|   September 17-20, 2014, Manila, Philippines 
            We, the  participants in the conference on “Sharing Best Practices in Advocating for  Legislation Against Enforced Disappearances” coming from organizations from  Argentina, Bangladesh, Belarus, Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala, Hong Kong,  India, Indonesia, Lebanon, Nepal, Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste and the  United States of America are convened in Manila, Philippines, the first and  only Asian country that has enacted a law against enforced disappearances, but  has not yet signed and ratified the International Convention for the Protection  of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. 
             Organized by the Asian Federation Against Involuntary  Disappearances (AFAD), this inter-regional conference, which aims to share best  practices in advocating legislation, has gone beyond sharing of experiences on  legislation. This sharing of experiences has transcended discussion on  legislation and comprehensively tackles the imperative for truth, justice, reparation,  memory and guarantees of non-repetition.  
              We highlighted the gains during the last years of struggle  against enforced disappearances. We emphasized that these are fruits of the  permanent work done by the families of the disappeared and their organizations,  of the national and international solidarity. We emphasized the peaceful  efforts in obtaining truth and finding disappeared loved ones in as much as we  give recognition to the importance of consistency and the love for the victims. 
             The search for the disappeared persons were committed in  the context of repression characterized by the cruelty and cowardice of public  agents, protected by guaranteed impunity and in official lies that denigrate  more its perpetrators rather than those who are affected. 
             We lament that until now, many states in the Asian region  are not yet parties to the Convention. This is ironic because Asia is the  continent that submitted the biggest number of enforced disappearances to the  United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances (UN  WGEID). States have to guarantee all of their citizens that they would never  again be vulnerable to violations of the right to life, to physical integrity  and should guarantee the access of victims and their families to justice and  adequate reparations.  
              We likewise declare that crimes against humanity such as  enforced disappearances should never be investigated and tried by military  tribunals.  
             In the course of our inter-change of experience, we reflected on the situations  of specific regions and particular countries. In the Asian context, the  Philippines is the example of a country that criminalizes enforced  disappearance through the R.A. 10353 or the Philippine Anti-Enforced  Disappearance Act of 2012. It has the record of being the first and only  country in the vast region of Asia. With the law’s Implementing Rules and  Regulations, the spirit and letter of the law has now to be fully implemented.  Yet, two years since the law has been signed, no case has been filed yet. With  the recent capture of retired General JovitoPalparan convicted for being the  mastermind of the disappearance of the two lady students of the University of  the Philippines and of many other cases that occurred during the Arroyo  administration, filing a case of enforced disappearance is imperative. 
             Bereft of strong human rights instruments for protection to  avail of, Asian human rights defenders especially in Southeast Asia push for a  strong mandate of the ASEAN Inter-governmental Commission on Human Rights (AICHR)  and demand them to particularly tackle cases of enforced disappearances, one of  which is the case of the disappearance of Lao development worker,  SombathSomphone. Yet the principle of non-interference is invoked by ASEAN  states when they are called upon to take positions on particular cases. If the  AICHR is to be true to its mandate, it should take positions on specific cases.  
             In Indonesia, thousands of enforced disappearances and  killings during the 1965 massacre remain unresolved, such as the cases during  the eve of the fall of Suharto. The assassination of the former AFAD  Chairperson, Munir, remains unresolved. The former government failed to fulfill  its promise to ratify the Convention. We join our sisters and brothers in  Indonesia to call on the new government to give utmost priority to justly  resolve past cases of human rights violations if it is to learn from its dark  history of dictatorship and move on to a genuinely democratic government.  
             Timor Leste, a new country which acquired its independence  only more than a decade ago, is stained by the blood of those who were killed  and disappeared during the Indonesian occupation. One third of its population  were killed and made to disappear and more than 4,000 children were forcibly  taken during the conflict and believed to have been brought to Indonesia and  whose identity has been changed, thus depriving these children of the knowledge  of their historical identity. The truth about what happened to them remains  unknown up to this day. To this end, the government must be serious to expedite  the establishment of the bilateral Commission on Disappeared Persons. A  breakthrough in this regard is important if Timor-Leste has move on as an  independent country, learning from its bloody history. 
             India, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh since long  have been on the pretext of countering insurgencies, subjugating people to  enforced disappearances and the work of human rights defenders in these  countries has been made difficult by the governments. The importance of  documentation was highlighted through the reports like “Alleged Perpetrators”  which was produced by APDP in Kashmir, which aims at focusing on the individual  culpability of the government forces responsible for enforced disappearances.  It was observed that till States do not relent impunity for the armed forces,  the campaign of naming and shaming the individual perpetrators would surely  create some kind of deterrence.  
             The case from Nepal of Colonel Kumar Lama, in which  Advocacy Forum has been successful in getting him arrested in the United  Kingdom under the principle of universal jurisdiction was discussed. It was  observed that this strategy of filing cases in different countries who have  laws allowing the universal jurisdiction and human rights violations should be  explored.  
            Our representative from the Asociacion Pro Busqueda de  Ninas y NinosDesaparecidos shared about the existence of the Inter-American  Court for Human Rights which made a sentence pronouncing the state of El  Salvador responsible for the disappearance of the Serrano-Cruz sisters. The  state complied with reparation measures, which include among others, a public  act of recognition of state responsibility, the publication of the sentence,  the proclamation of a Day dedicated to disappeared children, providing medical  and psychological attention to the families of the disappeared. Many other  cases in other parts of Latin America have been presented to the Inter-American  Court for Human Rights which brought concrete achievements to the victims and  their families.  
             The LigaGuatemalteca de Higiene Mental has been working on  the search for disappeared children during the last fifteen years. Despite  having absence of support of the government of Guatemala, more than 400  children who disappeared have been found and have been reunited with their  biological families. We call on the government to cooperate with the Liga in  this important effort as part of the dream to attain genuine and lasting peace. 
             We have shared about the situation in Argentina and Chile  which both experienced the dark years of dictatorship resulting in enforced  disappearances. Never during the time of dictatorship could the victims imagine  that one day, they would realize the end of the dark years of repression  resulting in series of actions to search for the disappeared, to prosecute the  perpetrators and to attend to the devastating consequences of enforced  disappearances. So impressive is the level of organization of families of the  disappeared and so commendable is their persistence that they are able to  attain concrete victories in court. In Chile, the downfall of Pinochet  manifests the triumph of good against evil – a clear indication that with  courage and determination, human rights violators shall have their day in  court. On the part of the Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo of Argentina, the  finding of the 115th grandchild and their consequent reunion with their  biological parents are sources of human gratification worth commendation by the  international community.  
              We have also learned about the situation in Belarus, the  only remaining dictatorship in Europe, a country where enforced disappearances  occurred from 1999 – 2000. Four famous politicians and public activists were  kidnapped by a “death squad.” The fate of the victims are unknown. Despite the  demand of international organizations and the decision of the UN Human Rights  Committee, the government did not investigate these cases properly.  
             The Euro-Mediterranean Federation of Families of the  Disappeared (FEMED) speaks of enforced disappearances in Morocco, Algeria,  Lebanon, Turkey and many other countries. In Libya, Syria and Iraq, enforced  disappearances are on-going in huge numbers. In Lebanon, many disappeared  persons are believed to be detained in Syrian prisons. In Turkey, enforced  disappearances are committed in the context of the Kurdish Party of Workers’  struggle for independence. In Morocco, despite the Equity and Reconciliation  Commission, dozens of families are still waiting for the truth of the  whereabouts of their disappeared loved ones. In Algeria, families continue the  struggle for the acknowledgement by the government of the issue of enforced  disappearance and for the establishment of the truth.  
             In our four-day conference, we shared and reflected on the  distinctness and the commonality of our situation and our response. In so  doing, we have identified lessons: 
             • We underscored the vital importance of documentation as  the most basic requirement in our search for truth and justice and in our  campaign to get the widest possible support in this difficult work; 
  • The importance of forming associations of families of the victims in the  struggle for justice and of ensuring that the struggle against disappearances  in whatever ways has to be owned by the families of the victims and the rest of  society;  
  • The work against enforced disappearances is jointly done by victims, lawyers  and other members of civil society; 
  • On the aspect of reparation, it is important to fully maximize existing forms  of reparation and not limit these to material and monetary aspects. Reparation  of dignity of the victims for a damage done because of human rights violation  is of paramount importance; 
  • Media and communication work are very important to disseminate information  and to make enforced disappearance a social concern; 
  • In view of the global character of the crime, international solidarity is  imperative to strengthen response. This will complement the work at the  national and regional levels; 
  • In Asia, the signing and the ratification of the Convention and the  recognition of the competence of the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances  should be given prime importance. 
             We conclude this four-day conference on the eve of the 41st  anniversary of the declaration of Martial Law in the Philippines with the hope  that like the dark days of the repressive regime are over, in the future, the  remaining repression and darkness would disappear.  
            Losing our hope is a bigger crime than the actual crimes  perpetrated against us. Therefore, in this conference, we resolve that we are  the agents of hope.  |