The text of the European Parliament Resolution is hereby
attached below:
Texts adopted by Parliament
Thursday 1 December 2005 - Brussels
Provisional edition
Human rights
P6_TA-PROV(2005)0462
B6-0622/2005
European Parliament resolution on the human rights situation
in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam
The European Parliament ,
- having regard to the EU Annual Report on Human Rights 2005,
- having regard to its earlier resolutions on Cambodia, Laos
and Vietnam and, in particular, its resolution of 28 April
2005 on human rights in the world 2004(1) ,
- having regard to the cooperation agreements of 1997 between
the European Community on the one hand and the Kingdom of Cambodia
and the Lao People's Democratic Republic on the other, and
the cooperation agreement of 1995 between the EU and the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam,
- having regard to the EU Guidelines on Human Rights Defenders,
approved by the Council on 14 June 2004,
- having regard to Article 103(4) of its Rules of Procedure,
A. recognising the important progress made in recent
years by the three countries in economic development, and supporting their
efforts to engage with regional and non-regional partners in multilateral
fora,
B. supporting the actions taken by the European Union,
its Member States and other members of the international community to
assist their governments' programmes to reduce poverty,
C. regretting that economic and social reforms are not
yet matched by adequate political and civil rights reforms,
D. welcoming the holding of the first meetings in June
2005 of the EU-Vietnam and EU-Laos Working Groups on Institution Building,
Administrative Reform, Governance and Human Rights, but taking the view
that the fundamental rights situation remains a matter of concern,
Cambodia
E. whereas on 3 February 2005 the National Assembly of
the Kingdom of Cambodia waived the parliamentary immunity of three members
of the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP), namely its chairman, Sam Rainsy, and Chea
Poch and Cheam Channy,
F. whereas Cheam Channy and his deputy Khom Piseth were
tried by a military tribunal despite the fact that, under Cambodian national
law, civilians cannot be brought before military courts,
G. whereas the rights of the defence were not observed
by this military tribunal and whereas Cheam Channy was sentenced to a
seven-year prison term and subsequently deprived of his parliamentary
seat,
H. whereas the situation of women in Cambodia is especially
worrying as they face discrimination and extreme difficulties in various
areas, as stated in its resolution of 13 January 2005 on trafficking of
women and children in Cambodia(2) ,
I. whereas the waiver of the parliamentary immunity of
those three opposition Members of Parliament, the recent arrest and detention
of journalists (Mam Sonando, director of Beehive radio station) and teachers
(Rong Chhun, President of the Cambodian Independent Teachers Association)
and the charges brought against Chea Mony, the President of the Free Trade
Union Workers, Men Nath, the President of the Civil Servants Association
and Ea Channa, a member of the Student's Movement for Democracy, are symptomatic
of a general deterioration in respect for civil liberties in Cambodia
and of a crackdown on political dissidents,
J. whereas there is no guarantee as to the independence
and impartiality of the judiciary, and therefore as to its ability to
conduct the trials of the Khmer Rouge leaders in the specially-created
court without political interference,
Laos
K. whereas the authorities of the Lao People's Democratic
Republic, despite strong representations from the European Union, international
organisations and other members of the international community, continue
to take measures that limit the freedoms of expression, the press, association,
assembly and religion,
L. whereas the international media and human rights organisations
continue to report abuses against the Lao-Hmong people, whose humanitarian
situation remains appalling,
M. whereas the main leaders of the peaceful Movement
of 26 October 1999, who called for democratic reforms, Thongpraseuth Keuakoun,
Seng-Aloun Phengphanh, Bouavanh Chanmanivong and Keochay, are still in
detention and another of its leaders, Khamphouvieng Sisa-At, died in prison
following ill-treatment and deprivation,
N. whereas foreign observers, in particular those from
Amnesty International, have been denied free access to the territory of
Laos,
Vietnam
O. welcoming the adoption by Vietnam in June 2005 of
the Masterplan and action plan for development of EU-Vietnam relations
towards 2010 as well as the government's increased willingness to discuss
human rights issues,
P. recognising the substantial progress made by the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam towards economic and social rights, as indicated by
social indicators and the UNDP Human Development Index,
Q. whereas the Vietnamese authorities are still putting
restrictions on freedom of expression and the freedom of the press, in
particular by establishing a police force in 2004 to censor the Internet
and imprisoning cyber-dissidents, including Nguyen Dan Que, Pham Hong
Son, Nguyen Vu Binh and Nguyen Khac Toan, for espionage, simply for having
circulated information on the Internet,
R. whereas the indigenous minorities of the high plateaux
(Centre and North), in particular the Montagnards, suffer from discrimination
and measures such as confiscation of ancestral lands or religious repression,
S. whereas since 1975 the Unified Buddhist Church of
Vietnam (UBCV) has been systematically persecuted for its commitment to
religious freedom, human rights and democratic reform, whereas it has
been banned since 1981, its property confiscated and its schools, universities
and social and cultural institutions destroyed, and whereas UBCV Patriarch,
Thich Huyen Quang, and his Deputy, Thich Quang Do, have been arbitrarily
detained for almost twenty-five years,
T. whereas the members of UBCV local committees set up
in 2005 in nine provinces of central and southern Vietnam have been systematically
harassed by police for providing aid to people in those poor provinces,
and whereas UBCV monk, Thich Vien Phuong, has been sentenced to pay a
fine equivalent to 43 months" basic wage simply for filming an appeal
for human rights and democracy in Vietnam, which was sent by Thich Quang
Do to the UN Commission on Human Rights in April 2005,
U. taking note of the testimony given by the Buddhist
monk, Thich Thien Minh, who recently left a re-education camp after 26
years in detention, concerning the terrible conditions endured by prisoners
in the Z30A camp in Xuan Loc, in particular the Roman Catholic priests,
Pham Minh Tri and Nguyen Duc Vinh, who have been held for more than 18
years, and a member of the Buddhist Hoa Hao sect, Ngo Quang Vinh, aged
87,
V. taking note that, despite a new Act on Belief and
Religion being introduced in 2004 to codify all aspects of religious life,
numerous restrictions on the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam and the
Protestant Churches, including the Mennonite Church, have remained in
place,
W. whereas the United Nations Human Rights Committee
has made recommendations (ref. CCPR/CO/75/VNM of 26 July 2002) to the
Vietnamese authorities with regard to the Legal System Development Strategy,
a ten-year plan partly funded by donor countries, including some Member
States,
Cambodia
1. Expresses its support for the Special Representative
of the UN Secretary-General for Human Rights in Cambodia and insists that
the independent Khmer Rouge Tribunal be established as soon as possible,
as agreed with the UN in June 2003;
2. Calls on the Cambodian authorities to:
- release immediately and unconditionally Cheam Channy, return
his parliamentary mandate and restore the parliamentary immunity
of Sam Rainsy and the two other representatives of his party,
as requested by Parliament in its resolution of 10 March 2005
on Cambodia(3) and the Inter-Parliamentary Union in its resolution
of 19 October 2005;
- engage in political and institutional reforms to build a
democratic state governed by the rule of law and founded on
respect for fundamental freedoms;
- demonstrate their will to combat effectively the endemic
scourges of corruption, massive deforestation resulting in
the displacement of people, and the sex tourism industry, to
refuse the current culture of impunity and to bring to justice
all those involved in such activities;
3. Calls on the Council and the Commission to establish
a Working Group on Institution Building, Administrative Reform, Governance
and Human Rights and to report its results to the European Parliament;
4. Suggests, inter alia, that an ad hoc EP Delegation
visit Cambodia as soon as possible to evaluate the situation of detained
parliamentarians, media representatives and trade union leaders in the
country and that an end be brought to the detention of all political prisoners;
Laos
5. Calls on the Laotian authorities to:
- release all political prisoners and prisoners of conscience,
including the leaders of the Movement of 26 October 1999, Christians
imprisoned for not having renounced their faith, the Hmong
and, in particular, Thao Moua and Pa Phue Khang, the guides
employed by visiting European journalists and arrested in 2003;
- draw up and implement as soon as possible all the necessary
reforms required to democratize the country, guarantee the
peaceful expression of political opposition and ensure a speedy
holding of multiparty elections under international monitoring
with a view to national reconciliation;
- implement programmes allowing the integration of the Lao-Hmong
population and other ethnic and religious minorities into Laotian
society, while preserving their social and political rights
so as to urgently improve their human rights and living conditions;
- allow specialised UN agencies and representatives of humanitarian
organisations unrestricted access, so that they can visit political
prisoners, the Hmong population, and all ethnic and religious
minorities in Laos;
- ratify without delay the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights;
6. Calls on the Commission closely to monitor the situation
of the Lao-Hmong community and the government's programmes designed for
ethnic minorities;
Vietnam
7. Calls on the Vietnamese authorities to:
- pursue on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the end
of the Vietnam war a genuine dialogue involving all sections
of the population in the economic, social, intellectual and
political development of Vietnam;
- undertake political and institutional reforms leading to
democracy and the rule of law, starting by allowing a multi-party
system and guaranteeing the right of all currents of opinion
to express their views;
- apply the Legal System Development Strategy in accordance
with the recommendations made by the UN Human Rights Committee
and with the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights;
- end all forms of repression of members of the Unified Buddhist
Church of Vietnam and officially recognise its existence and
that of other non-recognised Churches in the country;
- release all Vietnamese political prisoners and prisoners
of conscience detained for having legitimately and peacefully
exercised their rights to freedom of opinion, freedom of expression,
freedom of the press and freedom of religion, in particular
Thich Huyen Quang and Thich Quang Do, who are regarded by the
United Nations as victims of arbitrary detention(4) ;
- guarantee full enjoyment of the fundamental rights enshrined
in the Vietnamese Constitution and the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, in particular by allowing the
creation of a genuinely free press;
- ensure the safe repatriation, under the Cambodia-Vietnam-UNHCR
agreement, of the Montagnards who fled Vietnam, and allow proper
monitoring of the situation of the returnees by the UNHCR and
international NGOs;
General
8. Supports the projects to be funded by the Commission
to promote the development of journalism and to support capacity-building
programmes at the National Assembly in Laos as well as the activities
in Vietnam that emerge from the Working Group on Institution Building,
Administrative Reform, Governance and Human Rights;
9. Calls on the Council and Commission to fully involve
Parliament in the work of the EU-Vietnam and EU-Laos Working Groups on
Institution Building, Administrative Reform, Governance and Human Rights;
10. Calls on the Council and the Commission to make a
detailed assessment of the implementation policies conducted in Cambodia,
Laos and Vietnam since the signing of the association and cooperation
agreements, mindful of Article 1 of these agreements, which reiterates
that respect for democratic principles and fundamental rights is an essential
element of the agreements, and to report back to Parliament;
11. Instructs its President to forward this resolution
to the Council, the Commission, the Secretary-General of the United Nations
and the governments and parliaments of Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia.
(1)
Texts Adopted,P6_TA(2005)0150.
(2)
OJ C 247 E, 6.10.2005, p. 161.
(3)
Texts Adopted , P6_TA(2005)0081.
(4)
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Opinion 18/2005, 26 May 2005.
|