution is key to breaking the SPDC’s totalitarian grip on Burma.
Rights & Democracy said a UNSC resolution should include the following four points:
Rights & Democracy has also written Canada ’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Peter MacKay, to request the Government of Canada’s support for this matter, which would respond to the Parliamentary motion on Burma adopted in May, 2005. Surprisingly, no past Canadian governments have supported any of Burma’s democratic institutions. These institutions, which include Burma ’s government in exile and the Members of Parliament Union, are dependent on funding from foreign governments for their existence and Rights & Democracy urges an end to Canada ’s silence on this matter.
Rights & Democracy’s involvement in Burma dates to 1990, the year Burma ’s military refused to cede power to Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy party after its landslide election victory. Rights & Democracy was the first institution to support the democratically-elected government-in-exile, and remains committed to supporting Burma ’s democratic movement.
See also: Letter to Mr. Kofi Annan re. Call for a UN Security Council resolution on Burma
Please contact Steve Smith (ext 255) or Louis Moubarak (ext 261) at Rights & Democracy, 514-283-6073.