Japan: Increase your travel rights to Southeast Asia

Prime Minister Kishida must demand reforms in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam

The Prime Minister of Japan Fumio Kishida will hold a press conference on April 8, 2022 at the official residence of the Prime Minister of Japan in Tokyo.

(Tokyo) – Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida should urge the governments of Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam to improve human rights in the upcoming three countries, a human rights observer has said. Kishida will actually visit the country from late April to May 2022.
“Japan must help improve economic protection and improve human rights in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam through donor activities,” said Kanae Doi, Japan’s director of human rights. “The presence of Prime Minister Kishida should determine Japan’s conviction that human rights consensus should be extended to the public and private sectors and that the government should uphold its human rights commitments.”
In Indonesia, Kishida must demand that the government of President Joko Widodo fight Islamist politicians and anti-religious discrimination and degradation as a political weapon against religious minorities. The bill, which seeks to increase the number of blasphemies against God, emphasizes Kishida’s protection of the disease, which threatens freedom of religion, association and expression.
In February 2021, President Vido’s government attempted to impose hijab on state universities, but the Supreme Court overturned the system. Kishida Widodo needs to establish a new central system for the abolition of 60 local and national devices for the protection of women’s and girls’ rights. The Indonesian government must also end government discrimination against lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people (LGBT).
In Thailand, Prime Minister General Prayuth Chan-o-chad should be seriously concerned about the government, which is restricting fundamental rights, including freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, by arresting pro-democracy activists and anti-monarchists in Thailand. The Thai government has opposed political action and the use of force to suppress the anti-democratic struggle, which has led to the arbitrary use of state of emergency across the country and the use of the Kovid-19 plague as a pretext. Kishida opposes a law that severely restricts Thai freedom of expression by non-governmental organizations that support state protection, including groups funded by the Japanese government.

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Kishida’s actions in Thailand coincide with the 135th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. The close relationship between government, economy and socio-culture shows that it is impossible to return to business as a region between Tokyo and Bangkok without a genuine democratic rule of law and respect for human rights. Prayut must be pushed to stop the free expression of his views and the repression of demonstrations.
In Vietnam, Prime Minister Kishida must show that the Vietnamese government is actively concerned about the crackdown on human rights activists and bloggers. Vietnam sentenced at least 51 people to long prison terms between December 12, 2022 and April 2022 for exercising their fundamental right to freedom of expression and religion. Kishida should call for the immediate and unconditional release of political prisoners such as Pham Chi Dung, Nguyen Tuong Thui, Le Huu Min Tuan, Kang Thi Teu, Trin Ba Tu, Pham Chi Than, Pham Doan Trang, Trin Ba Phuong and Nguyen Thi Tam. , Do Nam Trun, Le Trong Hung, Le Van Dung.

Japan is Vietnam’s most important donor on both sides. Kishida must express to the public his concern that the Communist Party of Vietnam is banning the establishment and operation of any organization or group that threatens its monopoly power. He should demand that Vietnam respect freedom of expression online, ban access to websites, and pressure media and telecommunications companies to remove content they deem politically sensitive.
People who criticize one-party rule, including on social media, face police intimidation, harassment, restriction of movement, physical assault, arbitrary arrest, and detention. Police detain and interrogate political activists for months without legal advice; Party-controlled courts then convicted bloggers and activists on trumped-up charges of national security and sentenced them to long prison terms.
In February, Human Rights Watch released a report entitled “Locked in Our Home: Restrictions on Human Rights Movements in Vietnam,” detailing the Vietnamese government’s systematic and severe restrictions on freedom of movement between 2004 and 2021. Agents have barred eight pro-democracy activists from attending an event in Hanoi to show solidarity and support for Ukraine against Russian aggression.
Kishida should call on the public to release all those imprisoned for exercising their rights, such as criticizing the Vietnamese government, joining a rights group, and worshiping without the consent of the Communist Party.
“While Japan is proud to announce its commitment to human rights on the world stage, in reality, there is little pressure on Asian governments to improve their registration,” Doi said. “Prime Minister Kishida’s visit to Southeast Asia is an important opportunity to break Tokyo’s long-standing silence on violence abroad and instead lead the world on human rights.”

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