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FAC News -
Monday, June 10, 2002 8:54 AM
Release
the ISA 6: Lim
Yesterday,
Mr Lim Kit Siang, the Chairman of the Democratic Action Party (DAP),
asked what Malaysia’s
Human Rights Commission, SUHAKAM, had done to persuade the authorities
to release the six political detainees from Internal Security Act
(ISA) incarceration. Mr Lim was speaking during the official launch
of the BEBASKAN
Roadshow Exhibition at the Chinese Assembly Hall in Kuala
Lumpur.
The six – National
Justice Party Youth Leader Ezam Mohd Nor, Dr Badrulamin Bahron,
Saari Sungib, Lokman Noor Adam, Tian Chua and Hishamuddin Rais –
were arrested over various dates in April 2001 together with four
others (who have since been released) on grounds that “they are
a threat to national security” – the “standard” allegation for those
arrested under the ISA.
However, to
date, no evidence has surfaced nor have they been charged in court for these “crimes” and, after
more than a year, they still languish in the Kamunting
Detention Center.
“On 11 April
2001, Suhakam made the categorical and unequivocal stand that detention
without trial constitutes a fundamental human rights violation and
called on the authorities to release the detainees immediately and,
if they have committed any offence, then they should be charged
and tried in an open court,” said Mr Lim.
“On 24
May 2002, the second-term Suhakam issued a statement
on the ISA which was clearly a departure from its first statement
a year ago,” added Mr Lim.
“The September
11 attacks in the United States
have weakened the Suhakam stand on the ISA as reflected by its statement
last month.”
“Suhakam should
declare whether it still adheres to its statement of 11
April 2001 that the six Reformasi activists currently
under ISA detention should have been released more than a year ago
or charged and tried in an open court.”
“If so, Suhakam
should give a satisfactory accounting as to what it had done in
the past 13 months to actively persuade the authorities concerned
to release the Reformasi 6 from ISA incarceration.”
Suhakam has
confirmed that it will be holding a public
inquiry into the ISA detentions from Monday,
17 June 2002. The inquiry will be conducted
in or around Kamunting to facilitate all the ISA detainees testifying
at this inquiry.
On 10
April 2002, the 6 Kamunting Political Detainees, plus
15 Reformasi supporters, launched a 12-day hunger
strike to demand that Suhakam conduct a public inquiry into
the ISA detentions. They also demanded that the detainees either
be released or be brought to trial and that Anwar Ibrahim be allowed
medical treatment for his back injury.
Mr Lim went
on to say, “Suhakam should explain whether the inquiry it has decided
to hold would be the most comprehensive in scope concerning the
violation of their human rights and not narrowed down and restricted
merely to investigate their visitation rights and detention conditions.”
“Suhakam should
conduct a fully public and transparent national review of the 42-year
history of the ISA, particularly into its abuses of fundamental
freedoms and undermining political dissent because of the absence
of judicial safeguards ad checks and balances.”
It is
believed Suhakam will not be inquiring into the ISA detentions
but merely into the “treatment of the detainees”; a departure from
the demands of the hunger strike and what Suhakam promised in April
this year, the first anniversary of the arrests.
On 21
April 2002, the 12-day hunger strike was temporary suspended
on Suhakam’s promise that it would conduct
the public inquiry into the detentions. If, however, Suhakam fails
to deliver its promise, the hunger strike may be re-launched and,
this time, the wives and children of the ISA detainees would probably
join the hunger strike to push its case.
Anwar Ibrahim,
who himself is under a 15-year jail sentence on trumped-up charges,
joined
the hunger strike on the fifth day and would certainly rejoin
the hunger strike if it is re-launched.
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