Rohingya exodus continues
AHRC TV: Rohingya exodus continues as satellite
images reveal burning villages and other stories in JUST
ASIA, Episode 187
This week
Just Asia begins with Burma, where Rohingya refugees
continue streaming to Bangladesh after violence erupted in
Rakhine state just over a week ago. Although the Bangladesh
government has a zero-tolerance refugee policy, it seems
that security officials are ignoring government orders and
allowing refugees to cross the border. Meanwhile, Human
Rights Watch has released satellite imagery showing that
more than 700 homes have been burned down in one Rohingya
village.
Next, an independent newspaper in Cambodia was
forced to close due to astronomical taxes demanded by the
government. The English language Cambodia Daily had been
given a deadline of one month to pay USD 6.3 million in
years of back taxes, which the publication disputed and
described as “astronomical”. In the run-up to an
election next year, Cambodia has seen a widening crackdown
on independent media, opposition politicians and rights
activists.
In India, senior journalist and activist Gauri
Lankesh was murdered Tuesday at her Bangalore home. Shot
three times at close range, she died instantly at her
doorstep, and her body was found by neighbours. Gauri
Lankesh ran the Kannada tabloid, Gauri Lankesh Patrike. She
was known for her forthright and outspoken views on many
topics.
In Pakistan, a 28-year-old man set himself on
fire at the Athar Hazari police station in Punjab’s Jhang
District last month, to protest against the police setting
free a suspect in his wife’s rape case. While several
officers have been suspended following the incident, nothing
further is expected to occur within Pakistan’s corrupt and
inefficient justice system.
Indonesia’s corruption
court on Monday sentenced one of the country’s top judges
to eight years in prison for taking bribes, the second time
a Constitutional Court judge has been imprisoned for bribery
since 2014. A five-member panel of judges ruled that
Patrialis Akbar was guilty of receiving thousands of dollars
from a meat importer to influence the outcome of a judicial
review of the law on animal husbandry.
Nearly five months
after an acid attack against Indonesia’s Novel Baswedan,
senior investigator of the country’s Corruption
Eradication Commission (KPK), no one has been prosecuted for
the crime. The police investigation has been slow and
unclear, resulting in increasing suspicion of a lack of
commitment and political will to seriously find and
prosecute the criminals. According to civil society, the
acid attack against Novel is part of an effort to weaken the
KPK.
The government of Nepal has yet to reply to a joint
communication by the UN Special Procedures regarding the
Terai killings and other human rights abuses of 2013-2016.
The deadline for answers to the various queries made by the
Special Procedures, including the Special Rapporteurs on
extrajudicial executions and freedom of expression, was 7
August 2017.
Finally, the Urgent Appeals Weekly features
one case from India.
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