I. Editorial

II. Cover Story

III. Country
 Situations:

Kashmir

Pakistan (1)

Pakistan (2)

Philippines

IV. News Feature:

Trial on Munir’s Case: To Reveal the Mastermind, or To Find a Scapegoat?

V. Feature Articles:

Fr. Rudy Romano, Missing But Still Alive…

Modern-Day Heroes

They Shall Overcome

Until When Shall We Wait? 

VI. Review

VII. Year-end Report

VII. AFAD Song

 

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances
 

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances

COVER STORY

by Mary Aileen Diez-Bacalso

 

 

September 22, 2005, Geneva, Switzerland -  After three years of difficult negotiations, His Excellency Bernard Kessedjian, Chair of the United Nations Inter-Sessional Open-Ended Working Group to Elaborate a Draft Legally-Binding Normative Instrument for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances offered the packaged consensus document to the delegations of about ninety UN member-states.  With unparalleled courage, he asked the body thrice to accept the result of the series of difficult discussions and not to open the package.  There was deafening silence – the first time in the whole three-year existence of this Working Group.  Following the silence, the sound of the gavel of Honorable Kessedjian banged like music to the ears of the delegates of organizations of families of the disappeared.  The approval of the text of the Draft International Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances was announced, followed by a thundering applause that reverberated in Room X11 of Palais des Nations.  

            Well-deserved gestures of gratitude and commendation were accorded to Honorable Kessedjian.  He is the man whose able leadership, excellent sense of diplomacy, photographic memory, impressive sense of humor and most importantly, unflinching commitment to the cause of the disappeared and their families had successfully brought to the victorious conclusion such an uphill struggle to finalize the text of the draft international treaty protecting all persons from this scourge of involuntary disappearances.   As states and NGO delegations came to the fore to express appreciation to Honorable Kessedjian, he himself could not hide his emotions.   Taking off his glasses, he humbly wiped the few tears of victory he shed and went back to the chair to continue the unfinished process.  

            FEDEFAM spokesperson, Señora Marta Vazquez, whose personal experience of losing her daughter and grandchild during the dictatorship in Argentina consistently echoed the griefs and hopes of the families of the disappeared in the halls of the United Nations, was conspicuously absent.  Nevertheless, the day earlier, Honorable Kessedjian announced in her presence that the final report of the body would be heartily dedicated to her - the popular symbol of the families of the disappeared not only of Latin America but of the whole world. 

            During past sessions of the Working Group, general statements of delegations  were usually presented at the beginning of the sessions. But this time toward the very end of the session, Honorable Kessedjian gave the floor to all.  States delegations eloquently delivered their speeches.  During that historic Thursday afternoon, AFAD was privileged to be the last to speak.  After three years of consistent presence during all sessions of the Working Group, AFAD said the following intervention, its last since January 2003. 

            “Thank you very much, Mr. Chairperson and all the delegations for the tremendous efforts you have been exerting since the very establishment of this Working Group in order to achieve consensus and to ensure that the very purpose of this whole process would be fully realized.    In the name of AFAD, we congratulate and thank you and your team and all the states and NGO delegations for a job excellently done! 

            The Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances has been attending all the sessions of this working group since the very beginning of its establishment.  We have poured our time and limited resources for this very important process knowing the important value of both the process of drafting and the desired results. May I take this opportunity to tell you that the families of the disappeared in our respective countries have, at this very moment, been informed through text messages about the attainment of the long-cherished dream for the moral and political victory – the final text of the Draft International Convention For the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances with a Strong Independent Monitoring Body.  Already, we have received euphoric responses and words of gratitude and congratulations to everyone in this room. 

            We have been contented with both the process and the result of the work of this inter-sessional open-ended working group after those three years of difficult process in drafting.   We salute you, Honorable Bernard Kessedjian, for the very commendable and able leadership you manifested throughout the whole drafting process.  Indeed, you, your team and this whole body have fulfilled the expectations of the families of the disappeared in our continent and in the rest of the world. 

            We are aware that the establishment of a Convention with an autonomous monitoring body will not be the end of our struggle.  But it is a very huge step to our continuing struggle for the very elusive truth, justice, redress and the recuperation of the historical memory of the disappeared.  As our member-organizations from many Asian countries say, we are tired with the continuing practice of enforced disappearances.   In the course of our work, we have even lost our Chairperson, Munir, a human rights defender who worked long and hard against enforced disappearances in Indonesia and as a consequence of his strong human rights advocacy, he was murdered on a Garuda flight from Jakarta to Amsterdam. He was with us in this session in January last year but unfortunately, he is not anymore here to reap the result of our joint efforts.   But we are certain that wherever he may be, he is happy during this most historic moment. 

            Amidst these difficulties, we will never stop hoping.  We will never stop struggling.  Much remains to be done in terms of campaigning for ratification of states and establishment of national legislation.  In so doing, we are certain that the day will come when no mother or father or son or daughter or brother or sister will ask the same question:  Where are you?  

            With this newly adopted text of the Draft International Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances and the support of the United Nations, we shall overcome.  With this, I end by saying that the disappeared all over the world, wherever they may be in this significant occasion, are all as victorious as we are during this historic success.  Thank you very much.  “ 

            In response, Honorable Kessedjian was so kind to pay tribute to AFAD and expressed great satisfaction that the result of the Working Group’s work had given happiness to the families’ associations.  With the tribute rendered, the day that marked the historical event ended. 

            That was the second to the last day of the two-week session.  AFAD representatives, composed of its Secretary-General and delegates of its member-organizations from Indonesia, Kashmir of India, the Philippines and Sri Lanka, celebrated the achievement in a solidarity dinner held at the residence of Alan and Kate Harmer, AFAD’s invaluable supporter in Geneva.  Friends from FEDEFAM and Linking Solidarity graced the victory party that was highlighted by the opening of a bottle of champagne. It was a memorable evening that allowed everyone to relish, in beautiful ways, the long-cherished victory.  Music and dancing filled the night, making everyone exhausted at the end.  With euphoria in the air, the night ended with the group still mesmerized, unable to believe that finally, it got what it had longed for. 

           

            September 23, 2005 - The day of days - the final day of the life of the three-year old Working Group arrived.  People were late, perhaps because of  a hang-over from the previous night’s celebrations.  It was  a long morning with series of speeches from various delegations which peaked when Loyola Guzman from FEDEFAM delivered her final intervention, interspersed with sobs and tears when she poignantly recounted how she dealt with her small children when they asked her about their disappeared father. 

            Delegations of UN member-states spoke of their general satisfaction with the process and the result and took turns in congratulating the Honorable Kessedjian and paying tribute to the families of the disappeared.  Just to mention a few…. 

            In general, the Latin American governments passionately delivered their speeches, expressing gratitude to Honorable Kessedjian and feeling satisfied that their collective efforts as GRULAC (Latin American and Caribbean Group) had, at last, borne the long-awaited fruit.  To them, the approval of the text was a vindication of the families who continue to suffer from consequences of the dark years of dictatorship on their continent.           

            The delegation of Japan, the only Asian country that explicitly supported a convention with a strong, independent monitoring body, emphasized the imperative of setting up of a new follow up body made up of 10 experts.    

            The French delegation who, from the beginning, had already championed this project, said that what was achieved had lived up to the expectations of those for whom the convention was intended – the victims. Furthermore, he stressed that the body’s responsibility vis-à-vis the victims did not end there because what was most important was to mobilize their efforts to add enough accessions for the instrument to enter into force.   

            The Italian delegation mentioned the further steps ahead – the adoption by the Commission on Human Rights, the Economic and Social Council and the General Assembly. 

            In any negotiation, there are always reservations.  The delegation of the United States of America, while expressing general satisfaction, expressed reservation of the right to truth, because accordingly, it should have to be viewed in the context of the freedom of information.   Moreover, it clearly mentioned that the delegation remained unconvinced of the creation of a new treaty body.   

            In conclusion to all of the speeches, Ambassador Kessedjian’s words during the last few official minutes of the final session gave a message loud enough to reiterate the very purpose of the international treaty.  “We must decide that there must be a NO TO SILENCE, a NO TO FORGETTING AND a NO TO IMPUNITY.  Our greatest reward is the fact that we have aroused in the NGOs some degree of joy and satisfaction.  That is what we have done.  “ It was followed by the well-deserved standing ovation with a long and loud applause. 

              Savoring the hard-earned victory, everyone had the opportunity to express gratitude to each other.  To everyone’s delight, Honorable Kessedjian surprised the body with the opening of bottles of champagne. The profound sense of fulfillment and happiness, especially of the representatives of organizations of families of the disappeared, was manifested in their tears of joy for garnering such a great victory.  As everybody was enjoying every minute of the celebration, the AFAD song, “DESAPARECIDOS” was played.   Independent expert Mr. Louis Joinet, who, in no small measure, substantially contributed to the drafting the convention, skillfully played his accordion, thus all the more making the celebration a very memorable one, indeed.    

            For those who had consistently attended the sessions of the Working Group since its establishment in January 2003, a sense of separation anxiety may have enveloped them.  It was in Room XII of Palais des Nations that several sessions were conducted and where arguments and counter-arguments on the form and substance of the draft treaty were presented and which, eventually resulted in a consensus. 

            Reaping the hard-earned fruit of the struggle, associations of families of the disappeared should brace themselves for more struggles ahead in order to reach the finish line – the treaty’s adoption by the United Nations General Assembly, its ratification by at least, 20 UN member-states for it to enter into force and the establishment of national legislations that criminalize enforced or involuntary disappearances and the serious implementation of the treaty in the national levels. 

 

Debate on the Form of Instrument and its Monitoring Body  

            It was amazing and inspiring how states delegations changed their positions after having been convinced of the value of the convention with an independent monitoring body for the lives of the families of the disappeared.   

            The delegation of France saw that on the legal level, there existed two feasible options - a convention and a protocol to an already existing covenant.  The delegation felt that if the number of members of the committee would be increased, the covenant had to be amended.  Furthermore, they thought that with the current workload of the Human Rights Committee vis-à-vis its resources, it would have too much work if entrusted with monitoring and unable to cope.  The French delegation added that the amount needed in both options would be the same, but the main issue was  efficiency.   Its position was a response to the victims who had been asking for years to find a solution so that suffering of this kind will not be repeated.  Thus, it reiterated that an autonomous convention with an independent body which would have an effective humanitarian procedure be the best solution. 

            The Swiss delegation, for example, admitted to have changed their position in favor of a convention with an independent monitoring body. It realized that an extra burden of work to an already over-burdened committee would render the existing Human Rights Committee ineffective.  

            Other European governments, such as Germany, Finland, Ireland, Norway, Spain were vocal of their position in favor of a convention with an independent monitoring body – a position that aptly responded to the cry of the families of the disappeared. 

            The very clear information from Mr. Bruni, the expert requested to explain the financial and legal issues concerning the choice of the form of instrument and its monitoring body, had clarified many things.  Approximately 887,000 US dollars would be the estimated budget if a new body of five members with the task of convening two sessions per year lasting one week each and which would both entail documentation, a new report, a state report, individual communication, travel, per diem, secretariat support and one field mission per year    If the existing Human Rights Committee would be used, it would have the same support costs.   

            The legal opinion of the UN Legal Adviser, in a fax dated Sept. 2003, replied to the question of the Working Group.  If the proposed new instrument would assign the monitoring task to the UN Human Rights Committee, a treaty organ established by Article 28 of the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights whose mandate is set out in the Covenant and its optional protocol, there would be a need to amend the said Covenant.  It gave an example that in January 1981, there was a proposal received by the Office of Legal Affairs that the UN Human Rights Committee would function as the organ of the proposed Committee on Torture.  The legal adviser said that the proposal posed serious legal obstacles and if adopted, its validity could be challenged because the stated modification could only be effected using the procedures specified in Art. 51 of the Covenant, part of which is the procedure to amend.  

            Other member-states, such as, among others, the United States and Canada remain unconvinced of a new treaty body and brought to the fore their reservations on the basis of the  of unnecessary proliferation of international treaties.

 

AFAD’s Position 

            In an earlier intervention during the same session, AFAD emphasized the importance of the convention to the lives of the families of the victims, to wit: 

             “Mr. Chairperson, AFAD would like to reiterate its position in favor of the imperative of an international convention for the protection of all persons from enforced or involuntary disappearances.     For organizations of families of the disappeared, whose members have themselves personally experienced this very cruel form of human rights violation, an international convention is a well-deserved victory.  Our Latin American partners have been struggling for an international convention during these last 23 years.  But still, more families have suffered in other continents, which have prompted us in Asia, to form our own Federation. Our members from other Asian countries e.g. organizations of families of the disappeared from the Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Kashmir, India and the Philippines, who are here with us, are living witnesses to the crime of enforced or involuntary disappearances on  our own continent.   Amidst all these, no single country in Asia has a law criminalizing enforced disappearances.  Our continent, unfortunately, has no regional human rights mechanisms which can serve as venues for victims to use.  Worse still, the most recent reports of the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances witness to the fact that Asia has the highest number of cases reported – a fact which encouraged the UNWGEID to meet for the first time in Asia, particularly in Thailand, in May of  this year.  This phenomenon continues and is happening in numbers in our region.  We cannot afford to have more persons disappeared, lose more lives and have more families suffer from this scourge of enforced disappearances.  We do not want to prolong this dark night of the disappeared.  Thus, we believe that the organizations of families of the disappeared deserve no less than an international convention.    An independent international treaty has a moral, symbolic and legal value. An additional optional protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), while also legally-binding, poses many difficulties.  A number of states have not yet ratified the ICCPR and its additional protocols.  Thus, there will be technical problems of coordination.   

            Any international instrument should have a monitoring body to ensure effective implementation.  Our Federation, therefore, wants a strong, independent monitoring body which will be tasked to receive reports by states parties about the issue of enforced disappearance; to take charge of international habeas corpus; to conduct country visits, to examine individual communications in cases of enforced disappearances; and, in situations where cases are massive and systematic, this body can inform the Secretary General of the UN who then can refer the matter to the International Criminal Court to exercise its competence.  We believe that an independent monitoring body is more effective than the existing Human Rights Committee of the ICCPR. As very eloquently explained yesterday by the delegate of the International Commission of Jurists, it is already overburdened with the huge number of cases of human rights violations other than enforced disappearances.  Furthermore, using the existing Human Rights Committee will be competent only to those states that have ratified the ICCPR and its additional protocols and thus, will be very untrue to the universal character of the future instrument. 

            The families of the disappeared all over the world, who suffer the pain of waiting, of the uncertainty of their loved ones’ whereabouts, of the horror of the possibility of death and of the many other emotional, psychological and economic consequences of losing their loved ones, deserve no less than an international convention with a strong  independent monitoring body to ensure effective and efficient implementation.  

            Mr. Chairperson, in this concluding session of the Working Group, we would once again, call on all member-states of the United Nations to listen to the cry of the disappeared and their families all over the world –

September 22, 2005, Geneva, Switzerland -  After three years of difficult negotiations, His Excellency Bernard Kessedjian, Chair of the United Nations Inter-Sessional Open-Ended Working Group to Elaborate a Draft Legally-Binding Normative Instrument for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances offered the packaged consensus document to the delegations of about ninety UN member-states.  With unparalleled courage, he asked the body thrice to accept the result of the series of difficult discussions and not to open the package.  There was deafening silence – the first time in the whole three-year existence of this Working Group.  Following the silence, the sound of the gavel of Honorable Kessedjian banged like music to the ears of the delegates of organizations of families of the disappeared.  The approval of the text of the Draft International Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances was announced, followed by a thundering applause that reverberated in Room X11 of Palais des Nations

            Well-deserved gestures of gratitude and commendation were accorded to Honorable Kessedjian.  He is the man whose able leadership, excellent sense of diplomacy, photographic memory, impressive sense of humor and most importantly, unflinching commitment to the cause of the disappeared and their families had successfully brought to the victorious conclusion such an uphill struggle to finalize the text of the draft international treaty protecting all persons from this scourge of involuntary disappearances.   As states and NGO delegations came to the fore to express appreciation to Honorable Kessedjian, he himself could not hide his emotions.   Taking off his glasses, he humbly wiped the few tears of victory he shed and went back to the chair to continue the unfinished process. 

            FEDEFAM spokesperson, Señora Marta Vazquez, whose personal experience of losing her daughter and grandchild during the dictatorship in Argentina consistently echoed the griefs and hopes of the families of the disappeared in the halls of the United Nations, was conspicuously absent.  Nevertheless, the day earlier, Honorable Kessedjian announced in her presence that the final report of the body would be heartily dedicated to her - the popular symbol of the families of the disappeared not only of Latin America but of the whole world.

            During past sessions of the Working Group, general statements of delegations  were usually presented at the beginning of the sessions. But this time toward the very end of the session, Honorable Kessedjian gave the floor to all.  States delegations eloquently delivered their speeches.  During that historic Thursday afternoon, AFAD was privileged to be the last to speak.  After three years of consistent presence during all sessions of the Working Group, AFAD said the following intervention, its last since January 2003. 

            “Thank you very much, Mr. Chairperson and all the delegations for the tremendous efforts you have been exerting since the very establishment of this Working Group in order to achieve consensus and to ensure that the very purpose of this whole process would be fully realized.    In the name of AFAD, we congratulate and thank you and your team and all the states and NGO delegations for a job excellently done! 

            The Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances has been attending all the sessions of this working group since the very beginning of its establishment.  We have poured our time and limited resources for this very important process knowing the important value of both the process of drafting and the desired results. May I take this opportunity to tell you that the families of the disappeared in our respective countries have, at this very moment, been informed through text messages about the attainment of the long-cherished dream for the moral and political victory – the final text of the Draft International Convention For the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances with a Strong Independent Monitoring Body.  Already, we have received euphoric responses and words of gratitude and congratulations to everyone in this room. 

            We have been contented with both the process and the result of the work of this inter-sessional open-ended working group after those three years of difficult process in drafting.   We salute you, Honorable Bernard Kessedjian, for the very commendable and able leadership you manifested throughout the whole drafting process.  Indeed, you, your team and this whole body have fulfilled the expectations of the families of the disappeared in our continent and in the rest of the world. 

            We are aware that the establishment of a Convention with an autonomous monitoring body will not be the end of our struggle.  But it is a very huge step to our continuing struggle for the very elusive truth, justice, redress and the recuperation of the historical memory of the disappeared.  As our member-organizations from many Asian countries say, we are tired with the continuing practice of enforced disappearances.   In the course of our work, we have even lost our Chairperson, Munir, a human rights defender who worked long and hard against enforced disappearances in Indonesia and as a consequence of his strong human rights advocacy, he was murdered on a Garuda flight from Jakarta to Amsterdam. He was with us in this session in January last year but unfortunately, he is not anymore here to reap the result of our joint efforts.   But we are certain that wherever he may be, he is happy during this most historic moment. 

            Amidst these difficulties, we will never stop hoping.  We will never stop struggling.  Much remains to be done in terms of campaigning for ratification of states and establishment of national legislation.  In so doing, we are certain that the day will come when no mother or father or son or daughter or brother or sister will ask the same question:  Where are you?  

            With this newly adopted text of the Draft International Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances and the support of the United Nations, we shall overcome.  With this, I end by saying that the disappeared all over the world, wherever they may be in this significant occasion, are all as victorious as we are during this historic success.  Thank you very much.  “ 

            In response, Honorable Kessedjian was so kind to pay tribute to AFAD and expressed great satisfaction that the result of the Working Group’s work had given happiness to the families’ associations.  With the tribute rendered, the day that marked the historical event ended. 

            That was the second to the last day of the two-week session.  AFAD representatives, composed of its Secretary-General and delegates of its member-organizations from Indonesia, Kashmir of India, the Philippines and Sri Lanka, celebrated the achievement in a solidarity dinner held at the residence of Alan and Kate Harmer, AFAD’s invaluable supporter in Geneva.  Friends from FEDEFAM and Linking Solidarity graced the victory party that was highlighted by the opening of a bottle of champagne. It was a memorable evening that allowed everyone to relish, in beautiful ways, the long-cherished victory.  Music and dancing filled the night, making everyone exhausted at the end.  With euphoria in the air, the night ended with the group still mesmerized, unable to believe that finally, it got what it had longed for. 

            September 23, 2005 - The day of days - the final day of the life of the three-year old Working Group arrived.  People were late, perhaps because of  a hang-over from the previous night’s celebrations.  It was  a long morning with series of speeches from various delegations which peaked when Loyola Guzman from FEDEFAM delivered her final intervention, interspersed with sobs and tears when she poignantly recounted how she dealt with her small children when they asked her about their disappeared father. 

            Delegations of UN member-states spoke of their general satisfaction with the process and the result and took turns in congratulating the Honorable Kessedjian and paying tribute to the families of the disappeared.  Just to mention a few….

            In general, the Latin American governments passionately delivered their speeches, expressing gratitude to Honorable Kessedjian and feeling satisfied that their collective efforts as GRULAC (Latin American and Caribbean Group) had, at last, borne the long-awaited fruit.  To them, the approval of the text was a vindication of the families who continue to suffer from consequences of the dark years of dictatorship on their continent.           

            The delegation of Japan, the only Asian country that explicitly supported a convention with a strong, independent monitoring body, emphasized the imperative of setting up of a new follow up body made up of 10 experts.    

            The French delegation who, from the beginning, had already championed this project, said that what was achieved had lived up to the expectations of those for whom the convention was intended – the victims. Furthermore, he stressed that the body’s responsibility vis-à-vis the victims did not end there because what was most important was to mobilize their efforts to add enough accessions for the instrument to enter into force.   

            The Italian delegation mentioned the further steps ahead – the adoption by the Commission on Human Rights, the Economic and Social Council and the General Assembly. 

            In any negotiation, there are always reservations.  The delegation of the United States of America, while expressing general satisfaction, expressed reservation of the right to truth, because accordingly, it should have to be viewed in the context of the freedom of information.   Moreover, it clearly mentioned that the delegation remained unconvinced of the creation of a new treaty body.   

            In conclusion to all of the speeches, Ambassador Kessedjian’s words during the last few official minutes of the final session gave a message loud enough to reiterate the very purpose of the international treaty.  “We must decide that there must be a NO TO SILENCE, a NO TO FORGETTING AND a NO TO IMPUNITY.  Our greatest reward is the fact that we have aroused in the NGOs some degree of joy and satisfaction.  That is what we have done.  “ It was followed by the well-deserved standing ovation with a long and loud applause. 

              Savoring the hard-earned victory, everyone had the opportunity to express gratitude to each other.  To everyone’s delight, Honorable Kessedjian surprised the body with the opening of bottles of champagne. The profound sense of fulfillment and happiness, especially of the representatives of organizations of families of the disappeared, was manifested in their tears of joy for garnering such a great victory.  As everybody was enjoying every minute of the celebration, the AFAD song, “DESAPARECIDOS” was played.   Independent expert Mr. Louis Joinet, who, in no small measure, substantially contributed to the drafting the convention, skillfully played his accordion, thus all the more making the celebration a very memorable one, indeed.    

            For those who had consistently attended the sessions of the Working Group since its establishment in January 2003, a sense of separation anxiety may have enveloped them.  It was in Room XII of Palais des Nations that several sessions were conducted and where arguments and counter-arguments on the form and substance of the draft treaty were presented and which, eventually resulted in a consensus.

             Reaping the hard-earned fruit of the struggle, associations of families of the disappeared should brace themselves for more struggles ahead in order to reach the finish line – the treaty’s adoption by the United Nations General Assembly, its ratification by at least, 20 UN member-states for it to enter into force and the establishment of national legislations that criminalize enforced or involuntary disappearances and the serious implementation of the treaty in the national levels.

  

Debate on the Form of Instrument and its Monitoring Body  

            It was amazing and inspiring how states delegations changed their positions after having been convinced of the value of the convention with an independent monitoring body for the lives of the families of the disappeared.   

            The delegation of France saw that on the legal level, there existed two feasible options - a convention and a protocol to an already existing covenant.  The delegation felt that if the number of members of the committee would be increased, the covenant had to be amended.  Furthermore, they thought that with the current workload of the Human Rights Committee vis-à-vis its resources, it would have too much work if entrusted with monitoring and unable to cope.  The French delegation added that the amount needed in both options would be the same, but the main issue was  efficiency.   Its position was a response to the victims who had been asking for years to find a solution so that suffering of this kind will not be repeated.  Thus, it reiterated that an autonomous convention with an independent body which would have an effective humanitarian procedure be the best solution.

             The Swiss delegation, for example, admitted to have changed their position in favor of a convention with an independent monitoring body. It realized that an extra burden of work to an already over-burdened committee would render the existing Human Rights Committee ineffective. 

             Other European governments, such as Germany, Finland, Ireland, Norway, Spain were vocal of their position in favor of a convention with an independent monitoring body – a position that aptly responded to the cry of the families of the disappeared.

             The very clear information from Mr. Bruni, the expert requested to explain the financial and legal issues concerning the choice of the form of instrument and its monitoring body, had clarified many things.  Approximately 887,000 US dollars would be the estimated budget if a new body of five members with the task of convening two sessions per year lasting one week each and which would both entail documentation, a new report, a state report, individual communication, travel, per diem, secretariat support and one field mission per year    If the existing Human Rights Committee would be used, it would have the same support costs. 

             The legal opinion of the UN Legal Adviser, in a fax dated Sept. 2003, replied to the question of the Working Group.  If the proposed new instrument would assign the monitoring task to the UN Human Rights Committee, a treaty organ established by Article 28 of the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights whose mandate is set out in the Covenant and its optional protocol, there would be a need to amend the said Covenant.  It gave an example that in January 1981, there was a proposal received by the Office of Legal Affairs that the UN Human Rights Committee would function as the organ of the proposed Committee on Torture.  The legal adviser said that the proposal posed serious legal obstacles and if adopted, its validity could be challenged because the stated modification could only be effected using the procedures specified in Art. 51 of the Covenant, part of which is the procedure to amend. 

             Other member-states, such as, among others, the United States and Canada remain unconvinced of a new treaty body and brought to the fore their reservations on the basis of the  of unnecessary proliferation of international treaties.

  

AFAD’s Position 

            In an earlier intervention during the same session, AFAD emphasized the importance of the convention to the lives of the families of the victims, to wit:

              “Mr. Chairperson, AFAD would like to reiterate its position in favor of the imperative of an international convention for the protection of all persons from enforced or involuntary disappearances.  For organizations of families of the disappeared, whose members have themselves personally experienced this very cruel form of human rights violation, an international convention is a well-deserved victory.  Our Latin American partners have been struggling for an international convention during these last 23 years.  But still, more families have suffered in other continents, which have prompted us in Asia, to form our own Federation. Our members from other Asian countries e.g. organizations of families of the disappeared from the Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Kashmir, India and the Philippines, who are here with us, are living witnesses to the crime of enforced or involuntary disappearances on  our own continent.   Amidst all these, no single country in Asia has a law criminalizing enforced disappearances.  Our continent, unfortunately, has no regional human rights mechanisms which can serve as venues for victims to use.  Worse still, the most recent reports of the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances witness to the fact that Asia has the highest number of cases reported – a fact which encouraged the UNWGEID to meet for the first time in Asia, particularly in Thailand, in May of  this year.  This phenomenon continues and is happening in numbers in our region.  We cannot afford to have more persons disappeared, lose more lives and have more families suffer from this scourge of enforced disappearances.  We do not want to prolong this dark night of the disappeared.  Thus, we believe that the organizations of families of the disappeared deserve no less than an international convention.    An independent international treaty has a moral, symbolic and legal value. An additional optional protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), while also legally-binding, poses many difficulties.  A number of states have not yet ratified the ICCPR and its additional protocols.  Thus, there will be technical problems of coordination. 

             Any international instrument should have a monitoring body to ensure effective implementation.  Our Federation, therefore, wants a strong, independent monitoring body which will be tasked to receive reports by states parties about the issue of enforced disappearance; to take charge of international habeas corpus; to conduct country visits, to examine individual communications in cases of enforced disappearances; and, in situations where cases are massive and systematic, this body can inform the Secretary General of the UN who then can refer the matter to the International Criminal Court to exercise its competence.  We believe that an independent monitoring body is more effective than the existing Human Rights Committee of the ICCPR. As very eloquently explained yesterday by the delegate of the International Commission of Jurists, it is already overburdened with the huge number of cases of human rights violations other than enforced disappearances.  Furthermore, using the existing Human Rights Committee will be competent only to those states that have ratified the ICCPR and its additional protocols and thus, will be very untrue to the universal character of the future instrument. 

            The families of the disappeared all over the world, who suffer the pain of waiting, of the uncertainty of their loved ones’ whereabouts, of the horror of the possibility of death and of the many other emotional, psychological and economic consequences of losing their loved ones, deserve no less than an international convention with a strong  independent monitoring body to ensure effective and efficient implementation. 

            Mr. Chairperson, in this concluding session of the Working Group, we would once again, call on all member-states of the United Nations to listen to the cry of the disappeared and their families all over the world – NEVER AGAIN!   CONVENTION NOW! 

            The said intervention is AFAD’s own practical version of the value of the Convention to the families of the disappeared in Asia, especially.   During these three years of drafting process, states delegations, international NGOs and organizations of families of the disappeared debated on the form of instrument – whether it be a convention with an independent monitoring body or a protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights using the existing UN Human Rights Committee as the monitoring body.

 

A Fruit of a Collective Global Struggle…..  

            The approval of the text of the convention is, to say the least, a breakthrough to the global campaign against enforced or involuntary disappearances and against impunity.  It is an advance to the cause of human rights – a great accomplishment of the United Nations.  First and foremost, it is an accomplishment of the global movement against involuntary disappearances, constituted by federations and organizations of families of the disappeared from different parts of the world.  International non-government organizations, such as the International Commission of Jurists, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International had fully dedicated their legal adeptness in human rights work through their active participation in the sessions in Geneva.  Their inputs had complemented the interventions of organizations of families of the disappeared and most certainly contributed in ensuring the approval of the text of the convention.  

            The year 2005 has been declared by AFAD and its sister-federations and organizations in other continents as the year of the Convention.  As a matter of fact, AFAD spent the bulk of its time and resources for lobby work this year.  Not only did it attend regular sessions of the Working Group for a Draft Treaty in January and September, but also it actively lobbied in many different ways on the regional and national levels.  

            A Training Seminar on the Imperative of the Draft Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances was conducted in Bangkok, Thailand on the occasion of the 75th session of the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.   During the training, AFAD agreed to hold a lobby tour in selected Asian countries, e.g. Philippines, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Thailand.  While only Sri Lanka promised to support the convention, AFAD is optimistic that the rest of the countries visited will, at least, not object the future treaty when it will be presented to the Commission on Human Rights in March 2006 and will, at most, ratify it and seriously implement its provisions.   

            Moreover, a couple of weeks prior to the final session of the Working Group, AFAD staged a Solidarity Concert, entitled, “ Seeking.”  Held in the Film Center of the University of the Philippines and graced by progressive popular artists, the concert, attended by more than 700 people from all walks of life, was meant to gain public attention and support to the convention.  AFAD member-organizations from different Asian countries witnessed the inspiring rendition of songs that depict pain, hope, struggle of families of the disappeared in their incessant search not only for their loved ones, but for a world without desaparecidos

            Not missing any of the sessions at the Working Group for the draft treaty, the Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances feels gratified in the most profound sense of the word, for the biggest victory it has ever achieved.  Concretely, its very presence at the United Nations has shattered the myth propagated by not-so-friendly states that the issue of enforced or involuntary disappearances is an issue of the past which belongs solely to Latin America.  The fact that Asia reported the biggest number of cases to the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances has, to a large measure, convinced the United Nations that an international treaty with an independent monitoring body be established.  This is AFAD’s modest contribution to the struggle against this despicable crime, never to be repeated in the history of humankind.  What FEDEFAM started several years ago and indefatigably continues to strive for, AFAD, together with the rest of families’ associations world- wide, vows to finish until its victorious adoption by the General Assembly of the United Nations.  Forever grateful to FEDEFAM for its inspiration in starting the struggle more than a couple of decades ago, AFAD continues to link arms with them and other families’ associations, supporters and the rest of society so that, one day, the truth shall be revealed and justice shall emerge triumphant.  

            To the desaparecidos all over the world, whose inspiration has made the tiring task of lobbying surmountable, AFAD wholeheartedly dedicates this collective victory and offers them its unyielding struggle for a world without desaparecidos. 

            The said intervention is AFAD’s own practical version of the value of the Convention to the families of the disappeared in Asia, especially.   During these three years of drafting process, states delegations, international NGOs and organizations of families of the disappeared debated on the form of instrument – whether it be a convention with an independent monitoring body or a protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights using the existing UN Human Rights Committee as the monitoring body.

 

A Fruit of a Collective Global Struggle…..  

            The approval of the text of the convention is, to say the least, a breakthrough to the global campaign against enforced or involuntary disappearances and against impunity.  It is an advance to the cause of human rights – a great accomplishment of the United Nations.  First and foremost, it is an accomplishment of the global movement against involuntary disappearances, constituted by federations and organizations of families of the disappeared from different parts of the world.  International non-government organizations, such as the International Commission of Jurists, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International had fully dedicated their legal adeptness in human rights work through their active participation in the sessions in Geneva.  Their inputs had complemented the interventions of organizations of families of the disappeared and most certainly contributed in ensuring the approval of the text of the convention.  

            The year 2005 has been declared by AFAD and its sister-federations and organizations in other continents as the year of the Convention.  As a matter of fact, AFAD spent the bulk of its time and resources for lobby work this year.  Not only did it attend regular sessions of the Working Group for a Draft Treaty in January and September, but also it actively lobbied in many different ways on the regional and national levels.  

            A Training Seminar on the Imperative of the Draft Convention on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances was conducted in Bangkok, Thailand on the occasion of the 75th session of the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.   During the training, AFAD agreed to hold a lobby tour in selected Asian countries, e.g. Philippines, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Thailand.  While only Sri Lanka promised to support the convention, AFAD is optimistic that the rest of the countries visited will, at least, not object the future treaty when it will be presented to the Commission on Human Rights in March 2006 and will, at most, ratify it and seriously implement its provisions.   

            Moreover, a couple of weeks prior to the final session of the Working Group, AFAD staged a Solidarity Concert, entitled, “ Seeking.”  Held in the Film Center of the University of the Philippines and graced by progressive popular artists, the concert, attended by more than 700 people from all walks of life, was meant to gain public attention and support to the convention.  AFAD member-organizations from different Asian countries witnessed the inspiring rendition of songs that depict pain, hope, struggle of families of the disappeared in their incessant search not only for their loved ones, but for a world without desaparecidos

            Not missing any of the sessions at the Working Group for the draft treaty, the Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances feels gratified in the most profound sense of the word, for the biggest victory it has ever achieved.  Concretely, its very presence at the United Nations has shattered the myth propagated by not-so-friendly states that the issue of enforced or involuntary disappearances is an issue of the past which belongs solely to Latin America.  The fact that Asia reported the biggest number of cases to the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances has, to a large measure, convinced the United Nations that an international treaty with an independent monitoring body be established.  This is AFAD’s modest contribution to the struggle against this despicable crime, never to be repeated in the history of humankind.  What FEDEFAM started several years ago and indefatigably continues to strive for, AFAD, together with the rest of families’ associations world- wide, vows to finish until its victorious adoption by the General Assembly of the United Nations.  Forever grateful to FEDEFAM for its inspiration in starting the struggle more than a couple of decades ago, AFAD continues to link arms with them and other families’ associations, supporters and the rest of society so that, one day, the truth shall be revealed and justice shall emerge triumphant.  

            To the desaparecidos all over the world, whose inspiration has made the tiring task of lobbying surmountable, AFAD wholeheartedly dedicates this collective victory and offers them its unyielding struggle for a world without desaparecidos.

 

Mary Aileen Diez-Bacalso is a Filipino through and through, but claims that her name is actually Irish in origin.  This perhaps manifests her highly cosmopolitan bent, having traveled to Europe, Africa, Latin America and other parts of Asia in her continuing advocacy for justice and redress for the disappeared and the attainment of truth.  She is currently the Secretary-General of the Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances (AFAD) and has been in the human rights movement since the early 1980s.

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