Indonesia parliament ratifies Asean charter
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
INDONESIA'S parliament yesterday ratified the Southeast Asian charter committing Asean member nations to promote democracy and human rights, clearing the way for its formal adoption before year's end.
The country was the last member of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations to ratify the charter, which also sets out rules, transforms Asean into a legal entity and envisages a single free trade area by 2015.
It is now expected to be formally adopted at the regional bloc's annual summit in Bangkok in December.
But opponents in Indonesia criticised it as a purely symbolic document with no power to bring real democratic reform to errant members like military-ruled Myanmar.
Lawmakers said they had ratified it with four key conditions which will be submitted for further discussion, aimed at strengthening the charter and setting serious consequences for rule-breakers.
"The charter is open to amendments in the future and we can always fine-tune them along the way," Foreign Minister Hasan Wirajuda said.
He said he hoped the charter would bring human rights improvements in rogue Asean states like Myanmar. "Once the charter is formed, we will see how serious Myanmar is in making its roadmap to democracy. We will see if it keeps to its promise," he said.
The charter will give the bloc, much maligned as a pointless talking shop, greater clout in international negotiations, but critics argue black sheep like Myanmar will continue to get away with gross human rights abuses.
Its proposed new rights body is toothless and the charter has no provision to sanction members such as Myanmar, where the junta has kept democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest for most of the past 18 years.
Myanmar ratified the charter amid much fanfare at an Asean ministerial conference in Singapore in July. The country's secretive junta is under European Union and US sanctions over its long record of human rights abuses.
Lawmaker Marzuki Darusman, who was on the committee that helped draft the ratification law, said Indonesia must show "solidarity" with other member states on the charter but it still wanted changes.AFP
The country was the last member of the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations to ratify the charter, which also sets out rules, transforms Asean into a legal entity and envisages a single free trade area by 2015.
It is now expected to be formally adopted at the regional bloc's annual summit in Bangkok in December.
But opponents in Indonesia criticised it as a purely symbolic document with no power to bring real democratic reform to errant members like military-ruled Myanmar.
Lawmakers said they had ratified it with four key conditions which will be submitted for further discussion, aimed at strengthening the charter and setting serious consequences for rule-breakers.
"The charter is open to amendments in the future and we can always fine-tune them along the way," Foreign Minister Hasan Wirajuda said.
He said he hoped the charter would bring human rights improvements in rogue Asean states like Myanmar. "Once the charter is formed, we will see how serious Myanmar is in making its roadmap to democracy. We will see if it keeps to its promise," he said.
The charter will give the bloc, much maligned as a pointless talking shop, greater clout in international negotiations, but critics argue black sheep like Myanmar will continue to get away with gross human rights abuses.
Its proposed new rights body is toothless and the charter has no provision to sanction members such as Myanmar, where the junta has kept democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest for most of the past 18 years.
Myanmar ratified the charter amid much fanfare at an Asean ministerial conference in Singapore in July. The country's secretive junta is under European Union and US sanctions over its long record of human rights abuses.
Lawmaker Marzuki Darusman, who was on the committee that helped draft the ratification law, said Indonesia must show "solidarity" with other member states on the charter but it still wanted changes.AFP


