OHCHR - (1) Syria, (2) Indonesia / LGBT, (3) Gaza
OHCHR PRESS BRIEFING NOTES - (1) Syria, (2) Indonesia / LGBT, (3) Gaza
26 May 2017
Spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights: Rupert Colville
Location: Geneva
Subject:
(1) Syria
(2) Indonesia / LGBT
(3) Gaza
(1) Syria
Civilians in Syria are increasingly paying the price as
counter-ISIL airstrikes escalate while ISIL cracks down on
those in and around areas remaining under its control, the
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al
Hussein said Friday.
The UN Human Rights chief urged “all States’ air forces operating in the country to take much greater care to distinguish between legitimate military targets and civilians. All parties to the conflict must uphold their obligation to take every feasible measure to spare the civilian population from the effects of the armed conflict.”
The full press release in English is at: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21662&LangID=E
The full press release in Arabic is at: http://www.ohchr.org/AR/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21662&LangID=A
The French version will be made available on www.ohchr.org later in the
day.
(2) Indonesia / LGBT
We are
concerned by the recent persecution, arbitrary arrest,
detention and ill-treatment of men perceived to be gay in
Indonesia. In the past two months, more than 150 men were
reportedly arrested in Aceh, Surabaya and Jakarta on the
basis of alleged consensual relations between adults of the
same sex. While many of them were reportedly released
shortly after, some have been charged under a pornography
law.
The arrested men have been subjected to public
humiliation and stigmatization. In some cases, their names,
photos and videos were released to the media. The men
arrested in Surabaya were also subjected to forced HIV
tests. In the case of Aceh, two men were publicly caned
after being tried by a Sharia court. These latest incidents
take place against a backdrop of reported violent attacks
against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in
Indonesia. While high-level officials had previously spoken
out in defence of the rights of LGBT people, there has
recently been widespread hate speech in the media and by
some religious groups and some public
officials.
Attitudes towards lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender (LGBT) people may vary from country to country
but human rights standards are invariable. International law
is clear: all people, without exception, are entitled to
protection of their human rights – and that includes LGBT
individuals. Consensual relations between adults of the same
sex should not be criminalized, and arresting and detaining
people on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender
identity is by definition arbitrary.
The treatment of
these men violates multiple human rights standards including
those on liberty, fair trial, integrity, privacy, dignity,
equality before the law, non-discrimination and the absolute
prohibition on torture and other cruel, inhuman and
degrading treatment or punishment. These human rights
standards are enshrined in legally binding treaties ratified
by Indonesia, including the Convention against Torture and
the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights.
We call on the Indonesian authorities to release
all individuals detained on the basis of their sexual
orientation, provide those subjected to abuses with
effective remedy and review legislation that contravenes
Indonesia’s legal obligations, including local criminal
legislation in Aceh. The authorities should ensure prompt,
effective, independent and impartial investigations and
prosecution of human rights violations based on sexual
orientation and gender identity, in line with fair trial
norms and standards. They should also work to combat stigma
and negative public attitudes towards LGBT
people.
(3) Gaza
We condemn the
execution of three men by the authorities in Gaza yesterday.
The men were convicted by a special so-called “field
military court” of involvement in the murder of Hamas
leader Mazen Al Faqhaa on 24 March, as well as on charges of
“collaboration with an enemy party”. The executions
amount to an arbitrary deprivation of life.
International
law sets very stringent conditions for the application of
the death penalty, including meticulous compliance with fair
trial standards. This trial does not appear to have met
these standards. The “field military court” allows no
possibility of appeal or clemency, in breach of
international law. Two of the men were civilians and should
not have been tried by a military court. Article 109 of the
Palestinian Basic Law requires that executions be carried
out after the approval of President Mahmoud Abbas. This law
too was ignored. We are also appalled by the public and
celebratory nature of the executions. Authorities in Gaza
have now carried out 28 executions since the Hamas takeover
in 2007, nine of them in the last 12 months.
We reiterate
our call to the authorities in Gaza to desist from carrying
out further executions; to end the practice of trying
civilians before military courts; and to comply with all of
its obligations under international law. The UN opposes the
use of the death penalty in all circumstances. We call on
the State of Palestine to immediately establish an official
moratorium on the use of the death penalty with a view to
its abolition.
ENDS