Threats to the Life of Pakistan Human Right Activist
COMMONWEALTH EMINENT PERSONS
GROUP
2010-2011
MEDIA
RELEASE
8th June 2012
Eminent Persons
Group Calls for Immediate Commonwealth Action on Threats to
the Life of Pakistan Human Right
Activist
Members of a Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group (EPG), that authored a report on reform of the Commonwealth, have called for immediate Commonwealth action in relation to threats against the life of Pakistani lawyer and human rights activist Asma Jahangir.
The EPG, of whom Jahangir was one, last year submitted the report A Commonwealth of the People: Time for Urgent Reform, to Commonwealth Heads of Government at their meeting in Perth last October. One of its key recommendations is that the Commonwealth should establish a Commissioner for Democracy, the Rule of Law and Human Rights.
Members of the group made their call for action in a letter to the Commonwealth Secretary-General, Kamalesh, Sharma and the Chairman of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG). The letter declares that the EPG members “are extremely troubled by the charges that Dr Jahangir has reliable information that her life is under threat from Pakistan’s security establishment”. They declared: “Given our knowledge of her and of her highly regarded work, we are confident that her charges would have been made only after the most careful consideration and in light of credible intelligence”.
The Group called on the Secretary-General "to request the Government of Pakistan to provide full protection for Dr Jahangir, and to launch an immediate and transparent inquiry into the threats directed at her”.
“We are sufficiently alarmed to suggest that you should appoint a ‘good offices’ representative to be engaged in this matter with the authorities in Pakistan to furnish both you and the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) with information” the Group said.
Copying
their letter to the Chair of CMAG, the EPG members asked
that CMAG take appropriate steps “to advise the Government
of Pakistan of the deep disquiet that this matter has
engendered”.
The letter was signed by Tun Abdullah
Ahmad Badawi, Dr. Emmanuel O. Akwetey, Ms Patricia Francis, Mr Samuel Kavuma,
The Hon Michael Kirby, Rt Hon Sir Malcolm Rifkind, Sir
Ronald Sanders, and Senator Hugh Segal.
Note to Editors: Profiles of the Eminent Persons Group is attached.
Profiles of
Eminent Persons Group (including Dr Asma
Jahangir)
Dr
Emmanuel O Akwetey is the founding Executive
Director of the Institute for Democratic Governance (IDEG),
one of Ghana’s leading research and advocacy organisations
established in 2000. He has for more than a decade
participated in and facilitated several local, national,
regional, continental and global forums on issues pertaining
to poverty and inequality, human and institutional capacity
development, and African political and economic integration.
Dr Akwetey has been widely consulted by the Government of
Ghana, the African Capacity Building Foundation (ACBF), the
Government of Liberia, UNDP and several bilateral donor
agencies. The political scientist has also collaborated with
the Commonwealth Foundation and the Parliament of Ghana in
its work with the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association's
Africa branch.
Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi –
Served as Chair of the Eminent Persons Group - is a
former Prime Minister of Malaysia. Previously he served as
minister of education, defence, foreign affairs, home
affairs, finance and deputy prime minister. In 2003 he
succeeded Mahathir Mohamad as Prime Minister of Malaysia,
building a progressive and modern multi-racial society as
well as promoting wide-range reform. During his career, he
attended Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings and
Commonwealth Foreign Ministers Meetings. He was a member of
the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group and earlier an
architect of the Commonwealth Youth Programme.
Patricia R. Francis joined the
International Trade Centre (ITC) as Executive Director in
June 2006. ITC is a joint agency of the United Nations and
the World Trade Organization that enables small business
export success in developing countries. During her tenure at
ITC she has implemented a change management strategy to
build common values and strengthen key management functions.
ITC has defined and restructured itself around five new
business lines, and extensive consultation has led to a
stronger strategic framework. Ms Francis went to ITC from
Jamaica Trade and Invest, where she served as president
since 1995. She served twice as President of the World
Association of Investment Promotion Agencies. She has
chaired the Organization of Economic Cooperation and
Development’s Caribbean Rim Investment Initiative, as well
as the China-Caribbean Business Council.
Dr Asma
Jilani Jahangir is a leading human rights lawyer,
and Chair of Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission. She is
known for her work in Pakistan and internationally to
prevent the persecution of religious minorities, women, and
exploitation of children. She is the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, at the UN Human
Rights Council. Previously, she served as the UN Special
Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Arbitrary and Summary
Executions. She is co-author of “Democracy in the
Commonwealth” (Commonwealth Policy Studies Unit &
ERIS report) and a board member of the International Crisis
Group. Dr Jahangir has gained international recognition for
her achievements. In 1995, she received the Martin Ennals
Award for Human Rights Defenders as well as the Ramon
Magsaysay Award for "greatness of spirit shown in service of
the people”.
Samuel Kavuma is the
interim Chairperson of the Commonwealth Youth Caucus. Mr
Kavuma has been a student leader in Uganda since 1997 at the
institution, district and national level. In 2004, he was
elected to the National Youth Council of Uganda and in 2007
he was elected to be the Regional Youth Caucus
representative. During this time, he was elected by other
country youth representatives to be the Regional
Coordinator/Chairperson for the Commonwealth African Region
Youth Caucus. Mr Kavuma has also worked as a youth worker
with Students Partnership Worldwide, Youth and Women
Initiative of Uganda, and the Africa Youth Trust; he has
also served as the Director of Uganda Youth Action for
Development.
The Hon Michael Kirby AC
CMG served as a Justice of the High Court of
Australia between 1996 and 2009. When he retired from the
Bench, he was Australia's longest serving judge. He also
served as President of the Court of Appeal of the Solomon
Islands 1995-6. He has held many international posts,
including as President of the International Commission of
Jurists 1995-8; UN Special Representative for Human Rights
in Cambodia 1993-6; and member of the UNESCO International
Bioethics Committee 1996-2005. He took part in the
Commonwealth Secretariat Conferences 1988-95 that
established the Bangalore Principles on domestic application
of international human rights law; was independent
co-chairman of the Malawi Constitutional Conference 1994;
and member of the International Labour Organization mission
to South Africa 1991-2. He is on the board of advisors for
The Law Reports of the Commonwealth and regularly
contributes to the Commonwealth Law Bulletin. In 2010, he
was named co-winner of the Gruber Justice
Prize.
Sir Malcolm Rifkind KCMG QC MP is
a British Conservative party politician. He was appointed a
Queen's Counsel in 1985. In 1974 he was elected as MP for
Pentlands and represented that constituency until 1997. In
1979, he was appointed a Parliamentary Under Secretary of
State, at first in the Scottish Office and then, he was
transferred to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, being
promoted to Minister of State in 1983. He became a member of
the Cabinet in 1986 as Secretary of State for Scotland. In
1990 he became Secretary of State for Transport and in 1992
Secretary of State for Defence. From 1995-97 he was
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs.
Sir Malcolm was re-elected as a Member of Parliament in
2005, and now Chairs an all-party Committee on security.
Sir Ronald Sanders KCMG served as
Rapporteur of the EPG. He is an international consultant,
writer, and former Caribbean senior diplomat. He served on
the Board of the International Programme for the Development
of Communications at UNESCO (1983-1985) and as an elected
member of the Executive Board of UNESCO (1985-1987). He was
one of three Commonwealth High Commissioners elected in 1985
to liaise with the UN Committee on countering Apartheid
propaganda; member of the Commonwealth Advisory Group on
Advancing the Small States Agenda, 2001; member of the
Advisory Board to World Bank/Commonwealth Secretariat Task
Force on Small States (2000-2003); Deputy Chairman and
Chairman of the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force
against Drug Trafficking and money laundering (2002-2004).
He is the author of several works on the Commonwealth
including “The Commonwealth as the Champion of Small
States” in The Contemporary Commonwealth:
An Assessment 1965-2009 (Routledge, London,
2009).
Senator Hugh Segal CM is
currently Canada’s representative for Commonwealth reform.
He joined the Canadian Senate in 2005, after four decades of
public service which included Chief of Staff to the Prime
Minister of Canada, Associate Cabinet Secretary (Ontario)
for Federal-Provincial Affairs and Policies and Priorities,
Legislative Assistant to the Leader of the Opposition
(Ottawa), and President of the independent Institute for
Research on Public Policy. Chair of the Special Senate
Committee on Anti-Terrorism, he is a former chair and
present member of the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs.
He headed a NATO parliamentary delegation to Washington and
is a former chair (Calgary 2004) of the annual Canada-UK
Colloquium. He is a Senior Fellow at the Queen’s Schools
of Policy Studies and Business, the Canadian Defence and
Foreign Affairs Institute and a member of the Working Group
on National Security at Cranfield University’s Centre for
Security Sector Management. He chaired the Canadian
Institute for Strategic Studies and was the founding
Vice-Chair (Research) of the Canadian International Council.
He sits on the Council of the International Institute for
Democratic and Electoral Assistance (Stockholm).