INTER-PARLIAMENTARY UNION PLACE DU PETIT-SACONNEX 1211 GENEVA 19, SWITZERLAND |
MYANMAR
Resolution adopted without a vote by the Inter-Parliamentary Council
Referring to the outline of the case of the above-mentioned elected members of the Pyithu Hluttaw (People's Assembly) of the Union of Myanmar, as contained in the report of the Committee on the Human Rights of Parliamentarians (CL/166/16(c)R.1), and to the relevant resolution adopted at its 165th session (October 1999), Taking account of information provided by representatives of the sources at the hearing held on the occasion of the 103rd Conference (April/May 2000), Recalling that on 27 May 1990 a national election called by the then State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) was held to constitute a new Parliament (Pyithu Hluttaw) and that the National League for Democracy (NLD) won 392 of the 485 seats (about 81% of all seats), all the above Parliamentarians being among those elected; that, however, instead of transferring power as it had pledged before the election, SLORC ruled, in Declaration No. 1/90, that the duty of the elected representatives was merely to draft a new democratic Constitution and convene a National Convention to this end; that, under severe pressure from SLORC, the National League for Democracy took part in the Convention's work but withdrew in November 1995, thus severing whatever link there may have been between the National Convention and the popular will as expressed in the 1990 elections, Considering that, since 1990, the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC) and subsequently the State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) not only systematically impeded the functioning of the National League for Democracy, in particular, but eliminated from the political process the MPs elected in 1990, first by invalidating election results, dismissing them from Parliament and banning them from future elections, by forcing them to resign, orchestrating no-confidence motions against them and finally by arresting, detaining and sentencing them under laws (such as the Emergency Provision Act, State Protection Act, Official Secrets Act, Printers and Publishers Registration Act, Unlawful Associations Act, etc.) considered by the appropriate United Nations human rights bodies to be in breach of international civil and political rights standards, Recalling that the National League for Democracy, together with the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy, the Arakan League for Democracy, the Mon National Democratic Front and the Zomi National Congress, requested the authorities to convene the Parliament and, their request being disregarded, established in September 1998 a body, the Committee Representing the People's Parliament (CRPP), temporarily to represent Members of Parliament elected in 1990 and prevented by the authorities from exercising the mandate conferred on them by the people of Myanmar in the democratic elections of 1990; that, as a result of this, scores of MPs-elect and other persons supporting the CRPP were arrested and detained in what the authorities called guest houses, Considering that the CRPP has received support from the leaders of all political parties represented in the Norwegian Parliament, from five parties represented in the Danish Parliament, from the National Assembly of Belgium, which passed a resolution announcing support for the CRPP, from the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia and the National Assembly of Quebec, which in March and December 1999, respectively, urged the Canadian Government to recognise the CRPP as the legitimate instrument of the will of the Burmese People, and from Asian democratic leaders under the Forum of Democratic Leaders of the Asia Pacific (FDL-AP), who supported the CRPP out of solidarity, Noting that, according to the sources, at least 40 of the elected members of the Pyithu Hluttaw were in detention as of April 2000, and recalling in this connection that conditions of detention in Myanmar are reported to be harsh and to include cruel disciplinary practices and torture, lack of proper medical care and insufficient food; Kyaw Min, another MP-elect, died on 1 July 1999 of hepatitis contracted in prison after he had been detained since 1996 without trial and released to his family prior to his death; recalling further in this connection the death in prison of Tin Maung Win on 18 January 1991, Khin Maung Gyi on 8 February 1991, Hla Than on 2 August 1996, and Saw Win on 7 August 1998, Bearing in mind the consistent appeals made by the United Nations General Assembly and the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in their resolutions on the human rights situation in Myanmar to the authorities of Myanmar, urging them to take urgent and meaningful measures to ensure the establishment of democracy in accordance with the will of the people as expressed in the democratic elections held in 1990 and, to this end, to engage immediately and unconditionally in a substantive dialogue with the leaders of political parties and the ethnic minorities ... to accelerate the process of transition to democracy, in particular through the transfer of power to democratically elected representatives and to release immediately and unconditionally those detained for political reasons, Considering that parliamentarians around the world are joining together to sign a declaration of support for their democratically elected colleagues in Burma that calls upon the SPDC to recognise the right of the duly elected representatives of Burma to sit in Parliament, and immediately to lift all restrictions against them; to release immediately and unconditionally all MPs-elect; to end all violations of human rights imposed on the people of Burma; and to join the National League for Democracy and the representatives of ethnic nationalities in a dialogue to achieve a peaceful transition to democracy,
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