PH ACTING UNDERSECRETARY AND ASEAN SENIOR OFFICIAL MEETING LEADER LAZARO RECEIVES SPECIAL ENVOY OF BRAZIL TO ASEAN TARRAG?

PASAY CITY 25 July 2022 — Undersecretary and ASEAN Senior Official Meeting (SOM) Leader Ma. Theresa P. Lazaro welcomed the Special Envoy of Brazil to ASEAN Piragibe S. Tarrag?, and his delegation at the Department of Foreign Affairs on 19 July 2022.

Undersecretary Lazaro conveyed the Philippines’ support for Brazil’s application for Sectoral Dialogue Partnership, which will be subject to further deliberation by the ASEAN Member States. Ambassador Tarrag? noted that Brazil was the first Latin American country to sign the Treaty of Amity and Cooperation (TAC) with ASEAN in 2012. He underscored Brazil’s strong interest in deepening its engagement with ASEAN and its member states to advance mutually beneficial cooperation.

The Undersecretary noted Brazil’s expertise in areas which could help facilitate ASEAN’s community-building and post-pandemic recovery efforts, especially in universal health care, forest management and conservation, agriculture, digital transformation and defense, among others. She conveyed the Philippines’ priority areas of cooperation within the ASEAN structure, in particular, support for micro, medium and small-scale enterprises (MSMEs), people-to-people exchanges, diplomatic training and wildlife conservation.

Undersecretary Lazaro also encouraged Brazil to support the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity (ACB) in light of Brazil’s extensive activities and experience in forest and biodiversity preservation in the Amazon basin. The ACB, based in Los Baños, Laguna, is ASEAN’s lead institution in biodiversity promotion. One of its flagship projects is the management of fifty (50) ASEAN Heritage Parks (AHP) located across all ten ASEAN Member States. AHPs are protected national parks and nature reserves of high conservation importance which aim to preserve the complete spectrum of representative ecosystems in the ASEAN region.

Source: Republic of Philippines Department Of Foreign Affairs

In rare rebuke, ASEAN scorches Myanmar for ‘highly reprehensible’ executions

ASEAN on Tuesday issued its harshest criticism of the Burmese junta yet, calling Myanmar’s execution of four political prisoners “highly reprehensible” and saying it displayed “a gross lack of will” to return the member-state to normalcy.

Malaysia, an outspoken member of the Southeast Asian bloc, separately called their killings a “crime against humanity.” The top Malaysian diplomat said “no Myanmar military regime representative” should be allowed at any meeting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, including the next ASEAN foreign ministers’ gathering, scheduled for Aug. 3.

This was a rare rebuke of one of the members of the 55-year-old bloc, which operates mostly on consensus, as ASEAN and member-state governments joined a global chorus of condemnation over the executions of the four by the junta. Its forces have also killed more than 2,000 people since the generals seized power by toppling an elected government last year.

The executions have caused ASEAN to distrust Myanmar, said Indonesia – next year’s chair of the 10-nation bloc – with Indonesian human rights representative Yuyun Wahyuningrum wondering whether the renegade member’s standing in the regional bloc was now shaky.

Cambodia, the 2022 holder of the ASEAN chair, said it was “strongly disappointed” that the executions took place despite appeals from Cambodian leader Hun Sen. The first judicial executions in Myanmar since 1976 came despite a direct appeal on June 11 by Hun Sen to Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, the junta leader.

“While the complexity of the crisis is well recognized and the extreme bellicose mood can be felt from all corners of Myanmar, ASEAN as a whole has called for utmost restraint, patience and efforts to avoid escalating the situation,” Cambodia said in a statement as ASEAN chair.

“The implementation of the death sentences, just a week before the 55th ASEAN Ministerial Meeting is highly reprehensible as it created a setback to and present[s] a gross lack of will to support the efforts, particularly by the ASEAN Chair, in expediting progress on the implementation of the Five-Point Consensus (5PC), namely in building trust and confidence to engender a dialogue among all parties concerned, in order to end violence and alleviate the suffering of the innocent people.”

The statement reiterated ASEAN’s commitment to the 5PC and urged the junta to “take concrete actions” to implement it.

The junta has reneged on a five-point consensus it agreed to with ASEAN in April 2021 to put the country back on the path to democracy. The consensus called for an end to violence; constructive dialogue among all parties; the mediation of such talks by a special ASEAN envoy; the provision of ASEAN-coordinated humanitarian assistance and a visit to Myanmar by an ASEAN delegation to meet with all parties.

The Burmese junta put to death veteran democracy activist Ko Jimmy (whose real name is Kyaw Min Yu), former National League for Democracy lawmaker Phyo Zeya Thaw, as well as activists Hla Myo Aung and Aung Thura Zaw, likely on Saturday, but announced their executions at the gallows on Monday.

A military court had convicted them over “terrorist” acts and they lost appeals against their death sentences. The junta had also rejected the possibility of a pardon for the condemned men.

It seems that the Myanmar junta “is making a mockery of the five-point consensus,” Malaysian Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah said during a joint press conference with Noeleen Heyzer, United Nations special envoy on Myanmar, after they met in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday.

“I believe the foreign ministers when we meet in Phnom Penh on Aug.3 will look into this,” he told reporters.

“Myanmar should not be invited to send political representation to all ministerial level meetings. This is to show that we are very serious on the issue of political representation. “

‘A direct rebuke’ of ASEAN

Indonesia, too, indicated that the Southeast Asian bloc could no longer carry on with business as usual.

“With these executions, ASEAN is increasingly distrusting Myanmar. Does Myanmar have good intentions to implement the consensus?” Yuyun Wahyuningrum, representative of Indonesia to the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights, told BenarNews, an RFA-affiliated news service.

“Will there be more serious implications in ASEAN for Myanmar or not?”

During a press briefing in Washington on Monday, Ned Price, spokesman for the U.S. State Department, which had pressed ASEAN to take action the Burmese regime, characterized the executions as a “direct rebuke” of appeals made by regional bloc and others.

Elsewhere, a Cambodian academic concurred with Washington’s views.

“The execution of the four Burmese political prisoners reflects that the junta government does not respect … and give value to Cambodia’s ASEAN chair, who has urged them not to execute political prisoners,” Van Bunna, a research fellow at the Cambodian Center for Cooperation and Peace, told Radio Free Asia (RFA), an online news service affiliated with BenarNews.

“It also reflects that the junta government does not care about the ASEAN’s 5-point consensus. The execution sentence also proves that the junta government does not care what the international community says about them,” Van Bunna added.

Meanwhile in Thailand, some 500 young Thai and Burmese protestors rallied outside the Myanmar Embassy in Bangkok to vent their anger over the executions. They waved Myanmar flags and banners, and chanted slogans against Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing.

One of the protesters, Saw Kyaw Aie Paing, 19, had fled Myanmar with her mother after the coup in February 2021.

She said she wanted the world community to stand with the people of Myanmar and give them humanitarian aid. She also urged the Thai government not to deal with the Burmese junta.

In a statement about the executions, the Thai government, via its foreign ministry, said it was “profoundly concerned about such and other developments that could foreclose all efforts towards achieving peace.”

“We regret so deeply the loss of four lives which aggravates the vexing problems of Myanmar. Use of force, cruelty and violence could never settle political differences,” Tanee Sangrat, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said in the statement on Tuesday.

“The use of force, cruelty and violence could never settle political differences. We call upon all parties to the conflict to seek, with all their might, a durable political resolution so no more lives would be wasted, and the people of Myanmar’s rights to live in peace are respected.”

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AICHR PH REPRESENTATIVE MENIOLA-RAU MODERATES SESSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS DUE DILIGENCE IN ASEAN, ECHOES NEED FOR COLLABORATION IN BUSINESS AND HUMAN RIGHTS

PASAY CITY, 26 July 2022 – Philippine Representative to the ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR) and Deputy Assistant Secretary Aileen S. Mendiola-Rau moderated a session on best practices and challenges in implementing human rights due diligence (HRDD) in ASEAN during the “AICHR Regional Dialogue: Sharing Good Practices on Business and Human Rights and Recovery from COVID-19 in ASEAN” on 20 July 2022 held via videoconference.

During the session, Deputy Assistant Secretary Aileen S. Mendiola-Rau echoed local and regional experiences in monitoring the implementation of UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGP) in the region. She also emphasized that collaboration between the State, community, and business sector should resonate to all.

“Although there is no “one-size-fits-all” in HRDD, what does fit all is the moral value of human rights. It is an overarching concept that we just have to break down to actionable levels for different sectors,” said Deputy Assistat Secretary Mendiola-Rau.

Speakers during the session, likewise, shared the importance of developing partnership with the businesses to build their commitments in ending exploitations. They gave emphasis on remedy and gender equality as well as in stressing labor issues within the supply chain as part of the region’s efforts to build back better from the COVID-19 pandemic. Global Mandatory Due Diligence Frameworks from other countries and regions were also cited as a way on how the business sector should view human rights.

Organized by AICHR Thailand, the Dialogue served as a platform to exchange views on how the different sectoral bodies in the region contributed to the implementation of the UNGP. The recommendations and outcomes of the Dialogue will be further discussed by AICHR during its forthcoming meeting in August 2022.

Source: Republic of Philippines Department Of Foreign Affairs