Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 June 2016
This article offers a critical analysis of the human rights system established by ASEAN. It first investigates concrete evidence of the system’s ineffectiveness by comparing the cases of Myanmar and Thailand, which illustrate ASEAN’s failure to address human rights violations both before and after the creation of the ASEAN system. It then examines the substantive and procedural limitations of the ASEAN human rights instruments and mechanisms. Specifically, while restrictions on rights and freedoms contained in the instruments undermine the universality of human rights, ASEAN’s mechanisms lack independence and offer only weak protection mandates to address rights violations. In addition, the absence of a judicial body to hear complaints and issue binding remedies makes the system incomplete. The article recommends the creation of an ASEAN court of human rights and suggests changes to the existing instruments and mechanisms that might accommodate the new court.
LLM (University of London); LLB (Vietnam National University); Bar Training (Vietnam Judicial Academy); Research Associate, Centre for Asian Legal Studies, National University of Singapore, Faculty of Law; With special thanks to Prof Andrew Harding, Dr Paul Gragl, Dr Tan Hsien-Li, and Dr Son Bui for their inspirational guidance; and Marie De Martino for her unconditional love and support.
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216. Ibid at 226.
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224. Ibid at 227.
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230. Ibid.
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233. Ibid at 163; African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights, “African Court in Brief”, online: African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights <http://en.african-court.org/index.php/about-us/court-in-brief>.
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236. Ibid at 227.
237. Ibid at 201.
238. Ibid at 188.
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241. Phan, A Selective Approach, supra note 13 at 200–201.
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