Mar 1, 2017

Vanuatu Minister of Justice addresses UN Human Rights Council on behalf of seven Pacific nations

Geneva, Switzerland – Today the Vanuatu Minister of Justice addressed the 34th session of the UN Human Rights Council on behalf of the Pacific Coalition of 5 nations. He called on the UN Human Rights Council to request the High Commissioner for Human Rights to produce a consolidated report on the actual situation in West Papua. He highlighted that “the report should … detail the various rights under the International Bill of Human Rights and the related conventions, including the right to self-determination”.

A full transcript of the speech follow and you can watch the speech in full at the UN Web TV site:

The Republic of Vanuatu

Statement delivered by the Hon. RONALD K WARSAL (MP)

MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, REPUBLIC OF VANUATU

34TH SESSION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL

1ST MARCH 2017, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

Mr. President

Excellencies, Distinguished Delegates Ladies and Gentlemen.

The Republic of Vanuatu is very pleased to address this meeting.

Today, I am speaking on behalf of both Vanuatu and six other nations of our Pacific region: Tonga, Nauru, Palau, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands, and the Solomon Islands

Mr. President, we seven have come together today – and in a separate written joint statement – in order to draw the attention of the distinguished members of the UN Human Rights Council to the grave situation in West Papua.

Mr. President, specifically, we focus your attention on a number of recent pronouncements by mandate holders of this Council about serious Indonesian violations of the human rights of indigenous Papuans:

  • The recent joint letter issued by the UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression;
  • The Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and of association;
  • The Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples;
  • The Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions;
  • And the Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

We also draw attention to other accounts of Indonesian state violence in West Papua, including:

  • communications from the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, referring to killings and arrests of Papuans;
  • numerous well-documented reports of extrajudicial executions of activists and the arrests, beatings and fatal shootings of peaceful demonstrators, including high school students;
  • and reports of persistent violence against Papuan women.

We note that in the last fifteen years the Indonesian National Commission on Human Rights has collected evidence of gross human rights violations by Indonesian security forces in three principal areas of West Papua: Wasior, Wamena, and Paniai. The Commission has described the sets of cases in the first two places as crimes against humanity, which are punishable under Indonesian and international laws.

We want further to highlight another broad aspect of human rights violations – the Indonesian government policy over many decades and continuing until today of the migration of non-indigenous Papuans to West Papua, leading to a dramatic decline in the percentage of the indigenous Papuan population.

Mr. President, to date, the government of Indonesia has, however, not been able to curtail or halt these various and widespread violations. Neither has that government been able to deliver justice for the victims. Nor has there been any noticeable action to address these violations by the Indonesian government, which has, of course, immediate responsibility and primary accountability.

Furthermore, the Indonesian government has consistently been unable to submit the required periodic human right reports and reviews, which are an essential international norm by which the United Nations secretariat and member states monitor human rights around the world. These written assessments are critical to identifying and eradicating torture, racial discrimination and human rights violations generally.

Mr. President, in light of these violations and the Indonesian government’s inaction, we call on the UN Human Rights Council to request the High Commissioner for Human Rights to produce a consolidated report on the actual situation in West Papua.

The High Commissioner’s report needs to take account of the information in existing Treaties, Special Procedures, and the Universal Periodic Review, as well as reports from other international and regional organizations and non-governmental organizations.

The report should also detail the various rights under the International Bill of Human Rights and the related conventions, including the right to self-determination.

And the report must make recommendations for immediate action to halt the pattern of human rights violations as attested to by the numerous Special Procedures and other bodies noted earlier.

Finally, we ask for full and unreserved cooperation with the High Commissioner in the fulfilment of this mandate, including provision by Indonesian authorities of complete access to any persons in West Papua deemed appropriate to meet in the compilation of this report.

Mr. President, as I close, we believe that challenges of West Papua must be brought back to the agenda of the United Nations.

Thank you once again for the opportunity to express my views in this forum. Long God Yumi Stanap. In God we stand. Thank you.

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