EU should support human rights progress in Bangladesh: Claudio Francavilla
UNB
Publish: 02 Sep 2024, 03:23 PM
Dhaka,
Sept 2 (UNB) - The European Union (EU) can help the Bangladeshi people
consolidate the human rights gains they have fought so hard for, and lay the
foundations for further progress and reforms in the future, said the Human
Rights Watch (HRW).
"The Bangladeshi
people have shown enormous courage over the past few months, paying a very high
price to secure an opportunity for democratic transition and progress on human
rights," said Associate Director (EU Advocacy) Claudio Francavilla.
In an article published
by New York-based rights body on Monday, he said the European Union should
stand by their side and take concrete actions to support them.
Claudio said the
authoritarian rule of Sheikh Hasina's government ended when she resigned and
left the country, following weeks of protest.
Hundreds were killed and
thousands more injured, in what were among the deadliest crackdowns on protests
in Bangladesh's recent history, he said.
Nobel Prize laureate
Prof Mohammed Yunus, who replaces Hasina as interim prime minister, took some
positive steps and has committed to enacting reforms and ensuring justice for
the abuses. "But his ability to deliver on those pledges will rely on
support from Bangladesh's international partners."
Bangladesh is the main
beneficiary of the EU's Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme, enjoying lucrative
tariff-free exports to the EU conditioned on respect for human rights and good
governance.
Claudio said Hasina's
intensifying authoritarianism was in clear breach of those conditions,
including the most recent deadly repression, the violent crackdown ahead of the
controversial January elections, and other abuses. Yet those responsible faced
no consequences.
"To support
Bangladesh's transition, the EU should take a different approach," he
said.
As a first step, Claudio
said, it should back action at the upcoming session of the UN Human Rights
Council to investigate and pursue accountability for recent grave abuses, and
secure UN monitoring and reporting on the situation in the country.
Secondly, he said, the
EU should urge Bangladesh authorities to disband the notorious Rapid Action
Battalion (RAB), a security force responsible for extrajudicial killings and
enforced disappearances, which was also among the forces deployed during the
recent brutal crackdown on protests.
"That call should
be accompanied by the adoption of EU targeted sanctions against the RAB, which
has been under US sanctions since 2021," Claudio said.
Finally, he said, the EU
should, in the context of EBA negotiations, agree with Bangladeshi authorities'
public benchmarks for the protection of human rights, including the release of
all those unjustly jailed and disappeared, security sector reform and
accountability, and other reforms to strengthen independent institutions and
respect for human rights.
END/UNB/MK/FH/1310 Hrs