We
have brought several situations of State terrorism to the Commission for many
years, especially that of India in Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir and that
of China against political reformists, Falun Gong practitioners and ethnic nationalities
such as the Tibetans and Uighurs. While the Kashmir situation is now subject
to some bi-lateral talks between Pakistan and India, we remind the international
community that this is not a bi-lateral issue but, according to the Security
Council, an issue for the Kashmiri people alone to decide through a UN- administered
plebiscite. Bi-lateral discussions should be focused on how to establish the
necessary conditions for that plebiscite - not on a "negotiated" bilateral
agreement on the final disposition of Kashmir. The Kashmiri people own the right
to self-determination, not either interested government.
In China, State terrorism directed at Falun Gong practitioners continues unabated, despite the reporting of it by virtually every procedure under this agenda item. Indeed, the Falun Gong cases have swamped the UN procedures, leading us to ask why the Commission still will not address this issue or the other compelling issues involving China. Surely the failure of the Commission to address China brings the forum into ridicule, especially with the preoccupation of one State on Cuba. That State's focus guarantees that there will be no Commission action on China.
State and State-sponsored terrorism is also a feature in Indonesia, where the Laskar Jihad has terrorized the people of the Moluccas with the apparent full blessing of the government, that itself has directly terrorized the Moluccan people for many years. This situation will not be permanently resolved until the Moluccan people fully exercise the rights, including the right to choose independence, granted then in the UN indorsed Round Table Conference Agreements.
The failure of the Commission responsibly to address these State-terrorism
issues means that the Commission is not really serious about the support for
the democratic process and remedies for State terrorism but rather in the political
expediency of a only a few States.