Lebanon's 2009 Parliamentary Elections:
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Pledges on Rights Parliamentary Elections an Opportunity to Adopt
Improved Policies May 13, 2009 Related Materials: Lebanon’s 2009
Parliamentary Elections Other Material: Human Rights Watch
reporting on Lebanon Lebanese politicians need to move beyond their
slogans of promoting ‘justice, reform and equality' and start
explaining exactly how they plan to achieve these objectives. At a
minimum, they should promise to put an end to torture and amend
laws that discriminate against women and Palestinian refugees.
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch
(Beirut) - Political parties and candidates in the June
parliamentary elections should outline their plans to improve
Lebanon's human rights record and promise to enforce the country's
obligations under human rights law, Human Rights Watch said in a
report released today. So far, the parties and their candidates
have generally ignored human rights issues in their platforms. The
eight-page report, "Lebanon's 2009 Parliamentary Elections: A Human
Rights Agenda," focuses on five priority areas of human rights
problems in Lebanon: ill-treatment and torture in detention; the
"disappeared" from the civil war; discrimination against women;
ill-treatment of migrant domestic workers; and discrimination
against Palestinian refugees. It outlines specific and feasible
recommendations and urges political parties to make carrying them
out a part of their electoral commitment. "Lebanese politicians
need to move beyond their slogans of promoting ‘justice, reform and
equality' and start explaining exactly how they plan to achieve
these objectives," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at
Human Rights Watch. "At a minimum, they should promise to put an
end to torture and amend laws that discriminate against women and
Palestinian refugees." Since the last parliamentary elections in
2005, Lebanese authorities have taken some steps to improve human
rights, but they have not followed through on many of these
initiatives. For example, the government granted the International
Committee of the Red Cross access to detention facilities in
February 2007 and ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention
against Torture in December 2008. However, officials remain
unwilling to investigate and prosecute those accused of
responsibility for torture and have yet to comply with the
provisions of the Convention against Torture, which Lebanon
ratified in 2000. The national-unity government that emerged after
the Doha agreement in May 2008 pledged in its ministerial
declaration on August 4, 2008, to take steps to uncover the fate of
the thousands of people who disappeared during the civil war, which
ended almost two decades ago. Despite this official pledge and
numerous expressions of support by Lebanese political parties, the
government took no practical steps to shed light on the fate of the
‘disappeared'. The report lists concrete recommendations that build
on existing initiatives, including seeking pledges by candidates
and political parties that they will: * Call on the Ministry of
Interior to publish the results of the investigations it began last
August into allegations of corruption and torture in Lebanese
prisons. * Urge the current Syrian-Lebanese committee established
to investigate disappearances involving Syrian security forces to
make public any information it has obtained since May 2005. *
Insist that the Ministry of Labor set up an inspection unit to
monitor the recently enacted standard contract for migrant domestic
workers, set up to help protect them from abuse. * Abolish
legislative restrictions on the employment of Palestinians. *
Insist that the government submit its required initial report to
the UN Committee against Torture, which was due in 2001. Human
Rights Watch also urged Lebanese political parties and candidates
to tackle broader, long-standing human rights problems, such as the
discrimination against Palestinians. While the government
acknowledged the dire living conditions for Palestinians when it
created the Lebanese-Palestinian Dialogue Committee in October
2005, it has not changed the discriminatory policies that deny the
Palestinians the right to own property and restrict the professions
in which they may work. "Lebanon's recurring bouts of instability,
occupation and war have often delayed necessary and overdue
reforms," said Whitson. "Lebanon's leaders should take advantage of
the current stability to show that they are serious about building
a state that protects human rights."
Verknüpfte Dokumente
- Dokument-ID 1057417 Verwandt / Verknüpft
13. Mai 2009 | HRW – Human Rights Watch (Autor)
Libanon
Pressemitteilung zu Bericht zu anstehenden Parlamentswahlen am 7. Juni 2009 (in Hinblick auf notwendige Reformen im Bereich Menschenrechte, Folter, Verschwinden von Personen, Frauenrechte, ausländische Hausangestellte)
Lebanon's 2009 Parliamentary Elections: (Appell oder Pressemitteilung, Französisch)
- Dokument-ID 1057417 Verwandt / Verknüpft
13. Mai 2009 | HRW – Human Rights Watch (Autor)
Libanon
Bericht zu anstehenden Parlamentswahlen am 7. Juni 2009 (in Hinblick auf notwendige Reformen im Bereich Menschenrechte, Folter, Verschwinden von Personen, Frauenrechte, ausländische Hausangestellte)
Lebanon's 2009 Parliamentary Elections: (Spezieller Bericht oder Analyse, Englisch)
- Dokument-ID 1057417 Verwandt / Verknüpft
13. Mai 2009 | HRW – Human Rights Watch (Autor)
Libanon
Bericht zu anstehenden Parlamentswahlen am 7. Juni 2009 (in Hinblick auf notwendige Reformen im Bereich Menschenrechte, Folter, Verschwinden von Personen, Frauenrechte, ausländische Hausangestellte)
Lebanon's 2009 Parliamentary Elections: (Spezieller Bericht oder Analyse, Englisch)
- Dokument-ID 1057417 Verwandt / Verknüpft
13. Mai 2009 | HRW – Human Rights Watch (Autor)
Libanon
Pressemitteilung zu Bericht zu anstehenden Parlamentswahlen am 7. Juni 2009 (in Hinblick auf notwendige Reformen im Bereich Menschenrechte, Folter, Verschwinden von Personen, Frauenrechte, ausländische Hausangestellte)
Lebanon's 2009 Parliamentary Elections: (Appell oder Pressemitteilung, Englisch)