People have the right
to parade
By Tsai Chi-hsun 蔡季勳
At the end of November last year, Taiwan Association for Human Rights chairman
Lin Chia-fan (林佳範) was found not guilty in the court of first instance of
violating the Assembly and Parade Act (集會遊行法) in the first instance. In the
verdict, the judge conceded that this guarantee of peaceful assembly does apply
to Taiwan.
The judge cited the guarantee to the right of peaceful assembly stipulated in
Article 21 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
which, together with the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights (ICESCR), forms part of the International Bill of Human Rights. Taiwan
ratified both covenants earlier in the year.
At the same time, the Ministry of Justice was engaged in compiling its state
report on the ICCPR and the ICESCR following a government situational review,
conducted on Nov. 16 last year, of their implementation in Taiwan. This review
found that certain laws, including the Assembly and Parade Act, do in fact
conflict in part with the two covenants, and that the institutions concerned,
such as the ministry and the National Police Agency, had to conduct a more
in-depth review of the implications for the execution of that particular law.
On Dec. 10 — Human Rights Day — two years after the announcement of the Act to
Implement the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Presidential
Office issued a press release outlining current progress. According to the press
release, the majority of relevant legislation has either been amended or
submitted to the legislature, and that any conflicting clauses not yet amended
are to defer to the covenants, in line with the “last act” rule, by which the
most recent legislation takes precedence over older laws.
In other words, the highest administrative office in the land has already
publicly stated that, even though it is now too late to amend all the
legislation before the end of the current legislative session, any laws that
conflict with the covenants are already invalid, and that government departments
cannot use these outdated laws to infringe people’s human rights.
President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) claims he is prioritizing human rights, but are all
government departments throughout the country, at all levels, fully aware of
this? Apparently not. There is already a high degree of consensus among all
political parties that the Assembly and Parade Act, in its current form, should
be consigned to the dustbin of history. That notwithstanding, under the rather
schizophrenic government system that exists here, aspects of government policy
inconsistent with human rights’ promotion are reviewed while at the same time
legislation that is both flawed and outdated is being employed to intimidate
members of the public from exercising their basic human rights.
There are actual cases of this happening. On Dec. 23, people from Gangkou (港口),
an Amis Aboriginal village in Hualien County, staged a protest at the East Coast
National Scenic Area office. Not only did the Hualien County Police Bureau break
up the protest three times in the space of five minutes, they issued seven
people with citations the very next day, ordering them to appear in court for
violation of the Assembly and Parade Act. The Ministry of the Interior appears
to have completely disregarded the announcement made by Ma on Human Rights Day,
continuing to apply discredited legislation to deal with these “troublesome”
Aborigines and their attempts to claim their land back.
At the beginning of this article, it was stated that Lin was found not guilty of
violating the Assembly and Parade Act. Late last month, however, prosecutors
moved to take him to court once more for “masterminding” a protest outside the
Legislative Yuan in November 2008, which included a skit paying last respects to
this notorious Act. Different government departments always seem to be
contradicting themselves, enough to make one ask whether Ma’s words on Human
Rights Day were mere lip service, or whether government departments just
completely failed to take them in, preferring to do business as usual and
continuing to employ what are now illegal practices.
When leaders of democratic nations speak on important occasions such as Human
Rights Day, their words transcend party lines and government departments. They
set the direction in which human rights are to be taken. It may well be a case
of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted, but Ma should at least
now quickly set up a team tasked with requiring each government department to
furnish government departments and courts at all levels with a list of all laws
that conflict with the two covenants, and inform public servants that they can
no longer cite old laws to threaten the basic human rights of citizens.
In addition, reviews of similar cases should be suspended, pending legislative
amendments. For example, the government should identify all related cases
currently under investigation, being dealt with in the courts or under review
and inform police bureaus and local prosecutors offices around the country that
Article 29 of the current version of the Assembly and Parade Act is no longer
valid, and can no longer be used to deny the public its right of peaceful
assembly.
The fact that the Ma administration is not even willing to concede this one
point means that its ratification of the covenants has, right from the outset,
been its single most heinous betrayal of human rights during its four-year term.
Tsai Chi-hsun is secretary-general of the Taiwan Association for Human
Rights.
Translated by Paul Cooper
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