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Dear friends
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has learnt from the Burma Lawyers' Council (Thailand) that a 15-year-old boy was
sentenced to a juvenile detention facility after witnessing the
attack on the National League for Democracy at Depayin, on 30 May
2003. The boy, Maung Chan Thar Kyaw, who is now in a camp in Yangon
Division, was sentenced in violation of provisions of the
government's own Child Law. AHRC urges you to call for the release of
Maung Chan Thar Kyaw by writing letters to the senior legal officials
in the country and bringing the case to the attention of the
international community.Urgent Appeals DeskAsian Human Rights
Commission
DETAILED INFORMATION:
Maung Chan Thar Kyaw was a 15-year-old high school
student nearby whose place of residence in Monywa Township the attack
on the National League for Democracy by government-organised gangs
occurred on 30 May 2003. (For more details, see /article 2/, vol. 2,
no. 6, December 2003, www.article2.org) .
He was arrested by police on June 3 and accused of having thrown
rocks at police at the scene of the attack. He denied this, but was
charged and detained nonetheless. On July 7 the Monywa Township Court
found him guilty of obstructing the police and sentenced him to the
Nge Awsan Training School (detention centre) in Yangon Division. He
is to remain there until 4 October 2005, when he turns 18. After that
time he may be charged as an adult and transferred to a prison. The
court records reveal that Chan Thar Kyaw was sentenced in violation
of the government's own regulations under the Penal Code and the
Child Law. Among the violated provisions were the following:1.
Section 333/114 of the Penal Code under which he was tried applies
only to non-bailable offences, but under the Child Law children
cannot be held under detention while a trial is ongoing. Therefore,
Chan Thar Kyaw should not have been charged with this offence. 2.
Chan Thar Kyaw was kept in detention for the duration of the trial,
in violation of the Child Law. 3. Chan Thar Kyaw was given no counsel
and his parents were not permitted to assist him. He appeared on his
own, despite provisions in the Child Law requiring representation
unless the parents or guardian waive this right. 4. No witnesses were
called for Chan Thar Kyaw, although the judge has the power to call
them on his behalf even if he does not. By contrast, the prosecution
named 24 witnesses and called ten to the trial, being four police
officers, two Ward Peace and Development Council chairmen, and four
doctors who treated the police. The four doctors, however, were not
witnesses to the alleged event, but merely treated the injured
police. The Child Law was enacted in 1993 to bring Burma into
compliance with the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC),
which it acceded to in 1991. Under that law, the court may sentence a
child to a juvenile detention camp as a last resort, that is, if the
child has no parents or guardian or is otherwise of such bad
character that he cannot be cared for outside of a state facility.
Under any other circumstances, the judge may release the child with a
warning, and where appropriate, a fine, a good behaviour bond and if
necessary even a supervision order. In this case, the judge has
failed to meet any of the provisions for a juvenile trial under the
Child Law, and, without even consulting with the parents of the child
or other persons ready to speak on his behalf, handed down a maximum
sentence. To reach a decision on the child’s character, the judge
relied entirely on the depositions of the prosecution witnesses and a
report by a Juvenile Probation Officer. This act clearly violates
both domestic and international law, and it is a terrible irony that
a law introduced to ensure that international standards of justice be
applied in Burma is being used to take retribution on an innocent
bystander to a state-orchestrated massacre.
SUGGESTED ACTION:
Please
write to the Attorney General to demand the release of Chan Thar
Kyaw. A suggested letter follows. Please note that for the purposes
of this letter, the country should be referred to as Myanmar, rather
than Burma.
*Sample letter:
*Dr. Tun Shin
Director
General Office of the Attorney Genera
l101 Pansodan Street Kyauktada TownshipYangon
MYANMAR
Fax: + 95 1 282 449
Dear Attorney General
*Re: Case of Maung Chan Thar Kyaw (Case No. 4518/2003)
*I am deeply concerned by reports
that the Monywa Township Court has sentenced a minor to a juvenile
training camp in violation of the provisions of the Child Law (1993,
amended 2001). The child concerned, Maung Chan Thar Kyaw, was a
15-year-old high school student at time of sentencing on 7 July 2003,
and was ordered to go into the custody of the Chan Awsan Training
School, Yangon Division, until 4 October 2005, when he will become an
adult. The procedure and sentencing of the Monywa Township Court
violate many provisions of the Child Law, of which the presiding
judge appears to be almost entirely ignorant. In particular, the
following provisions were violated.1. Under section 41(c) the accused
should have been released into the custody of his parents or other
suitable persons during the trial, but he was kept under detention.
Additionally, he was charged under section 333/114 of the Penal Code,
which applies only to non-bailable offences, and therefore should not
have applied in this case. 2. Under section 42(c) the accused should
have had legal counsel unless his parents waived this right, however
in this case the accused was given no assistance by the court, and
nor were his parents permitted to assist him. He appeared before the
court alone. 3. As the accused lacked legal counsel, no witnesses
were called on his behalf, although it is within the powers of the
judge to take steps to do so, in order to ensure fair trial. 4. The
accused was committed to the custody of the training school under
section 47(d) of the Child Law, however this provision is a last
resort for children without parents or guardians, or who are
otherwise of such bad character that no alternative exists. A number
of lesser sanctions are outlined in section 47 (a)(b)(c), however the
judge sentenced the accused without due consideration of these and
without consulting with the child's parents or others appearing on
his behalf. Clearly, the proceedings of this trial violated not only
national law, but also the Convention on the Rights of the Child,
which Myanmar acceded to in 1991, and in relation to which the Child
Law was subsequently enacted. It is not enough to enact a law and
expect that it will bring the country into compliance with
international law. The provisions of the law must be applied. In the
case of Maung Chan Thar Kyaw they most certainly have not. I
therefore urge you to use your powers call for a review of this case
and see to it that the accused is released from detention and his
record cleared without delay. I also urge you to take steps to ensure
that the Child Law is applied and cases such as this do not continue
to occur in Myanmar.
Yours sincerely
PLEASE SEND COPIES TO:
1. General Khin Nyunt
Prime Ministerc/o Ministry of Defence
Signal Pagoda RoadYangon
MYANMARFax: + 95 1 652 624
2. Colonel Tin Hlaing
Chairman Myanmar Human Rights Committee c/o Ministry of Home
Affairs Corner of Saya San Street and No 1 Industrial Street, Yankin
Township Yangon MYANMAR
3. Ms. Manuela Carmema CastrilloWorking Group
on arbitrary detentionC/o OHCHR-UNOG, 1211 Geneva 10SWITZERLANDFax:
+41 22 917 90064.
4. Mr. Paulo Sergio PineheiroSpecial Rapporteur on the
situation of human rights in Myanmarc/o Ms. Hulan Tsedev Room
3-090Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights,Palais Wilson, Rue des Paquis 52, GenevaSWITZERLANDFax: + 41
22 9179 018 email: htsedev.hchr@unog.ch
5. Mr. Leandro Despouy Special Rapporteur on the independence of
judges and lawyers Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human RightsPalais Wilson, Rue des Paquis 52, GenevaSWITZERLAND Tel:
+41 22 9179130 Fax: +41 22 9179006
Thank you.Urgent Appeals DeskAsian Human Rights Commission (AHRC)
Posted on 2004-02-25
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