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Subject: NEWS - Rights groups representing unions in 143 countries seek

Burma probe
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Rights groups representing unions in 143 countries seek Burma probe


The Nation - May 14, 1999

INTERNATIONAL labour and human rights groups have urged Southeast Asian
countries to discuss and look into ''systematic'' use of forced labour
in
Burma, the country chosen to host a two-day Asean labour meeting
beginning
today.

In a press statement, the Brussels-based International Confederation of
Free
Trade Unions (ICFTU) said it had early this month submitted to the
International Labour Organisation (ILO) a 15-page report, supplemented
by
900 pages of fresh evidence of forced labour in Burma.

The allegations, it said, were drawn from over 14 different sources,
including the United Nations as well as state and non-state agencies.
The
report ''strongly'' alleged the Burmese junta was continuing the use of
forced labour throughout the country, a practice ''which under
international
law is tantamount to slavery'', added the statement.

The ICFTU, whose allegations against Burma in 1995 later led to the
European
Union's cancellation of trade preferences for Burma's exports in 1997,
estimated that over 800,000 Burmese were still victims of forced labour.

Its latest report is designed to help the ILO ''assess what measures can
be
taken in order to force Burma's authorities'' to comply with
international
labour standards, said the statement.

The ILO's Commission of Inquiry, established in June 1996 after the
ICFTU
complaints, released its findings last August, accusing the Burmese
regime
of ''condoning crimes against humanity by resorting on a massive scale
to
forced labour in its running of the country's economy''. It found the
military government ''guilty of an international crime that is also, if
committed in a widespread or systematic manner, a crime against
humanity''.

In a similar criticism against the Burmese forced labour practices,
London-based Amnesty International has questioned Asean's decision to
hold
the labour meeting in ''a country where thousands of people are
routinely
seized and forced to work against their will, and trade unionists are
jailed''.

Similar to the calls by exiled Burmese dissidents, the labour and human
rights groups have urged Asean labour ministers to focus their talks on
the

junta's use of forced labour and repression of trade union rights.

The Asean meeting takes place less than 10 days before the ILO's
newly-appointed director general Juan Somavia is to report on the
Burmese
situation.

''That Asean labour ministers should even consider meeting on an equal
footing with Burma's generals in their bunker-like capital is an insult
to
the international community in general, and to the Burmese people in
particular,'' said ICFTU general secretary Bill Jordan in the statement.

''By allowing forced labour to continue unabated, Burma's military
clique
keeps seeing the country's entire population as a bottomless reservoir
of
free manpower and, in doing so, treats the ILO and its supervisory
bodies
with utter contempt.''

The latest report of the ICFTU, which groups 213 national trade unions
in
143 countries representing 124 million workers, provided, among other
things, first-hand accounts and eye-witness interviews of those who were
abused or witnessed the forced labour practices.

It also provided names of Burmese officers, their Army units, and the
patterns of their abuses against civilians of various ethnic
nationalities.

Amnesty International said that forced labour in Burma was not a new
phenomenon and that it had documented the practice for over 10 years.
''During the last seven years the scale of forced labour has increased
dramatically, involving hundreds of thousands of civilians, including
criminal and political prisoners.''

BY YINDEE LERTCHAROENCHOK