Monday, July 30, 2012

BURMA: Police cover up abuse and murder of child domestic worker

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME


Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-136-2012

30 July 2012
---------------------------------------------------------------------
BURMA: Police cover up abuse and murder of child domestic worker

ISSUES: Administration of justice; police negligence; violence against women
---------------------------------------------------------------------
AHRC WEBSITE: BURMA PAGE

http://www.humanrights.asia/countries/burma
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has obtained information about the case of a child worker whose killing by her employer in the middle of Rangoon the police have covered up. Ten-year-old Ma Thin Thin Myat's employers subjected her to constant abuse and forced her to work like a slave before one of them allegedly pushed her out of a sixth floor window. Afterwards, the police failed to investigate and the family had to pursue the case themselves. When they succeeded in getting some charges into court, the police and employer coerced a witness to change her testimony. The courts also refused to alter the charges against the accused to make them responsible for the girls death, and have dragged their heels on the case, which has been going on for over 18 months without any resolution to date.

CASE NARRATIVE:

Ma Thin Thin Myat began working in the apartment of U Hashin and Daw Baby in 2009 on payment to her father of the equivalent of around USD10, when she was just seven years old. The couple confined her in the apartment. Due to constant abuse that she suffered, she fled from the household four times previously, but on each occasion Daw Baby brought her back. The forms of abuse had included pulling of hair, beatings and kicking.

At 8.15am on 18 November 2010 Thin Thin Myat fell from the balcony of the sixth-floor apartment. She did not immediately die from her injuries but lay crying out on the sidewalk at the front of an adjacent teashop, where there were witnesses to her fall. Her employers then came downstairs and instead of sending her immediately to hospital, incredibly, they carried her back upstairs and into the apartment. Not until after 4pm on the same day did police together with the employers convey Thin Thin Myat to the Yangon General Hospital, where she was admitted to the cranial and spinal unit.

When hospital staff conducted a medical investigation of Thin Thin Myat they found not only that she had suffered injuries from her fall but also had other injuries corresponding to the allegations of her abuse at the house, including bruising to her genitalia, suggesting that the girl had been sexually abused.

When the aunt of the victim went to the police to open a case against the employers, the police said that she had to lodge it in court directly. The aunt then opened a case at court for the causing of hurt and unlawful confinement prior to Thin Thin Myat's fall from the apartment. At this time, the girl had not yet died but was in a critical condition in hospital.

The girl twice regained consciousness in hospital in the presence of her mother, aunt and other relatives and when asked if she had jumped or had fallen she said that U Hashin pushed her from a chair. Thereafter, she died on 2 January 2011.

Instead of arresting the employers of Thin Thin Myat for her murder, police threatened another girl working in slave-like conditions at the apartment. In her initial testimony, the girl said that on the day of the incident when she heard Thin Thin Myat's cries she looked towards the front of the apartment and saw U Hashin coming back inside from the balcony, and going into his bedroom. She went to the balcony and saw Thin Thin Myat crying out from the street below. She then ran to the bedroom door and hammered on it to have the employer come out.

She said that later in the day the employers took her to Hashin's mother's house and that after going to the hospital he came and claimed that he had brought her there so that "the police will not arrest you" and that he had paid the police to protect her, but that if she did not say as he told her then he would arrange for the police to arrest her instead. She also confirmed that both she and Thin Thin Myat had been beaten and sworn at by their employers, "sometimes a little, sometimes a lot". However, under threats from the employers and police she later retracted her testimony.

The aunt of the deceased girl lodged a case in the district court to have the charges against the two accused altered so that they would be held responsible for her death, but after a cursory examination of the case records a higher court refused her request. Subsequently, it has not yet sent the case files back to the lower court, and the examination of the case has been unable to proceed.

Additional details of the case are found in the sample letter below.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

This case is by no means isolated. All across Myanmar, children like Ma Thin Thin Myat are daily forced into modern forms of slavery: jobs for which they are paid insignificant amounts of money and are constantly subjected to heinous forms of abuse. The employers are often influential people with money and means to manipulate local authorities' behaviour and prevent any effective investigations of their crimes. Therefore, it is important that an example be set in this case so that other perpetrators of similar forms of abuse be made to understand that they can indeed be held to account for their crimes, in order that the incidence of such crimes be reduced as quickly as possible.

To browse hundreds of other Burma-related appeals issued by the AHRC, go to the appeals homepage and type "Burma" or "Myanmar" into the search box http://www.ahrchk.net/ua/.

The AHRC Burmese-language blog is updated constantly for Burmese-language readers, and covers the contents of urgent appeal cases, related news, and special analysis pieces.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please write to the persons listed below to call for the investigation and prosecution of Ma Thin Thin Myat's employers, and for action to be taken against the police who conspired with them to cover up her killing. Please note that for the purposes of the letter Burma is referred to by its official name, Myanmar, and Rangoon, Yangon.

Please be informed that the AHRC is writing separate letters to the UN Special Rapporteurs on Myanmar; violence against women; contemporary forms of slavery, and on the sale of children, and the regional human rights office for Southeast Asia calling for interventions into this case.

SAMPLE LETTER:

Dear ___________,

MYANMAR: Police protect employer from charges of killing of child domestic worker

Details of victim: Ma Thin Thin Myat, 10, working in house of U Hashin and Daw Baby, Kyauktada Township, Yangon, at time of death in 2010

Details of alleged perpetrators:

1. U Hashin, alias U Myat Soe, and Daw Baby, residing at 6th floor, No. 233, 35th Street, Kyauktada Township, Yangon

2. Police Sergeant Tin Yu (Crime), Serial No. La/72104, and other officers of the Kyauktada Police Station, Yangon

Date of incident: 18 November 2010

Details of court cases:

1. Criminal Case No. 385/2010, Kyauktada Township Court, brought by the aunt of the victim, Daw Saw Thein, under sections 323/341 of the Penal Code, for causing hurt and unlawful confinement (trial ongoing)

2. Criminal Revision Case No. 259/2011, Yangon Western District Court, to request revision of charges (application rejected)

I am shocked to hear that the employers of a child domestic worker in Myanmar have escaped responsibility for her death, which was witnessed by many persons, due to the protection afforded them by officers of the Myanmar Police Force. I call for immediate action by the relevant authorities at higher levels to have action taken against them in accordance with law.

According to the information that I have received, Ma Thin Thin Myat began working in the apartment of U Hashin and Daw Baby in 2009 on payment to her father of 10,000 Kyat (around USD10), when she was just seven years old. The couple confined her in the apartment. Due to constant abuse that she suffered at their hands, she fled from the household four times previously, but on each occasion Daw Baby brought her back. The forms of abuse had included pulling of hair, beatings and kicking.

At 8.15am on 18 November 2010 Thin Thin Myat fell from the balcony of the sixth-floor apartment. She did not immediately die from her injuries but lay crying out on the sidewalk at the front of an adjacent teashop, where there were witnesses to her fall. Her employers then came downstairs and instead of sending her immediately to hospital, incredibly, they carried her back upstairs and into the apartment. Not until after 4pm on the same day did police together with the employers convey Thin Thin Myat to the Yangon General Hospital, where she was admitted to the cranial and spinal unit.

When hospital staff conducted a medical investigation of Thin Thin Myat they found not only that she had suffered injuries from her fall but also had other injuries corresponding to the allegations of her abuse at the house, including bruising to her genitalia, suggesting that the girl had been sexually abused.

When the aunt of the victim went to the Kyauktada Police Station to open a case against the employers, Police Sgt. Tin Yu recorded her complaint but the police said that it was not a police cognizable case under the Criminal Procedure Code, meaning that the complainant had to open it at the township court directly. The aunt then opened a case at court for the causing of hurt and unlawful confinement prior to Thin Thin Myat's fall from the apartment. At this time, she had not yet died but was in a critical condition in hospital.

According to the lower court record, the employers had told Thin Thin Myat's mother only around the middle of November 19 that the girl had fallen by accident and that they would have her treated so long as she did not tell anyone. Her mother said that the following day in the presence of her and other relatives the girl regained consciousness and that when she asked, "Daughter, what happened, did you jump?" Thin Thin Myat replied that, "I didn't jump, U Hashin pushed me."

Furthermore, Thin Thin Myat's grandfather testified that on November 24 the girl again temporarily regained consciousness when he was present and he asked her if she remembered who he was and what her father's name was. When she answered correctly and consciously, he asked her if she jumped from the sixth floor and she replied that she had been pushed from a chair. She died on 2 January 2011.

Instead of arresting the employers of Thin Thin Myat for her murder, police officers from Kyauktada Police Station started to come repeatedly to the residence of another domestic worker, a 13-year-old girl who had been in the house with Thin Thin Myat, to interrogate her and tutor her on how to testify so as to protect the perpetrators.

That girl first testified that on the day of the incident when she heard Thin Thin Myat's cries she looked towards the front of the apartment and saw U Hashin coming back inside from the balcony, and going into his bedroom. She went to the balcony and saw Thin Thin Myat crying out from the street below. She then ran to the bedroom door and hammered on it to have the employer come out.

She said that later in the day the employers took her to Hashin's mother's house and that after going to the hospital he came and claimed that he had brought her there so that "the police will not arrest you" and that he had paid the police 30,000 Kyat to protect her, but that if she did not say as he told her then he would arrange for the police to arrest her instead. She also confirmed that both she and Thin Thin Myat had been beaten and sworn at by their employers, "sometimes a little, sometimes a lot".

However, under threats from the employers and police she later reversed her testimony and said that Thin Thin Myat had fallen of her own accord and that she had given her previous testimony because the family of the victim had told her to testify like that. This assertion is preposterous, because the victim's family members are poor townsfolk with no knowledge of law, authority or money with which to influence her testimony, whereas all of these resources are on the side of the defendants and the police who are protecting them.

After Thin Thin Myat died, her aunt lodged a case in the district court for revision of the charges against the accused, to hold them responsible for her death; however, after cursory examination of the lower court records, the district court judge refused the application to revise the charges. Since rejecting the application, the case files have not yet been sent back to the township court, and so not only have the relatives of the young victim been frustrated in their efforts to get appropriate charges brought against her, but also the trial on the non-commensurate charges also has been delayed. These features of the case cause genuine concerns that not only the police but also members of the judiciary are colluding, perhaps on payment of money, to ensure that the perpetrators of this crime escape responsibility for their actions.

In view of the above, I call for a reopening of the investigation into the death of Ma Thin Thin Myat by a special investigation team from the Yangon region police headquarters or Criminal Investigation Department in order that the true facts of the case be brought out and the persons responsible for her abuse and death be prosecuted and punished in accordance with the law. I also call for a special investigation into the police officers involved in covering up the facts of the case, to establish the reasons that they failed to perform their duties as required and to take appropriate action against them once those facts also are revealed.

I am aware that this case is by no means isolated. All across Myanmar, children of tender ages like Ma Thin Thin Myat are daily forced into what are correctly described as "modern forms of slavery": jobs for which they are paid insignificant amounts of money and are constantly subjected to heinous forms of abuse. I am also aware that the persons responsible for these modern forms of slavery are invariably influential people with money and means to manipulate local authorities' behaviour and prevent any effective investigations of their crimes. Therefore, it is of the utmost importance that an example be set in this case so that other perpetrators of similar forms of abuse be made to understand that they can indeed be held to account for their crimes, in order that the incidence of such crimes be reduced as quickly as possible.

Yours sincerely,
----------------

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

1. U Hla Min

Minister for Home Affairs

Ministry of Home Affairs

Office No. 10

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR

Tel: +95 67 412 079/ 549 393/ 549 663

Fax: +95 67 412 439


2. U Thein Sein

President of Myanmar

President Office

Office No.18

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR


3. U Tun Tun Oo

Chief Justice

Office of the Supreme Court

Office No. 24

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR

Tel: + 95 67 404 080/ 071/ 078/ 067 or + 95 1 372 145

Fax: + 95 67 404 059


4. Dr. Tun Shin

Attorney General

Office of the Attorney General

Office No. 25

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR

Tel: +95 67 404 088/ 090/ 092/ 094/ 097

Fax: +95 67 404 146/ 106


5. U Kyaw Kyaw Htun

Director General

Myanmar Police Force

Ministry of Home Affairs

Office No. 10

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR

Tel: +95 67 412 079/ 549 393/ 549 663

Fax: +951 549 663 / 549 208


6.Thura U Aung Ko

Chairman

Pyithu Hluttaw Judicial and legislative Committee

Pythu Hluttaw Office

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR.


7.U Aung Nyain

Chairman

Pyithu Hluttaw Judicial and Legislative Committee

Committee for Public complain and appeals

Office of Amyotha Hluttaw

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR


8. U Win Mra

Chairman

Myanmar National Human Rights Commission

27 Pyay Road

Hlaing Township

Yangon

MYANMAR

Tel: +95-1-659668

Fax: +95-1-659668


9. Ko Ko Hlaing

Chief Political Advisor

Office of the President

Naypyitaw

MYANMAR

Tel-+951532501ext-605

Fax-+951 532500


Thank you.


Urgent Appeals Programme

Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC)

No comments:

Post a Comment